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Andrew Strauss

 
Wikipedia: Andrew Strauss
Andrew Strauss
Straussdescends.jpg
Personal information
Full name Andrew John Strauss
Born 2 March 1977 (1977-03-02) (age 32)
Johannesburg, Transvaal Province, South Africa
Nickname Lord Brocket, The General, Levi, Mareman, Straussy, Jazzer
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Left-arm medium
Role Batsman, England captain
International information
National side England
Test debut (cap 624) 20 May 2004 v New Zealand
Last Test 20 August 2009 v Australia
ODI debut (cap 180) 18 November 2003 v Sri Lanka
Last ODI 29 November 2009 v South Africa
ODI shirt no. 14
Domestic team information
Years Team
1998 – present Middlesex (squad no. 6)
2002 MCC
2007-8 Northern Districts
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 67 99 181 222
Runs scored 5,266 2,886 13,090 6,245
Batting average 44.62 32.06 42.91 31.06
100s/50s 18/17 3/18 35/56 7/40
Top score 177 152 177 163
Balls bowled 6 102 6
Wickets 0 2 0
Bowling average 44.50
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0
10 wickets in match n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 0/3 1/16 0/3
Catches/stumpings 75/– 38/– 148/– 71/–
Source: CricketArchive, 30 November 2009

Andrew John Strauss MBE, (born 2 March 1977) is an English cricketer who plays county cricket for Middlesex County Cricket Club and is captain of England.

A fluent left-handed opening batsman, Strauss has the ability to accumulate runs without playing big shots, in which respect he has been likened to Graham Thorpe.[1] Also, his technique and more specifically his footwork has been compared to that of the Australian opening batsman Justin Langer[citation needed], who captained Strauss at Middlesex. Strauss favours scoring off the back foot, mostly playing cut and pull shots. Strauss is also known for his fielding strength at slip or in the covers.

He made his First-class debut in 1998, and made his One Day International (ODI) debut in Sri Lanka in 2003. He quickly rose to fame on his Test match debut replacing the injured Michael Vaughan at Lords against New Zealand in 2004.[2] With scores of 112 and 83 (run out) in an England victory, and the man of the match award, he became only the fourth batsman to score a century at Lord's on his debut and was close to becoming the first Englishman to score centuries in both innings of his debut.[1][3] Strauss again nearly scored two centuries (126 and 94 not out) and was named man of the match in his first overseas Test match, in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, in December 2004.[4] Strauss suffered a drop in form during 2007, and as a result he was left out of the Test squad for England's tour of Sri Lanka, and announced that he was taking a break from cricket.[5] After a poor tour for England, Andrew was recalled into the squad for the 2008 tour of New Zealand, and subsequently reestablished himself in the side with a career-best 177 in the third and final Test of that series, and a further three centuries in 2008.

Having deputised for Michael Vaughan as England captain in 2006, Strauss was appointed on a permanent basis for the 2009 tour of the West Indies following Kevin Pietersen's resignation.[1] He enjoyed success with three centuries, and retained the captaincy into 2009. Strauss captained the England team to a 2–1 victory in the 2009 Ashes, scoring a series total of 474 runs, more than any other player on either side,[6] including 161 in England's first victory in an Ashes Test at Lord's in 75 years.[7]

Contents

Personal life

Born in South Africa, Strauss moved to England aged six[8] owing to his English mother. First playing cricket in Australia for Caulfield Grammar School in Melbourne,[9][10] Strauss came back to England and was educated at Caldicott School[11], Radley College[12] and at Hatfield College, Durham University, where he studied economics.[1] He married Australian actress Ruth McDonald in October 2003 and they have settled in Ealing, with their son Samuel (born 2005). Ruth gave birth to the couple's second child Luca in July 2008.[13] Strauss also became President of the Primary Club Juniors, a charity which helps fund blind cricket. In aid of the cause he took part in a blind game, wearing a blindfold and being dismissed on his second ball.[14] He has a variety of nicknames ranging from the predictable Straussy, Levi and Johann, to the more obscure Lord Brocket, Mareman, The General, Jazzer and Muppet.[1][15]

