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Personal Information

Full Name Geoffrey Francis Lawson
Born December 7, 1957 Wagga Wagga, New South Wales
Age 67 Years, 0 Months, 20 Days
National Side Australia
Batting Style Right Handed
Bowling Right-arm fast
Sport Cricket

Ranking

Test ODI T20
Batting - -
Bowling - -

Man of the Match

Test ODI T20 World Cup CL
5 1 0

Career Information

Teams Played Australia
Career Span

Geoffrey Francis Lawson Profile

Geoffrey Francis Lawson Overall Stats

Batting & Fielding Performance

M I N/O R HS 100s 50s 4s 6s AVG S/R CT ST Ducks R/O
Test
46 68 12 894 74 v ENG 0 4 100 1 15.96 - 10 0
ODI
79 52 18 378 33* v ENG 0 0 19 4 11.11 75.60 18 0
World Cup
4 4 0 24 16 v IND 0 0 2 0 6.00 68.57 - -

Bowling Performance

I O M R W Best 3s 5s AVG E/R S/R Mtc
Test
78 1853 386 5501 180 8/112 v WI 13 11 30.56 2.96 61.76
ODI
79 709.5 94 2592 88 4/26 v ENG 8 0 29.45 3.65 48.39
World Cup
4 38 7 127 5 3/29 v WI 1 0 25.40 3.34 45.60

Geoffrey Francis Lawson Profile

Geoffrey Francis Lawson was a tall, right-arm fast bowler from Australia who also represented New South Wales at the domestic level.

Lawson captained NSW from 1988 to 1992 and led the team to the Sheffield Shield title of 1991-92, which was his final first-class game. Such was his captaincy that it inspired some of the greatest future Australian captains, Mark Taylor and Steve Waugh, his NSW colleagues.

Fondly known as “Henry” after the Australian poet, Lawson first attracted eyeballs on the international front in 1978-79 when he hit Geoffrey Boycott with a series of bouncers. Tall and lively, he was Australia’s leading fast bowler for a brief period, until injury came knocking. He established himself as the leading bowler in Australia’s tour of England in 1982. Later, replacing injured Dennis Lillee, he spearheaded the bowling attack in the Ashes series of 1982-83 with 34 wickets at an average of 20.20, for which he was adjudged “Player of the series”.

In 2007, Lawson was named coach of the Pakistan cricket team for a period of 2 years. During his tenure, Pakistan reached the finals of the ICC World Twenty20. Later, in 2011, he was selected to coach the now defunct franchise of Kochi Tuskers Kerala in the IPL.

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