Brad Hogg
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Brad Hogg Australia (Aus) |
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Batting style | Left-handed batsman (LHB) | |
Bowling type | Slow left-arm chinaman (SLC) | |
Tests | ODIs | |
Matches | 4 | 89 |
Runs scored | 38 | 620 |
Batting average | 9.50 | 20.66 |
100s/50s | -/- | -/2 |
Top score | 17* | 71* |
Balls bowled | 774 | 4044 |
Wickets | 9 | 110 |
Bowling average | 50.22 | 27.67 |
5 wickets in innings | - | 2 |
10 wickets in match | - | N/A |
Best bowling | 2/40 | 5/32 |
Catches/stumpings | -/- | 27/- |
As of 6 November 2006 |
George Bradley Hogg (born February 6, 1971 in Narrogin, Western Australia), known as Brad Hogg, is an Australian cricketer. He is primarily a left arm chinaman bowler, although he is a handy left-handed batsman as well and is an excellent fielder. His international career would have been a brief footnote in history, had it not been for Shane Warne's absence from cricket in 2003 due to suspension from a drugs test, and retirement from one-day cricket.
Hogg originates from Western Australia, where he has been a member of the State team since 1994. He originally entered the lineup as a batsman, but has since developed his bowling skills. He has a good googly and a well-disguised flipper, which he used to bowl Andy Flower, who was then considered to be one of the world's best at playing spin bowling, during the 2003 World Cup. In his book, Walking to Victory, Adam Gilchrist described it as 'one of the balls of the tournament.'
In 1996, he joined the Australian team to tour India to replace Warne (who was injured). He made his Test debut against India in Delhi, taking 1/69 and making 1 and 4. He also played seven One-day International matches. However, the belief at the time was that he was merely a place-holder for Warne, and he was discarded from international calculations for some time. Hogg was also in and out of the Western Australian squad for the next few years as he struggled to come to terms with unsympathetic pitches and poor returns with the ball.
Hogg was absent from the international scene until called up to replace Warne during the 2002/2003 VB Series (an annual tri-nations one day tournament in Australia) after Warne injured his shoulder, and the 2003 World Cup. However, Warne first dislocated his shoulder in a VB Series match, and then tested positive to a banned diuretic in a pre-World Cup drugs test (taken following his shoulder injury), leaving Hogg to play as Australia's specialist spinner in both series and has filled that role since, due to Warne's retirement from the one day game.
Hogg was recalled to the Australian Test team to tour the West Indies in April 2003, where he played two matches (making his wait between his first and second Tests the longest for an Australian). He also played against Zimbabwe at the SCG later that year, but was upstaged by part-time chinaman bowler Simon Katich, who took 6/90 for the match (Hogg took 3/119). He was left out of the Test team in 2004 but remains in the national one day team as the preferred spinner to Stuart MacGill. He appears to be becoming a one-day only player with Western Australian selectors preferring to play young spinner Beau Casson ahead of Hogg in the state's Pura Cup side.
Hogg's highest international score is 71 not out against England, and his best bowling figures in an innings are 5/32 against the West Indies. Hogg also works as a postman for Australia Post, and is a noted fitness fanatic.
Hogg is an old boy of Aquinas College, Perth.
[edit] External links
- Brad Hogg at Cricinfo
Persondata | |
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NAME | Hogg, George Bradley |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Cricketer |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 6, 1971 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Narrogin, Western Australia |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Australia squad - 2003 Cricket World Cup | ||
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1 Ponting | 2 Gilchrist | 3 Bevan | 4 Bichel | 5 Bracken | 6 Gillespie | 7 Harvey | 8 Hauritz | 9 Hayden | 10 Hogg | 11 Lee | 12 Lehmann | 13 Maher | 14 Martyn | 15 McGrath | 16 Symonds | 17 Warne | 18 Watson | Coach: Buchanan |