Playing career

Domestic career

Having played for the Durham University cricket team and the Middlesex second XI since 1996, Strauss made his Middlesex first XI debut in 1998, scoring 83 in his maiden first-class innings.[16] Despite this, he made a quiet start: he averaged 24 and 30.5 in his first two first-class seasons,[17] and he did not make his maiden first-class century until an innings of 111 not out two years after his debut.[18] Thereafter, Strauss's stock rose quickly: his returns in 2001, 2002 and 2003 were 1211 runs at an average of 45, 1202 at 48 and 1529 at 51.[17] He was appointed captain of Middlesex in 2002, following the retirement of Angus Fraser, and retained the post until the end of the 2004 season.[19]

International career

Debut year (2003–04)

Strauss' first taste of international cricket came as part of England's tour of the sub-continent,[20] but he would only fulfill the role of the twelfth man; despite considering himself better in the long form of the game, Strauss was surprised to be selected for the One Day squad.[21] Although he was not selected for the main team, Strauss did make an appearance in a tour match, starring with 51 in an opening partnership of 146 in a slow, but fluent innings.[22] As England moved straight from Bangladesh to Sri Lanka, Strauss continued to put pressure on England opener Vikram Solanki in a tour match top scoring with 83, juxtaposed with Solanki's five ball duck[23] and was rewarded with his England debut in a disastrous ten-wicket defeat where he was caught and bowled by fellow debutant Dinusha Fernando[24] and was subsequently omitted for the rest of the tour.

Strauss was given another chance in the tour of the West Indies, even being called up to the Test squad owing to the injury of Mark Butcher.[25] Still he was only given a chance in the ODI team, but he made an impact even at his unnative number three position top scoring with 29 in a tense England win.[26] Despite this he was omitted, after the second abandoned match, until the fifth ODI where he contributed only 10[27] but made up for it joint top scoring with skipper Michael Vaughan and putting on a good start in an ultimately losing match, making a great first international catch.[28] He also contributed 66 to help win the final match, drawing the series.[29]

Strauss joined the Lord's honours board for scoring a century on his Test debut

Strauss returned home to start the 2004 English season but finally was greenlighted to make his Test debut for England after Vaughan sustained a knee injury in the nets.[30] The initial plan was to promote Mark Butcher to the now vacant opening batsman position, and include Paul Collingwood in the middle order. Butcher declined to move up the order and batted third, meaning Strauss was asked to open the batting and Collingwood missed out on a place in the side.[31][32] Vaughan's injury turned out to be very fortuitous for Strauss who, in his first Test innings, top scored with 112 and contributed 82 in the second innings[33] before being run out, with Nasser Hussain taking responsibility for the dismissal.[34] This put Strauss on a series of exclusive lists including being the second English player to score a century on his debut at Lord's, third opener to score a hundred on debut,[35] the fifteenth English player to score a century on his debut, the first since Graham Thorpe in 1993[36] and only the fourth English player to score a century and half century on his debut.[37] Strauss also made the first dismissal of the Test, catching Stephen Fleming off Simon Jones and was awarded Man of The Match for his efforts.[33] The performance by Strauss excelled his role as a filler for Vaughan, leading to Hussain retiring from cricket allowing for Vaughan to move down the order and Strauss retaining the role of opener opposite Marcus Trescothick.[38] Strauss' form declined over the series, with one half century in the second Test[39] and his first Test duck along with a six in the third Test.[40]

In the ensuing NatWest tri-series that bridged the two tours, England won only one match, where Strauss guided them home with an unbeaten 44,[41] even losing against the West Indies after a century-each partnership of 226 with Andrew Flintoff at Lord's with Strauss recording his first One Day century with an exact 100.[42] Strauss continued to make Lord's a talisman as he returned for the opening Test of the series against West Indies with another century opposite Robert Key's 221 in a winning effort; the two also set the record for highest second wicket partnership against the West Indies.[43] In the third Test at Old Trafford where Brian Lara scored his ten thousandth run, Strauss faultered after five hours at the crease falling just short of another century at 90.[44] In the final part of a packed 2004 season, Strauss guided England to victory with 44 not out against India in the NatWest Challenge opening One Day match[45] but only scored 2 a piece in the following two matches.[46] Then, in the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy at home Strauss contributed towards a win against Zimbambwe[47] and then starred in the semi-final against old enemies Australia with 52 not out from 42.[48] However, along with the rest of the team aside from Trescothick he failed to muster a decent total in the final allowing West Indies to take the trophy.[49]

Road to The Ashes (2004–05)

