Saturday, September 6, 2008

The Beautiful Player To Watch Nathan Astle


Full name Nathan John Astle
Born September 15, 1971, Christchurch, Canterbury
Current age 36 years 357 days
Major teams New Zealand, Canterbury, Derbyshire, Durham, Lancashire, Mumbai Champs, Nottinghamshire
Playing role Opening batsman
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Relations Sister - LM Astle
Test debut New Zealand v Zimbabwe at Hamilton, Jan 13-17, 1996
Last Test New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Wellington, Dec 15-18, 2006
ODI debut New Zealand v West Indies at Auckland, Jan 22, 1995
Last ODI England v New Zealand at Adelaide, Jan 23, 2007

Profile

One of cricket's free spirits, Nathan Astle became a lively allrounder at Test and one-day level without losing his breezy confidence. He began at Canterbury as a no-account batsman and the most parsimonious of medium-paced bowlers, but his batting developed quickly. After becoming a free-scoring one-day player Astle was turned by the national coach Glenn Turner into a first-rate Test top-order batsman, with consecutive hundreds in West Indies in 1995-96. He ripped up the record books with his 222 against England, at Christchurch in 2001-02, which was the fastest double century in Tests, coming up off only 153 balls. A knee injury forced him out of action towards the end of 2003, but he was picked for the tour of England in 2004. Astle is now an assured batsman in both games, an expert slip-catcher, and an occasional medium-pace partnership-breaker.

He may be a certain selection, but his laid-back attitude means he has never been considered for the captaincy, despite his seniority. His 10th Test match century was made against Sri Lanka in April 2005, followed soon after by his 11th. And in September, he became only the tenth man to score 15 ODI centuries, arguably becoming New Zealand's greatest one-day player. In 2006 he signed for Lancashire, although he wasn't at his ballistic best. He surprised most people by retiring from international cricket six weeks before the Word Cup, citing a lack of motivation. Six months later, he retired from first-class cricket as well.

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