Cricket Players, Profiles

Brett Lee - Australia

Full nameBrett Lee

Born : November 8, 1976, Wollongong, New South Wales

Current age : 32 years

Major teams : Australia, Kings XI Punjab, New South Wales

Nickname : Bing

Playing role : Bowler

Batting style : Right-hand bat

Bowling style : Right-arm fast

Height 1.87 m

Relation : Brother - S Lee

Profile

Brett Lee is determined that age and injury shall not weary him. Always positive and flashing a smile from a toothpaste advertisement, he insists his body "still feels really young", but after years as Australia's youthful pin-up he has entered fatherhood and his early 30s. At first there was the pace, but then came the injury and long layoff. It is a recurring theme in Lee's career as he has aimed for numbers that would result in licence suspensions on any Australian road. His speed thrills, but after overcoming another serious ankle problem in 2009, there is no guarantee he will be able to continue slamming his foot down. Despite planning a post-cricket career in Bollywood - he already has a hit song with You're The One For Me and is learning Hindi - Lee is confident of delaying the all-singing, all-dancing routine for a few more seasons.

However, this time the scene has changed since Lee hobbled out of the 2008 Boxing Day Test for foot and ankle surgery. The rise of Mitchell Johnson and Peter Siddle has put rare pressure on Lee, who scraped into the Ashes squad, and he was so determined to join the set-up after five months out he flew to South Africa to be near them. His troubles started last year when he missed the Bangladesh one-day series for family reasons and then struggled with illness and form during his first Test campaign in India. Despite keeping his public spirits high, he didn't spark at home either - of his 21 wickets in eight games in 2008-09, nine came in one match against New Zealand - and it was sad to watch him grimace through the final day in Melbourne.

One major difference in his 2007 recovery was Australia needed his return to health. Previously Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie provided the cover, but the changes in the attack left Lee as the main man. And he excelled. Against Sri Lanka he was Man of the Series for his 16 wickets, another 24 came against India and by the time the West Indies campaign was over he had 58 Test victims at 21.55 in the post-McGrath era. The Allan Border Medal was another reward, along with the Test Player of the Year prize and the Pura Cup, which he helped seal with 97, his highest first-class score.

Over the past few years Lee's outlook has matured - essential variety has been added to the bouncer-yorker method - and he has become consistent to the point where the team analysts struggled to log a bad ball in some 2006-07 Ashes innings. Twenty England wickets helped him move on from the 2005 defeat, but the summer ended in disappointment when his ankle turned painfully at training in New Zealand.

As Lee completed rehab after an operation to reattach the ligaments, his team-mates reacquainted themselves with the World Cup. Lee was disappointed to miss out, but remained upbeat. "Having a bit of a layoff is good for the body," he said. "Although I'm 30 I still feel like I'm 27 as far as bowling age." When he was really young he was the freshest and fastest at a flicker above or below 100mph, and always seemed on the verge of striking a body or a wicket. When Lee released the throttle and began that smooth acceleration, the spectator stayed his drinking hand. The leaping, classical delivery might have produced a devastating yorker, a devilish slower ball or a young-Donald outswinger. Add a dash of peroxide, a fruity vocabulary, a trademark jump for joy, a stylish bat, a streak of sadism when bowling at tailenders, a pop group (Six And Out), and an endearing link to a job at a gentleman's outfitters, and you had the 21st century's first designer cricketer - not to mention a priceless pin-up boy.

While Steve Waugh unleashed him in a dramatic opening of 42 wickets in seven Tests before an elbow operation, Ricky Ponting gave Lee a blueprint for lasting success. "The way that Ricky has captained my personal bowling over the last couple of years has just been brilliant," he said early in 2006. "Going back two or three years, I wasn't really sure what they wanted me to do."

Lee's career hasn't always been easy. He struggled against accusations of throwing, bean balls, stress fractures and other injuries, and had a strangely barren first Ashes series in 2001. Three years later he U-turned from ankle surgery, but was stuck in the pits of the dressing room as he ran drinks and sponges in nine consecutive Tests. He came back for the 2005 Ashes series and earned plaudits for his brave performances with bat and ball. He nearly pulled off a win for Australia with a battling 43 at Edgbaston, but his partner-in-crime Michael Kasprowicz fell at the contentious final hurdle. Andrew Flintoff's consoling of Lee seconds after the catch was 2005's defining image.

Less than a year later the duet with Kasprowicz reformed and a nail-biting win over South Africa eased the pain of the previous near-miss. It had been an important summer as he assumed the role of attack leader when McGrath first struggled for impact and then pulled out of tours to South Africa and Bangladesh. Lee moved into the position he had craved since crashing on to the Test scene with 5 for 47 against India, and celebrated 89 international wickets for the season with lawnmower, hunting and leaping celebrations. Now Lee has to reprove he deserves the full-time paternal responsibilities following his difficulties in 2008-09

 

 

Ben Laughlin - Australia

Full name : Ben Laughlin

Born October : 3, 1982, Box Hill, Victoria

Current age : 27 years

Major teams : Australia, Queensland, Queensland Academy of Sport

Batting style : Right-hand bat

Bowling style : Right-arm fast-medium

Relation Father :  TJ Laughlin

Profile

Ben Laughlin started the 2008-09 season hoping for a few games with the Bulls and ended it with tours to South Africa and the United Arab Emirates with the Australian limited-overs team. A fast-medium bowler, Laughlin was promoted during the side's run of injuries to its quicks and appeared in five ODIs and a Twenty20. He neither starred nor failed, picking up some useful wickets while learning the difference between operating against state and international batsmen. However, he was not chosen for the World Twenty20 squad or given a national contract.