Strauss batting against Bangladesh at Lord's

The runners-up in the Champions Trophy took October off before beginning a tour of Africa in November. Their first port of call was Zimbabwe, visiting for the first time since the 2003 World Cup political concerns and despite being minnows Strauss could not muster even a half century in the 4-0 series win.[46] In the final match, Strauss was called on to bowl a single over, conceding three runs.[50] England then moved to Strauss' native South Africa for a five Test series taking them into the new year. His homecoming was an explosive one as he caught captain Graeme Smith off the second ball and went on to score his first away century with 126 before scoring over half of the team's secong innings score as he steered them towards victory, again falling short of twin hundreds with 94 not out; still he became only the seventh Test player to record a century on his home and away debut.[51][52] Despite missing out on this accolade he did record back to back centuries, in the Boxing Day Test he top scored in the first innings with only 25 as it seemed England were set for defeat, Strauss and Trescothick bolstered the side with an opening partnership stand of 273, top scoring with 136 to help England push for victory though it would end in a draw.[53] In the losing, third Test Strauss not only top scored in the first innings with 45, he also became the fourth fastest Englishman to reach 1,000 Test runs in 19 innings.[54] After his third century of the tour in the fourth Test that helped secure the decisive victory[55] Strauss ended with a pair of ducks in the fourth and fifth Test preventing England from extending the lead to 3-1.[55][56] Despite the two zeroes, Strauss dominated the batsmen of the series making 656 runs over the five matches at an average of 72.88[57] and earned his first Man of The Series award. In the losing One Day series that followed Strauss failed to impress with the bat, never making more than 35.[46] Nevertheless, his Test success drew the plaudits of, among others, future Australian rival Justin Langer.[58]

After the tour, England returned home to play Bangladesh with Strauss's home ground of Lord's only helping him towards a half century in the one innings they played.[59] In the following NatWest Series against Bangladesh and Australia, England built on their momentum going into the Ashes series by making their way to the top of the group and into the final.[60] Individually, Strauss posted 82* and 98 in the first and last matches against Bangladesh,[46] with a One Day high score of 152 from 128 balls in the middle match[61] but fared less well against Australia, never scoring more than 25 and only managing 2 in the tied final at Lord's.[46] Strauss was significantly shuffled down the order in England's inaugural Twenty20 International against Australia and made 18 in their 100 run win[62] and in the losing NatWest Challenge scored favourably, but not notable, with two scores near 50.[46]

The Ashes (2005)

Strauss is caught by Michael Clarke chasing 129 to win the fourth Test

Going into the 2005 Ashes series having not won since the 1980s but with an unbeaten series record going back six series it was a highly anticipated series with Australian captain Ricky Ponting predicting it to be the closest Ashes since England's last win.[63] Seemingly the pressure effected Strauss even at Lord's, along with the rest of the team, as he contributed 2 to their 190 and a more impressive 37 to their 180 in a losing first Test, though Strauss did catch Ponting in the first innings.[64] The second Test proved to be a much more dramatic affair and Strauss improved somewhat on his showing at Lord's with an opening stand of 112 opposite Trescothick, falling two short of a half century to the spin of Shane Warne.[65] While this healthy platform pushed England towards a 99 run lead in the first innings, it was Strauss' paltry second innings of six which garnered more attention:[66] four deliveries before the end of play on day two a Warne legbreak span prodigiously from the rough across Strauss' body to knock down leg stump.[67][68] Those six runs are arguably crucial though, as England's winning margin was simply two runs.[65] The number six would follow him into the next Test at Old Trafford, making way for Vaughan to bat the first century of the series. Strauss followed in his captain's footsteps in the second innings adding 106 of his own to help set a target of 371 for the Australians who managed to stave off losing their final wicket to secure a draw and maintain a 1-1 series score.[69]

