Tony Reid
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Tony Reid United States (USA) |
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Batting style | Right-handed batsman (RHB) | |
---|---|---|
Bowling type | Right-arm medium (RM) | |
Tests | ODIs | |
Matches | 0 | 2 |
Runs scored | - | 8 |
Batting average | - | 4.00 |
100s/50s | - | 0/0 |
Top score | - | 6 |
Overs bowled | - | 13 |
Wickets | - | 1 |
Bowling average | - | 60.00 |
5 wickets in innings | - | 0 |
10 wickets in match | - | n/a |
Best bowling | - | 1-37 |
Catches/stumpings | - | 0/0 |
As of 13 September 2004 |
Charles Anthony "Tony" Reid (born 9 April 1962 in Barbados) is a cricketer: a right-handed batsman and right-arm medium-pace bowler who plays for the United States. He is notable as the first man to take a wicket for the USA in a One-Day International.
Reid made his List A debut when the USA took part in the 2000-01 Red Stripe Bowl, playing three of the team's four group matches in Jamaica. His debut against the Jamaicans was inauspicious as he went for 50 from his ten overs and was lbw to Laurie Williams for a duck. He did not play in the match against Canada, but was back in the side against Barbados, taking his first senior wicket - that of West Indies Test batsman Adrian Griffith. He was retained against Trinidad and Tobago, but failed to make any impression as the USA were bowled out for a paltry 62, which their opponents rushed past for the loss of one wicket in 31 balls.
His next appearances were in early 2004, at the ICC Six Nations Challenge tournament in Sharjah and Dubai which the United States eventually won on net run rate. In the first match, against Namibia, he took 3-40 and scored 30 in a five-wicket win, as well as running out the Namibian captain, Deon Kotze. Later in the competition he scored 55 in a losing cause against the Netherlands.
Shortly after the end of the Six Nations competition, Reid made his first-class debut at the 2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup against Canada in Fort Lauderdale. He scored only 4 and 2 as the USA lost by 104 runs, but took 2-10 in six tight overs in the Canadian second innings. Five minor games followed at the Americas Cricket Championship, before another Intercontinental Cup appearance, this time in a winning cause against Bermuda.
In September 2004, the USA played the first ODIs in their history, in the Champions Trophy in England. Reid had been caught up in Hurricane Frances, and at one stage had looked unlikely to make it across the Atlantic, but he was rewarded for his perseverance when, opening the bowling in the first game against New Zealand, he had captain Stephen Fleming caught at cover. This was the first wicket in ODI history for the United States, although they were brought back down to earth by a thumping 210-run defeat, followed by a nine-wicket thrashing by the Australians.
Reid was an integral part of his team's squad for the 2005 ICC Trophy in Ireland, but despite two half centuries his bowling was ineffective, and he took just one wicket from 42 overs in a disastrous competition for the Americans which saw them lose all four of their group games (one more was abandoned), thus denying the USA both a place at the 2007 World Cup and ODI status for the following four years. He hit 54 against Denmark, but his best of 61 not out came in a ninth-place play-off match which saw the United States humiliated by rank outsiders Oman.