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Personal Information

Full Name Paul David Collingwood
Born May 26, 1976 Shotley Bridge, Co Durham
Age 48 Years, 5 Months, 28 Days
National Side England
Batting Style Right Handed
Bowling Right-arm medium
Sport Cricket

Ranking

Test ODI T20
Batting - - -
Bowling - - -

Man of the Match

Test ODI T20 World Cup CL
0 15 2 2 0

Career Information

Teams Played England, Durham, England XI, Rest of the World, Delhi Capitals, Rajasthan Royals, Perth Scorchers, Impi, Marylebone Cricket Club, World XI
Career Span

Paul David Collingwood Profile

Paul David Collingwood Overall Stats

Batting & Fielding Performance

M I N/O R HS 100s 50s 4s 6s AVG S/R CT ST Ducks R/O
Test
68 115 10 4259 206 v AUS 10 20 470 24 40.56 46.44 96 0
ODI
197 181 37 5092 120* v AUS 5 26 365 74 35.36 76.98 108 0
World Cup
18 18 6 474 90 v IRE 0 3 37 6 39.50 78.47 13 0
T20I
36 33 2 583 79 v WI 0 3 37 24 18.80 127.01 15 0
IPL
8 7 2 203 75* v RCB 0 3 9 13 40.60 130.12 4 0
CL
1 1 0 38 38 v AUC 0 0 5 0 38.00 140.74 - -

Bowling Performance

I O M R W Best 3s 5s AVG E/R S/R Mtc
Test
59 317.3 51 1018 17 3/23 v NZ 1 0 59.88 3.20 112.05
ODI
151 864.2 14 4294 111 6/31 v BAN 4 1 38.68 4.96 46.72
World Cup
14 85 0 423 8 2/33 v KEN 0 0 52.87 4.97 63.75
T20I
20 39 0 347 16 4/22 v SL 0 0 21.68 8.89 14.62
IPL
6 14.5 0 101 5 2/19 v KXIP 0 0 20.20 6.80 17.80
CL
1 1 0 14 0 0/14 v AUC 0 0 - 14.00 -

Paul David Collingwood Profile

Cited as the heir to the legendary Jonty Rhodes, Paul Collingwood embodies superior work-ethic, batting tenacity, mesmerizing fielding ability, and most importantly, a sense of enjoyment.

It took a while before Collingwood showed sparks of promise. Following his ODI debut against Pakistan in 2001, Collingwood’s first five outings averaged a mere 11.2. Selector- persistence eventually paid off when he notched 3 half-centuries in his next five innings. Combination of selective stroke-play and an ability to rotate strike to keep the scoreboard ticking often saw him play the sheet anchor role. His elusive Test debut came during the end of 2003 - after extended stints as England’s 12th man owing to his fielding ability - replacing flu-afflicted skipper Nasser Hussain in Galle during England’s trip to Sri Lanka. Although he scored a mere 37 in two innings with the bat, his fielding caught the eye once again when he held a total of 5 catches and caused a run-out. By 2005, Collingwood was an ODI regular and went on to become England’s most successful batsman by becoming the first-ever Englishman to cross the 5000-run mark; also their highest run-getter for a long, long time.

During the Ashes later that year, he replaced the injured Simon Jones in the final Test. He bowled some vital overs for a draw, resulting in a historic triumph for England against their old foes. More opportunities came, that Collingwood grabbed, the highlight being a 206 against Australia in Adelaide. His performances aided sub-continent success and in 2007 the same year, he became Michael Vaughan’s ODI successor. Despite mixed results, in 2008, he relinquished captaincy citing inability to enjoy the game as the reason. Still, his Test form kept improving, reflecting in England’s 2009 Ashes retention. That year, Collingwood replaced Alec Stewart as England’s most-capped ODI player.

In 2010, skipper “Colly” led the England side to their first-ever global success in the ICC World Twenty20, hitting the winning boundary against Australia. The Test retirement came on a high note, as England regained the 2010-11 Ashes and Collingwood bid adieu with pride. Eventually, the T20I captaincy was taken over by team-mate Stuart Broad.

Despite his sudden exit from the international arena, especially ODIs and T20Is, Collingwood continued to ply his trade for his domestic county, Durham. In 2011, the veteran was signed up by the Perth Scorchers for the inaugural Big Bash League.

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