England celebrate in Trafalgar Square after winning the Ashes

In the fourth Test Strauss helped England to a fine start with a century first wicket partnership, contributing 35 himself and helping restrict Australia to 218 with two catches, specifically fast striker Adam Gilchrist in an exceedingly wide catch at slip which was called "the abiding image of the Summer".[70] After enforcing the follow-on England were set 129 and the batsmen started falling under pressure, with Strauss lasting until the third wicket down and posting one of four scores within the twenties to help win the Test and take the series lead.[71] With only a draw required in the final Test to take home the Ashes, Strauss showed a winning attitude batting for almost all of the first day, with seven partnerships, to put on 129[72] and secure another Ashes hundred and make himself the only batsmen on either team to record two centuries in the series.[73] Once again Strauss made a notable catch in the field helping to dismiss captain Ponting again,[72] Australia's second best batsmen in the series,[73] as well as sending fast bowler Glenn McGrath back to the pavilion for a duck. Unfortunately Strauss could not keep up his sterling performance as England were put back into bat with just over a day left in the series he fell to Warne again, caught by Simon Katich, for a single run. Regardless, the maiden Test century of fellow South African-born England player Kevin Pietersen stalled Australia from taking victory and England won the series 2-1 to take home the Ashes for the first time in 18 years.[72]

In a series arguably dominated more by bowling than batting, Strauss notched up an average of 39.30 and while he was only the fourth highest scoring batsmen for England with 393, only one Australian, Justin Langer, scored more runs than him and by only one run; Strauss was also the only player to score two centuries and made six catches, the second highest fielder behind Ian Bell for England.[73] While captain Michael Vaughan and coach Duncan Fletcher were awarded OBEs, the rest of the team, Strauss included, were given MBEs in the New Years Honours list.[74][75]

Facing Asian teams and early captaincy (2005–06)

In the Winter months that followed, England toured Pakistan following their Ashes success looking to extend their unbeaten streak of six Test series (with only two lost Tests) since 2004.[76] Strauss started the tour unnervingly, with warm up scores of two fives and a six[77][78], mustering 56 in the final warm up innings.[77] Despite acknowledging his batting problems,[79] Strauss' performance never recovered as he scored only 44 runs in the first two Test matches, losing the first and drawing the second, at an average of 11[80] before he departed Pakistan to attend the birth of his first child, missing England's final loss.[81] Strauss returned for the One Day series but showed little improvement with only five runs in the tour match,[82] but found more success shuffled down to third man, top scoring 94 to help England win the first match.[83] He also scored 26 runs in the low scoring, final match which England also won[84] but in between picked up a pair of ducks.[85]

The otherside of Christmas, England went to India in March and after Trescothick absented himself owing to stress-related illness, Strauss found himself opening England's batting with 21 year old debutante Alastair Cook. Cook repeated Strauss' debut theatrics, scoring a half and full century, overshadowing Strauss' 28 and 46 in the drawn match.[86] Without Cook opposite him in the third Test, Strauss shined once again with 128 in a winning effort to level the series.[87] In the following One Day matches England would have been lucky to manage a draw, suffering four straight losses under replacement captain Andrew Flintoff since Vaughan's knee-injury had prevented him from touring.[88] Strauss' only double digit score was 61 in the second match[46] but with Flintoff requiring a break from deputising, Strauss was handed the captaincy for the fifth match which ultimately was abandoned, leading to crowd violence in Guwahati.[89] With Flintoff remaining the twelfth man for the following ODI,[90] Strauss guided England to victory after putting India to bat, with a hundred partnership with Ian Bell totalling 74 before cramp forced him to retire.[91] The emphatic, eight over victory was to be England's only One Day success on the tour as the final match saw India chase the runs victoriously with only five balls remaining with Strauss offering only 25.[92]

As England returned home weary from an entire Winter without a series victory after the euphoria of the previous two years, they completed a subcontinential triumvirate when Sri Lanka arrived to prove that Asian dominance was not particular to the Indian subcontinent. With the captaincy crown returned to Flintoff, Strauss could focus solely on his batting prowess at the ground that made him famous. Opening once again with Trescothick, Strauss fell two short of a half century to the bowling of Muttiah Muralitharan at the stroke of lunch, allowing Cook to walk out to the wicket afterwards with company. Strauss went on to take the final wicket of Sri Lanka's first innings, Nuwan Kulasekara, catching him off Flintoff to allow England to enforce the follow-on which they could not capitalise on, forcing a draw.[93] In the second Test, England took the lead with a victory after Strauss scored the second highest runs in both English innings, being controversially caught for 16 in the second off his pads.[94][95] He recorded another half century in the third Test, though it was not enough to stave off a 134 run defeat.[96] Once again he was offered the captaincy for the short form game, leading England in a tense, two run loss to Sri Lanka where he put on an opening partnership with Trescothick for 59.[97] Under Strauss' captaincy England endured a five match whitewash where Strauss failed to muster even fifty[98] though it was acknowledged that the team, particularly the bowling side, were under strength.[99]

