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Cricket World Cup Teams - England
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Full name James Michael Anderson
Born July 30, 1982, Burnley, Lancashire
Current age 22 years 348 days
Major teams England, Lancashire, Lancashire Cricket Board
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
class mat inns no runs hs ave bf sr 100 50 4s 6s ct
st
Tests 12 16 12 68 21* 17.00 191 35.60 0 0 9 0 4 0
ODIs 39 13 5 41 11 5.12 129 31.78 0 0 2 0 8 0
First-class 43 52 27 260 37* 10.40 0 0 13 0
List A 66 24 14 95 13* 9.50 0 0 12 0
Twenty-20 10 3 2 21 16 21.00 21 100.00 0 0 2 0
class mat balls runs wkts bbi bbm ave econ sr 4 5 10
Tests 12 2034 1274 35 5/73 7/119 36.39 3.75 58.11 2 2 0
ODIs 39 1903 1504 59 4/25 4/25 25.49 4.74 32.25 4 0 0
First-class 43 7152 4195 155 6/23 27.06 3.51 46.14 7 7 1
List A 66 3148 2424 101 4/25 4/25 24.00 4.62 31.16 4 0 0
Twenty-20 10 216 299 10 2/25 2/25 29.89 8.30 21.60 0 0 0
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Test debut England v Zimbabwe at Lord's - May 22-24, 2003 scorecard
Last Test South Africa v England at Johannesburg - Jan 13-17, 2005
scorecard
ODI debut Australia v England at Melbourne - Dec 15, 2002 scorecard
Last ODI Zimbabwe v England at Bulawayo - Dec 4, 2004 scorecard
First-class span 2002 - 2005
List A span 2000 - 2005
Twenty-20 span 2004 - 2005
Notes : NBC Denis Compton Award 2002
A strapping, genuinely quick fast bowler, James
Anderson had played only three one-day games for Lancashire in the
2002 season - he'd played more for his club Burnley - before being
called into England's VB Series squad the following winter as cover
for Andy Caddick, following an impressive stint at the Academy in
Adelaide. An amazing 10-over stint in century heat at Adelaide,
which cost just 12 runs, earned him a place in the 2003 World Cup,
where he produced a matchwinning spell against Pakistan, before
suffering a sobering last-over disaster against Australia. At this
stage, however, his star was very much in the ascendancy, and when
selected for the first Test of the new home season, he took five
wickets in his debut innings almost to order. An ODI hat-trick - the
first by an English bowler - followed against South Africa at The
Oval, but from that moment on, his fortunes began to wane. South
Africa's Test team made his new go-faster hairstyle seem a little
foolish, and though he retained his place for the winter tours to
Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in 2003-04 and South Africa the following
year, he was reduced to the most peripheral of net-bowling roles -
and a shadow of his former self on his rare appearances in the
middle
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