Strong performances on the state scene during his first year on a contract earned the elevation. In his debut FR Cup campaign he featured in all 11 games and collected 23 wickets, a haul highlighted by his 6 for 23 against New South Wales in Cairns, the third-best figures in Australian domestic one-dayers. There was also a vital return of 3 for 25 in the final success as Queensland came from behind to beat Victoria. In three Sheffield Shield games, including the drawn decider, he had less success.

Laughlin, whose father Trevor played three Tests in the late 1970s, was called on in the final Pura Cup match of the 2007-08 season and earned the wicket of Cameron White in the loss to Victoria. In the previous three years Laughlin was outstanding in the Brisbane grade competition, collecting 126 breakthroughs, including 50 in 2006-07. Stress fractures hampered him earlier in his career, but he overcame the problem and performed strongly for the QAS. Laughlin, a carpenter, relies on an outswinger and changes of pace, attributes that worked well for his former mentor Adam Dale.

 

 

Simon Katich - Australia

Full nameSimon Mathew Katich

Born : August 21, 1975, Middle Swan, Western Australia

Current age : 34 years

Major teams : Australia, Derbyshire, Durham, Hampshire, Kings XI Punjab, New South Wales, Western Australia, Yorkshire

Nickname : Kat

Playing role : Batsman

Batting style: Left-hand bat

Bowling style : Slow left-arm chinaman

Height : 1.82 m

Profile

There were several outstanding achievements in Simon Katich's 2007-08, as he broke the record for most runs in a Pura Cup season, captained New South Wales to the first-class title and registered his highest score, along the way plundering nearly 200 in a session. The greatest individual honour came after the summer had finished and he was recalled to the Test squad for the tour of the West Indies. After a nervous first Test in Jamaica, Katich recovered superbly to finish the series with 113, 36 and 157. In 15 matches after his recall he became one of the side's most dependable men, scoring five centuries and averaging more than 50 as the senior opener. He deserved the fulfilling return.

It was an adventure that seemed impossible when he lost his Cricket Australia contract in the 2007 off-season and signed a five-year deal with the Blues. But the selectors could not ignore his 1506 Pura Cup runs at 94.12, which surpassed the previous best in a season, Michael Bevan's 1464 at Tasmania in 2004-05. Katich was named Pura Cup Player of the Year and was the Man of the Match in the final victory after scoring 86 and 92. His campaign featured five centuries, including 306 against Queensland, the highest first-class score at the SCG since Don Bradman made 452 in 1929-30. Unbelievably, 184 of Katich's total came in an extended 150-minute post-lunch session.

Rather than trying to prove anything to the Australia selectors who axed him - he conceded he was struggling at the highest level and deserved to be dropped - Katich was simply enjoying batting without the expectation heaped on an international player. He had also worked on some technical issues that plagued him during 2005, when he was upset by reverse-swing in the Ashes and was bamboozled by Muttiah Muralitharan in the Super Series. Katich was soon downgraded to an ODI role only, but he could not hold down that spot as his top-order wariness was overshadowed by his fellow opener Adam Gilchrist. He was overlooked for the World Cup squad that triumphed in the Caribbean and had to settle for 711 Pura Cup runs at 64.63 in 2006-07 and leading the Blues to a final loss.

Ever since he was included in Western Australia's state squad in 1994-95 he looked destined for bigger things. His talents were on show in 1998-99 when he amassed 1039 first-class runs, including 115 in the final won by Western Australia, and earned a spot on the tour to Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe. Katich was on the brink of a Test call-up in Sri Lanka when he contracted chicken pox and was quarantined. Unable to free himself of a virus that overcame him in the wake of that illness, he was forced to sit out much of the 1999-2000 domestic summer, but after a stellar 2000-01 - 1282 first-class runs and a century against every state - he was picked for the 2001 Ashes tour.

Replacing the injured Steve Waugh for the fourth Test, he made 15 and 0 not out on debut and had to wait two years for an opportunity against Zimbabwe, when his occasional left-arm chinaman bowling was surprisingly effective. He took 6 for 65 in the second innings in Sydney, which became his home when he switched to New South Wales and accepted the captaincy. Returning to the SCG later in the summer against India, he registered his maiden Test century and helped to ensure Waugh's final Test ended in a draw instead of a loss. He was in and out of the side in the next couple of years but his vicious first-class assault in 2007-08 helped him regain more Test recognition.

 

 

Mitchell Johnson - Australia

Full name : Mitchell Guy Johnson

Born : November 2, 1981, Townsville, Queensland

Current age : 27 years

Major teams : Australia, Queensland

Nickname : Midge, Notch

Batting style : Left-hand bat

Bowling style : Left-arm fast

Height : 1.89 m

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