Despite the One Day white wash, Strauss was given faith and made the official captain, rather than a stand in, for Pakistan's Summer tour as England embarked on their busy international schedule leading up to the Ashes and the World Cup.[100] Given the Test captaincy, his first match was at his favourite ground Lord's where he recorded another century, 128 this time, in the second innings[101] but came under criticism for allowing his bowlers only 80 overs for victory, which they did not achieve.[102] He turned things round drastically in the second Test with tight fielding that restricted Pakistan to under 250 in both innings while contributing 42 to England's high strike rate 461, allowing an emphatic innings victory in just three days.[103] Though the third Test was not quite as emphatic, England still won the Test after restricting the second innings, not allowing any centuries like in the other three innings and scoring one himself, 116, to take an unassailable lead in his first Test series as captain.[104] Strauss' first Test series as skipper ended in an amount of controversy at The Oval in what some commentators have referred to as Ovalgate when, during their second innings, umpires Darrell Hair and Billy Doctrove inspected the ball and decided that it had been tampered with. Insulted by the allegation, the Pakistan team protested by not taking to the field after the tea break leading the umpires to declare the match forfeited. Pakistan later tried to take to the field but the umpires upheld their decision.[105] Two years later the decision was changed to a draw after a petition from Pakistan,[106] but in February 2009 the original decision was reinstated amidst criticism of the precedent such historicism would set.[107] The series thus ended 3-0 to England, with Strauss being awarded Player of The Series[108] due to being the top of England's run scorers, second only to Mohammed Yousuf.[109]

Strauss continues his captaincy with the limited overs team. He performed less well in the one-off Twenty20 International, falling for a duck while Pakistan soared to victory with two overs to spare[110] and his luck remained the same as the One Day series began. After two low scores[46] he scored 50 in the third match though the team would still lose,[111] however his 78 in the fourth match propped up an eight wicket win[112] and a top score of 35 earned England a 2-2 draw in the series.[113] The following month England returned to the sub-continent for the Champions Trophy in India. Strauss scored two half centuries in three matches[46] but the team as a whole played disastrously with only one victory over the West Indies.[114]

Decline in form (2006–07)

After the Champions Trophy the captaincy reverted to Andrew Flintoff as soon as he was cleared as being match fit.[115] Strauss started the tour terribly, scoring only 71 runs from the first four innings along with a generally terrible display from England. After losing the first two Tests, questions were asked about a divided dressing room owing to the captaincy changing hands so frequently between Strauss and Flintoff but Strauss played down these accusations.[116] He followed this with 88 in a warm up match[117] but in the following Test he was given out to dubious decisions in both innings, caught for 42 and LBW for a duck, with replays suggesting both decisions were harsh.[118] In the Boxing Day Test Strauss secured his only landmark of the series[119] with an even 50 though he will most likely remembered as Shane Warne's 700th Test victim as the Australian spin bowler reached the milestone in his penultimate Test match.[120] by which point the Ashes had been lost.[119] As if the five match whitewash was not enough, the final innings of the series for Strauss was marked with a bouncer to the head from Brett Lee causing him to go to hospital after he was dismissed.[121] After the Test series, coach Duncan Fletcher lamented the lack of confidence in both Strauss and Paul Collingwood whom he had wished to promote as role models for the rest of the team.[122] Despite the decline in his form towards the end of the year, poor umpiring decisions were taken into account and Strauss was picked as part of the 2006 Wisden Forty.[123]

England went from the Test series to a one off Twenty20 International in warm up for the Commonwealth Bank Tri-Series. Strauss was omitted from the Twenty20 game but did play for the One Day series. Though England tended to be superior in the long format over the short format, they gained momentum after opening losses and defeated New Zealand in what had become a winner takes all match at the end of the group stages,[124] with Strauss' 55 being the only notable score for him in the series.[46] By this point Strauss' poor One Day form had been highlighted, with Fletcher admitting he was mostly in the team due to shallow batting options.[125] The half century did nothing for Strauss' confidence though as he fell for a duck in the first final[46] and only six in the second, though he did take the prized wickets of Ponting and Mike Hussey, restricting them both to single digit scores helping to manipulate the Duckworth-Lewis effected score so that England could win the match without needing the third game.[126] His poor form saw him omitted from the group stage of the World Cup and despite commentators expecting him to make a return for the Super Eights stage against Sri Lanka[127] he had to wait to meet old enemies Australia to be recalled, where he only made 7 and had a run-out on Ponting turned down after TV replays.[46][128] He batted with England for the rest of the stage until England were knocked out; he would not play One Day cricket for England again until two years later.[46]

