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Graham Thorpe

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Full Name
  
Graham Paul Thorpe

Born
  
(
1969-08-01
) 1 August 1969 (age 54)

Birth Place
  
Farnham, Surrey, England

Role
  
Middle-order batsman

Name
  
Graham Thorpe

Spouse
  
Nicky Thorpe

Nickname
  
Thorpey

National team
  
England

Batting style
  
Left-handed

Bowling style
  
Right arm medium

Graham Thorpe (Cricketer)
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 100 82 341 354
Runs scored 6744 2380 21937 10871
Batting average 44.66 37.18 45.04 39.67
100s/50s 16/39 0/21 49/122 9/80
Top score * 89 * *
Balls bowled 138 120 2387 721
Wickets 0 2 26 16
Bowling average 48.50 53.00 40.56
5 wickets in innings 0 0
10 wickets in match n/a n/a
Best bowling 2/15 4/40 3/21
Catches/stumpings 105/– 42/– 290/– 168/–

Graham Paul Thorpe MBE (born 1 August 1969) is a former English cricketer who played for Surrey and England. A left-handed middle-order batsman and slip fielder, he appeared in exactly 100 Test matches.

Contents

Graham thorpe answers questions from cricket fans


Early life

Thorpe was born in Farnham, Surrey, in August 1969. Naturally right-handed, when he was six years old Thorpe changed his stance to make it harder for his two elder brothers to get him out and because the boundary in his garden was shorter on the leg-side for a left-hander.

Career

Graham Thorpe (Cricketer) playing cricket

Thorpe made his debut for Surrey in 1988, and his international debut in 1993. He scored a century (114 not out) in the second innings of his debut Test match, against Australia at Trent Bridge. Developing into a very highly regarded player, he was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1998. Thorpe hit only one four in his hundred against Pakistan at Lahore in November 2000. It also contained seven threes, 12 twos and 51 singles. He hit another boundary before being dismissed for 118 from 301 balls. This is among the fewest ever boundaries in a Test century. However, Thorpe was also a highly capable stroke-maker: during his highest Test score, 200 not out off 231 balls against New Zealand at Christchurch in 2002, he and Andrew Flintoff compiled a partnership of 281 in 51 overs.

During the 2002 season, Thorpe had marital difficulties which were well publicised in several tabloid newspapers, and this seriously affected his play and his focus on the game. Seemingly disillusioned with constant touring away from his family, he announced his retirement from the one-day game and changed his mind several times on whether to tour Australia, eventually pulling out of the tour entirely. However, in 2003 Thorpe, with family problems put to one side, returned to the England team in the fifth Test against South Africa at his home ground of The Oval, where he was warmly welcomed as a local hero with a standing ovation. Thorpe scored an excellent 124 as England won the match to force an unlikely series draw, and remained in the side for series victories against Bangladesh away and at home, against the West Indies away and at home, against New Zealand at home, and in South Africa. He played his hundredth and final Test against Bangladesh in June 2005; in the two years between his comeback and his retirement he scored 1635 Test runs at an average of 56.37.

Retirement

Thorpe announced his retirement from Test cricket after the England selectors chose Kevin Pietersen instead of him for the first Test of The Ashes in July 2005. Thorpe averaged over 49.00 against Australia, but given the impending back complaint and 2005/2006 winter tour unavailability the selectors felt the decision to replace Thorpe with Pietersen the correct one. After announcing the squad England chairman of selectors David Graveney described it as "the most difficult decision that I have been party to in my time as a selector". Thorpe played another two months with Surrey before following up his test retirement with his retirement from domestic cricket in August 2005. He served New South Wales as a batting coach in two seasons starting in 2005/6 and played for UTS-Balmain in the Sydney First Grade competition. Thorpe was named as assistant coach of New South Wales in 2007 replacing Matthew Mott who was promoted to the position of coach.

References

Graham Thorpe Wikipedia