Alec Stewart

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Alec Stewart
England
Personal information
Full name Alec James Stewart
Born 8 April 1963 (1963-04-08) (age 45)
Merton, Surrey, England
Role Wicket-keeper
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Occasional right-arm medium
International information
Test debut (cap 543) 24 February 1990: v West Indies
Last Test 8 September 2003: v South Africa
ODI debut (cap 104) 15 October 1989: v Sri Lanka
Last ODI 2 March 2003: v Australia
ODI shirt no. 4
Domestic team information
Years Team
1981 – 2003 Surrey
Career statistics
Tests ODI FC LA
Matches 133 170 447 504
Runs scored 8463 4677 26165 14771
Batting average 39.54 31.60 40.06 35.08
100s/50s 15/45 4/28 48/148 19/94
Top score 190 116 271* 167*
Balls bowled 20 0 502 4
Wickets 0 3 0
Bowling average 148.66
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 1/7
Catches/stumpings 263/14 159/15 721/32 442/48

As of 14 October 2007
Source: Cricinfo

Alec James Stewart OBE (born 8 April 1963 in Merton, Greater London) is a retired English cricketer, a right-handed batsman-wicketkeeper and former captain of the English cricket team. He is the most capped English cricketer of all time in both Test matches and One Day International, having played in 133 Tests and 170 ODIs.

Contents

[edit] Career

He was educated at Tiffin School in Kingston upon Thames and made his debut for Surrey in 1981 earning a reputation as an aggressive opening batsman and occasional wicketkeeper. He made his England debut in the first Test of the 1989/90 tour of the West Indies, along with Nasser Hussain, who would eventually replace him as England captain.

He was vice-captain of the England side during most of Michael Atherton's tenure as captain, eventually succeeding him in 1998. While England won their first series under him, against South Africa, failures against Australia and in the 1999 cricket World Cup saw him sacked from the captaincy to be replaced by Hussain. During his captaincy, he had the unusual distinction of simultaneously captaining the side, opening the batting and keeping wicket.

He continued as an England player for five more seasons, and became only the fourth player to score a century in his 100th Test, at Old Trafford.

In 1994 at the Kensington Oval in the West Indies he became only the 7th English batsmen to score centuries in both innings of a Test match. His highest Test score, 190, was against Pakistan in the first Edgbaston Test on 4 June 1992 - a match that was drawn. Stewart has the lowest batting average of any player to have scored 8000 or more runs in Test cricket. However, this still represents a fine return given he had the burden of keeping wicket in 82 of his 133 test matches.

As a specialist batsman in Test cricket, Stewart averaged 46.90 in 51 games with 9 centuries. As wicketkeeper batsman he averaged an impressive 34.92 from 82 tests, higher than many of his contemporaries and many of the current batch of international wicketkeepers. He was unlucky enough to be on the losing side in a record 54 Test Matches.

He is also the younger son of a former English Test cricketer, Micky Stewart. Stewart is a well-known supporter of Surrey County Cricket Club and Chelsea F.C. His favourite Chelsea player when growing up was John Hollins, which is why he always wore the number 4 shirt in One Day Internationals. [1]

[edit] Honours

[edit] Trivia

Alec Stewart's career performance graph.
Alec Stewart's career performance graph.
  • Stewart has been victim to Shane Warne for three of Warne's landmarks, his 150th, 250th and 400th wickets. He is also the legspinner's most frequent victim, having been dismissed by Warne 14 times during his career.
  • England and Surrey batsman Mark Butcher was married to Alec Stewart's sister Judy.[1]
  • Stewart has less body fat than an average supermodel. [2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Profile at Arundel Promotions
  2. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/sportacademy/hi/sa/cricket/features/newsid_2194000/2194100.stm

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Mike Atherton
English national cricket captain
1998 - 1999
Succeeded by
Nasser Hussain
Preceded by
Ian Greig
Surrey captain
1992-1997
Succeeded by
Adam Hollioake