Eventually his poor year in both forms of the international form of the game, even after being allowed only to focus on Tests, saw him dropped from the team after 43 Test matches.[129]

Omission from team and revival in New Zealand

Strauss' poor run of form continued through 2007, averaging a low 27 and failing to score a century with a top score of 96.[5] While he continued to play in Test matches against India and the West Indies, he was dropped from the ODI side. In late 2007, Strauss was not included in the Test squad for the tour of Sri Lanka, and Michael Vaughan was selected to take his position as opening batsman. Strauss then announced that he was going to take a break from cricket after what he described as a "long, tiring and immensely frustrating 12 months." He was, however, able to travel to India as part of the backup squad if he so wished.[5]

Strauss was thus omitted from England cricket fixtures over the winter. He returned to the Test squad for the tour of New Zealand, however made only four in the first warm up match before hitting his own wicket.[130] Despite what was now over 25 Test innings without a century, Strauss was chosen ahead of Owais Shah (who scored 96 in the same warm up match) to play in the second warm up match, sparking speculation that he would have a place in the Test squad for the first match against New Zealand.[131] Strauss was, however, placed in the number three spot on the batting order, leaving Vaughan and Cook to open as they did in Sri Lanka.[131] His batting in the first innings was poor, and he was dismissed for 5. In the second innings, however, he was returned to the position of opener and scored 104* along with Ian Bell.[132]

Strauss continued to play poorly through the first two matches, and was dismissed for a duck in the first innings of the third. In the second innings, however, he reached a century from 226 deliveries, his slowest but his first since August 2006, going on to make his highest score in Test cricket, 177. This innings seemed to help Strauss re-find his spark as in the first part of the English domestic season that followed he scored runs prolifically for Middlesex, smashing a 163 off 130 balls against Surrey in a domestic one day match.

New Zealand and South Africa tour England

After his 177, Strauss' place in the side was guaranteed for the following series against the same opposition. While still ignored for the One Day International team he was given back his position of Test opener alongside Alastair Cook, Michael Vaughan going back down to number 3. In the first rain affected match at Lords he carried on his form with a slow but steady 63 in the only England innings of the match. In the second Test Strauss made another 60 before getting out giving England a decent start following a big first innings total. He then went on to make 106, chasing 294, in the second innings on a now difficult batting wicket which set England up to win by 6 wickets to take a 1-0 lead in the three match series. This was Strauss' second Test match century at Old Trafford (the first coming against Australia in 2005, when he also scored 106). In the third and final Test at Trent Bridge he made 37 in England's first and only innings as England went on to win the series 2–0. He was named England's man of the series for his 266 runs at an average of 66.50.[133]

His form now impressing the selectors, Strauss was allowed to keep his place for the tour against South Africa. He started on an average note being dismissed for 44 in England's only innings of the first match. He suffered in the second Test at Headlingly, however, making just 27 runs in the first innings and a duck in the second. A pair of 20s resulted as Strauss continued to struggle against the pace bowling of South Africa in the third Test. With England 2–0 down going into the last Test, a win was needed to restore pride. Strauss failed in the first innings, being dismissed for six. With the bowlers having got England into a match winning position, Strauss then came good, sharing a century opening stand with Cook and eventually being dismissed for 58. Nevertheless, his place remained under pressure again.

2008 Tour of India

Strauss managed to keep his place for the India tour and immediately rewarded the selectors by making 123 in the first innings of the first Test match with the rest of the batting lagging behind. He followed it up by holding the batting order together after a collapse that saw England 43-3 and shared a 200 run partnership with Paul Collingwood in which Strauss and Collingwood both made 108. He became just the 10th Englishman to make two hundreds in the same Test match, with Marcus Trescothick being the last in 2004.[134]

Captaincy

Strauss was appointed captain on the January 7, 2009 after a rift between previous captain Kevin Pietersen and Peter Moores became public. Subsequently, Pietersen resigned the captaincy after just 3 Test Matches, and Moores was sacked. This came after a rise of form in the 2008 Test Series in India, in which England lost and drew their two games.

