|
Cricket World Cup Teams - South Africa
Back
Full name Charl Kenneth Langeveldt
Born December 17, 1974, Stellenbosch, Cape Province
Current age 30 years 208 days
Major teams South Africa, Boland, Lions
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
class mat inns no runs hs ave bf sr 100 50 4s 6s ct
st
Tests 4 2 1 15 10 15.00 48 31.25 0 0 3 0 1 0
ODIs 16 2 0 5 3 2.50 7 71.42 0 0 0 0 1 0
First-class 51 63 21 646 56 15.38 0 1 14 0
List A 93 38 13 194 33* 7.75 0 0 18 0
Twenty-20 2 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 0 0 0 1 0
class mat balls runs wkts bbi bbm ave econ sr 4 5 10
Tests 4 483 216 9 5/46 5/96 24.00 2.68 53.66 0 1 0
ODIs 16 732 544 26 5/62 5/62 20.92 4.45 28.15 1 1 0
First-class 51 8565 4137 154 5/19 26.86 2.89 55.61 5 1
List A 93 4316 3034 146 5/7 5/7 20.78 4.21 29.56 4 4 0
Twenty-20 2 48 30 1 1/9 1/9 30.00 3.75 48.00 0 0 0
StatsGuru Tests filter | StatsGuru One-Day
Internationals filter
Test debut South Africa v England at Cape Town - Jan 2-6, 2005
scorecard
Last Test West Indies v South Africa at Georgetown - Mar 31-Apr 4,
2005 scorecard
ODI debut South Africa v Kenya at Kimberley - Oct 14, 2001 scorecard
Last ODI West Indies v South Africa at Port of Spain - May 15, 2005
scorecard
First-class span 1997/98 - 2005
List A span 1997/98 - 2004/05
Twenty-20 span 2003/04
For much of the early part of his career, Charl
Langeveldt combined his first-class cricket with his job as a prison
warder at Drakenstein prison, not far from the headquarters of
Boland cricket, his provincial home, a short drive north of Cape
Town. Langeveldt first came to prominence with his ability to swing
the ball at genuine pace, and further work on his action in recent
seasons allowed him to generate even more movement, bringing him to
the attention of the national selectors. He made his one-day
international debut against Kenya in Kimberley in 2001-02, taking
two top-order wickets. He followed that with career-best figures of
4 for 21 when the two sides met for a second time at Newlands
shortly afterwards. Langeveldt was included in South Africa's 15-man
squad for their ill-starred World Cup campaign in 2003, playing only
in the pool match against Kenya. He returned to favour when South
Africa experienced a dramatic slump in the middle of 2004, taking 3
for 31 in Sri Lanka and thenm,, in perhaps his most impressive spell
so far, 3 for 17 against Bangladesh in the ICC Champions Trophy. He
returned in style against England at Newlands in 2004-05, breaking
his hand batting on his return but taking 5 for 46. It was enough to
win him selection for the series in the Caribbean which followed.
|