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Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff MBE (born 6 December 1977), is an English television and radio presenter and former international cricketer.Flintoff played all forms of the game and was one of the sport's leading all-rounders, a fast bowler, middle-order batsman and slip fielder.
Shakib Al Hasan is considered one of the best all-rounders in recent time. He is the only all-rounder in history of the game to score more than 14000 runs and take over 700 wickets. George Giffen (1886, 1893 and 1896) and Warwick Armstrong (1905, 1909 and 1921) achieved the double in an English season three times, the most by members of touring ...
The Blue Team was captained by retired Lancashire and England cricketer Freddie Flintoff for the first 16 series. [3] Flintoff was replaced by a series of guest captains starting from series 17. [4] For the first four series Flintoff was joined by then Sky Sports F1 presenter Georgie Thompson.
Inside the marquee, with Flintoff leading a training session, is the result of a multi-year project. Not the players, but the pitches – fast, bouncy and un-English surfaces.
We ranked the 50 best players throughout the history of professional sports who went a career without relocating.
An ODI differs from a Test match in that the number of overs per team is limited, and that each team has only one innings. The ICC World XI has played four matches, one for the 2005 World Cricket Tsunami Appeal (where the World XI was made up of the best non-Asian players), and three in the 2005 ICC Super Series (where the World XI was made up ...
averages and point differentials. Teams with the most symbols have the best chances at making deep runs. Keep in mind that very few teams have won it all with young point guards and/or low scoring post players. Be considerate of free throw percentages as teams rarely make the second weekend laying bricks at the line. Also, no team has ever won the
Key returned to England for two matches with Kent's second team, before joining up with England's Under-19s for a youth Test series against Zimbabwe's under-19s. In the three Test series, Key made two half-centuries, earning himself a place in the squad for the 1998 Under-19 Cricket World Cup in South Africa.