In his first match as regular captain, against the West Indies at Sabina Park, Strauss and his team failed, Strauss scoring 7 and 9 as England were bowled out for 51 in the second innings to lose by an innings[135]. After the fiasco of the abandoned Test match, Strauss subsequently had an excellent series with the bat, with scores of 169, 142 and 142 in the remaining three Tests giving him a series aggregate of 541 runs at an average of 67.62[136], but England were unable to force a victory in any of these three matches and consequently lost the series 1–0. As captain in the subsequent one-day series, which was drawn 2–2, Strauss scored 105 in Guyana[137] and 79 not out from 61 balls at the Kensington Oval[138]. He also captained the Twenty20 side to a six-wicket defeat[139]. Strauss said to the BBC that he hoped that the whole captaincy debacle would be solved in time for the 2009 Ashes Series.

Strauss atoned for the defeat by the West Indies with a 2–0 home victories over the West Indies at home in both the Test and the ODI series. After that series, Strauss had a break from the international circuit while the World Twenty20 was underway. He played two county championship matches to little effect beyond a score of 97 against Essex.[140]

The Ashes (2009)

England entered the series hoping to regain the Ashes after a 2007 5-0 whitewash.

In the first Test at Sophia Gardens, Strauss failed to capitalise on two starts, scoring 30 and 17; his second-innings dismissal, caught off a top-edged cut off Nathan Hauritz, was particularly reprehensible.[citation needed] On a good batting wicket Australia racked up 674 for 6 declared, with Simon Katich (122), Ricky Ponting (150), Marcus North (125 not out) and Brad Haddin (121) all scoring centuries. In the second innings, only a dogged 5¾-hour 74 from Paul Collingwood and tail-end contributions salvaged a draw for England, with final pair James Anderson and Monty Panesar left to block out the final 11½ overs of the match.[141]

England entered the second Test at Lord's having not won an Ashes Test there since Hedley Verity's match in the 1934 Ashes. On his domestic home ground, Strauss batted through the entire first day of the match for 161 runs, sharing an opening partnership of 196 with Alastair Cook (95). Though Strauss was bowled by Ben Hilfenhaus's second ball the following day without adding to his overnight score, his innings was the highest individual score made by either side during the series, and set up a 210-run first-innings lead. Strauss contributed 32 to England's second innings, as Australia were set a target of 522 to win, a record if achieved. Though Michael Clarke (136), Brad Haddin (80) and Mitchell Johnson (63) briefly made the target seem attainable, Andrew Flintoff (5–92) and Graeme Swann (4–87) bowled England to a comfortable 115-run victory.[142]

In the third Test at Edgbaston, Strauss responded to Australia's first innings of 263 by ending the second day 64 not out; he was removed by Ben Hilfenhaus the following morning for 69, before England's powerful lower-middle order propelled the side to a 113-run first-innings lead. Australia, however, experienced little difficulty in drawing the match, losing only five wickets in one-and-a-half days thanks to Michael Clarke (103 not out) and Marcus North (96).[143]

In the fourth Test at Headingley, Strauss was distracted before the start of play by team selection issues, with Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff both injured, and a back spasm to Matt Prior delaying play by ten minutes as his fitness to play was ascertained.[144] Strauss' concentration may have been affected by the fire alarm which sounded in the team's hotel at 5am, or by the media interviews he gave immediately before he opened the batting;[citation needed] he was lucky not to be given out lbw to the first ball of the match.[145] and was removed shortly afterwards for three as England collapsed to 102 all out against Peter Siddle and Stuart Clark. More runs for Michael Clarke and Marcus North led Australia to a total of 445. Strauss and Alastair Cook responded with an opening partnership of 58 before Ben Hilfenhaus removed Strauss for 32; England capitulated, this time to Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson en route to an innings defeat.[146]

England therefore entered the fifth Test at the Oval with the series level at 1–1, knowing that only a victory would suffice to bring the Ashes home, as by longstanding convention the Ashes are retained by the current holders in the event of a drawn series. Strauss contributed 55 to England's first innings of 332, before Stuart Broad (5–37) and Graeme Swann (4–38) unexpectedly combined to bowl Australia out for 160. In the second innings Strauss scored 75, sharing a 128-run partnership with debutant Jonathan Trott (119) to set Australia a target of 546. On the final day of the series, Strauss produced a sharp piece of fielding from leg slip to run out Michael Clarke for a duck, and also contributed a catch, as Australia were bowled out for 348 to hand England a 197-run victory in the match, a 2–1 victory in the series, and the Ashes.

