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Personal Information

Full Name Michael Gwyl Bevan
Born May 8, 1970 Belconnen
Age 54 Years, 7 Months, 20 Days
National Side Australia
Batting Style Left Handed
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Sport Cricket

Ranking

Test ODI T20
Batting - -
Bowling - -

Man of the Match

Test ODI T20 World Cup CL
1 12 0

Career Information

Teams Played Australia, Chennai Superstars, South Australia, Tasmania, Australia A, Kent, Leicestershire, Yorkshire, New South Wales, Australia Under-19, Sussex, Australian XI
Career Span

Michael Gwyl Bevan Profile

Michael Gwyl Bevan Overall Stats

Batting & Fielding Performance

M I N/O R HS 100s 50s 4s 6s AVG S/R CT ST Ducks R/O
Test
18 30 3 785 91 v PAK 0 6 89 1 29.07 39.80 8 0
ODI
232 196 67 6912 108* v ENG 6 46 450 21 53.58 74.16 69 0
World Cup
26 18 6 537 74* v ENG 0 5 35 5 44.75 64.38 6 0

Bowling Performance

I O M R W Best 3s 5s AVG E/R S/R Mtc
Test
21 214.1 30 703 29 6/82 v WI 2 1 24.24 3.28 44.31
ODI
67 327.4 4 1655 36 3/36 v PAK 2 0 45.97 5.05 54.61
World Cup
10 50 2 237 4 2/35 v KEN 0 0 59.25 4.74 75.00

Michael Gwyl Bevan Profile

Michael Bevan’s name will be forever etched in the pages of Australian cricket history. His ability to pick gaps, quick and aggressive running between the wickets, dubbed him as the best limited-overs batsman in the world. A trendy left-handed batsman and left-arm chinaman spin bowler, Bevan contributed extensively to the middle-order.

"Bevo”, as he is nicknamed, debuted in first-class cricket in 1989-90 for South Australia, but played most of his domestic cricket for New South Wales, before moving to Tasmania at the end of his career. He has also represented Yorkshire, Kent, Leicestershire and Sussex in England.

The “Pyjama Picasso” made his ODI debut for Australia in 1994. Known as “The Finisher”, he would often come to the team’s rescue after a top-order collapse. Batting at number four, he played 232 matches for his team, with a classic average of 53.58. Bevan’s Test career was relatively short-lived and less successful than his ODI career. He was highly susceptible to short-pitched deliveries and hence, could not succeed in the longer version of the game. However, his left-arm chinaman spin helped him as an all-rounder in the team.

In 2007, Bevan retired from all forms of international cricket following a series of injuries. Later in 2011, he was appointed as the coach of the Kings XI Punjab, a franchise of the IPL.

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