Strauss was named England's man of the series by Australian coach Tim Nielsen; he finished the series with an aggregate of 474 runs (the highest aggregate by either side; no other England player managed more than 261), at an average of 52.66 (no other England player barring Jonathan Trott, who only played in one match, averaged more than 40). Such was Strauss' dominance with the bat that Australia lost the series despite counting six of the seven leading run-scorers among their number.[147]

During the following seven-match ODI series, Strauss' contributions led England's batting to the extent that, following the series, Andrew Miller commented on "England's guileless middle-order who, for the umpteenth time this summer, treated the loss of Andrew Strauss' wicket with the same grief and disorientation that a clutch of baby chicks might greet the devouring of their mother by a fox."[148] He spearheaded England's batting efforts with scores of 12, 47, 63, 63, 35, zero and 47 in the series which spanned September 4 until September 20.[149] He stated on a number of occasions that, despite his own contributions, he was disenchanted by England's poor performances during their 6:1 defeat.[150]

Test Centuries

Andrew Strauss's Test Centuries
Runs Match Against City/Country Venue Year
[1] 112 1 New Zealand London, England Lord's 2004
[2] 137 4 West Indies London, England Lord's 2004
[3] 126 8 South Africa Port Elizabeth, South Africa Sahara Oval St George's 2004
[4] 136 9 South Africa Durban, South Africa Kingsmead 2004
[5] 147 11 South Africa Johannesburg, South Africa Old Wanderers 2005
[6] 106 17 Australia Manchester, England Old Trafford 2005
[7] 129 19 Australia London, England The Oval 2005
[8] 128 24 India Mumbai, India Wankhede Stadium 2006
[9] 128 28 Pakistan London, England Lord's 2006
[10] 116 30 Pakistan Leeds, England Headingley Stadium 2006
[11] 177 46 New Zealand Napier, New Zealand McLean Park 2008
[12] 106 48 New Zealand Manchester, England Old Trafford 2008
[13] 123 54 India Chennai, India M. A. Chidambaram Stadium 2008
[14] 108
[15] 169 58 West Indies Antigua, West Indies Antigua Recreation Ground 2009
[16] 142 59 West Indies Barbados, West Indies Kensington Oval 2009
[17] 142 60 West Indies Trinidad & Tobago, West Indies Port Of Spain 2009
[18] 161 63 Australia London, England Lord's 2009
An innings-by-innings breakdown of Strauss' Test match batting career, showing runs scored (red bars) and the average of the last ten innings (blue line).

Test Records Against Each Opponents

Opponent Matches Innings Not out Runs Balls High Score 100 50 Average Strike Rate
Australia 15 29 0 1,114 2,217 161 3 4 38.41 50.25
Bangladesh 2 2 0 77 123 69 0 1 38.50 62.60
India 8 16 1 700 1,595 128 3 2 46.66 43.88
New Zealand 9 16 0 813 1,728 177 3 4 50.81 47.04
Pakistan 6 11 0 488 814 128 2 1 44.36 59.95
South Africa 9 17 1 836 1,776 147 3 2 52.25 47.07
Sri Lanka 3 5 0 156 341 55 0 1 31.20 45.74
West Indies 13 24 2 1026 1931 169 4 2 46.63 53.31
TOTAL 65 120 4 5,210 10,525 177 18 17 44.91 49.50

One Day International Centuries

Andrew Strauss's One Day International Centuries
Runs Match Against City/Country Venue Year
[1] 100 11 West Indies London, England Lord's 2004
[2] 152 32 Bangladesh Nottingham, England Trent Bridge 2005
[3] 105 80 West Indies Guyana West Indies Providence Stadium 2009

See also

International cricketers of South African origin

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External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Angus Fraser
Middlesex County Cricket Captain
2002–2004
Succeeded by
Ben Hutton
Preceded by
Andrew Flintoff
Kevin Pietersen
English national cricket captain
(deputised 2006)
2009–
Succeeded by
Andrew Flintoff
Incumbent

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