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Owais Shah
اویس شاہ
Personal information
Full name Owais Alam Shah
Born 22 October 1978 (1978-10-22) (age 31)
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Nickname Ace
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm off break
Role Batsman
International information
National side England
Test debut (cap 632) 18 March 2006 v India
Last Test 6 March 2009 v West Indies
ODI debut (cap 163) 10 June 2001 v Australia
Last ODI 2 October 2009 v Australia
ODI shirt no. 3 (prev. 69)
Domestic team information
Years Team
1996–present Middlesex
2009–present Delhi Daredevils
2002–2008 MCC
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 6 71 209 311
Runs scored 269 1,834 13,717 8,879
Batting average 26.90 30.56 42.46 34.41
100s/50s 0/2 1/12 37/69 12/56
Top score 88 107* 203 134
Balls bowled 30 193 1,974 852
Wickets 0 7 22 26
Bowling average 26.28 61.63 31.69
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 0/12 3/15 3/33 4/11
Catches/stumpings 2/– 21/– 160/– 103/–
Source: CricketArchive, 3 October 2009

Owais Alam Shah (Urdu: اویس عالم شاہ) (born 22 October 1978 in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan) is a cricketer who plays for Middlesex County Cricket Club, Indian Premier League team Delhi Daredevils and has appeared for England in a number of One Day Internationals and four Test matches. Success at first class level from a young age for Middlesex led to regular appearances in the England ODI team, along with growing calls for him to become a regular Test match batsman after a strong 88 on debut in 2006 and the opening of a Test number three spot following the retirement of Michael Vaughan and the dropping of Ian Bell. Although Shah remains a regular ODI batsman, and is signed to the Delhi Daredevils in India, his Test appearances were limited to a winter tour of the West Indies in 2008/09, where he failed to make a strong impression and was out-shone by Ravi Bopara.

Contents

[edit] Early career

A cricketing prodigy as an adolescent,[1] Owais Shah began his career playing cricket for Wycombe House Cricket Club, breaking a number of club records. He was a complete all rounder, a classy yet destructive batsman and one of the quickest bowlers in the county for his age.[citation needed] Owais scored a league 154 for the senior first XI when aged only 12. He won numerous awards for the club including the Ken Barrington National Cup. His maturity at such a young age allowed him to be fast tracked through both the England Youth and Middlesex Cricket County System. He made his first-class debut at age 17 in 1996 and won the NBC Denis Compton Award in 1997. In early 1998 he captained England to victory in the Under 19's World Cup in South Africa, and the following season he was captain of the England Under-19 cricket team for their "Test" match series at home against Pakistan. Notable achievements at a young age led some to label him as the finest young English batting talent in 20 years,[citation needed] and his selection for the England 'A' team that toured Australia in late 1996 at the age of 17 suggested he was on the verge of a call-up to England's Test side.[2] However, two poor seasons followed, and despite being capped in 2000, by the end of that season—in which he made under 500 first-class runs—he could no longer command a place in the Middlesex first team. However, he made a return to form in 2001, averaging 41.60 and making his ODI debut against Australia at Bristol. Later that summer, he made 62 against Pakistan, and in 2001 also, Shah was named by the Cricket Writers' Club as their Young Cricketer of the Year. Owais attended Isleworth and Syon School for Boys, Lampton School (Hounslow) for his A Levels and is also a university graduate.

[edit] Return to international cricket

Despite a fairly solid start to his international career, however, Shah could not produce the required consistency of form, making just one more fifty in ten innings from 2001/02 to 2002/03. He also suffered from a perception that his fielding was below par, something close to unforgivable in the modern one-day game, and he was dropped from the England side without having had a chance at Test cricket. In 2004, a year of success with the bat (1,336 runs at 53.44) was tempered by the loss of his Middlesex captaincy in mid-season after some poor results.

2005 brought much-improved returns, as he was top-scorer of the First Division of the County Championship with two weeks left to play, having made 1578 runs at an average of 65.75. At the end of the county season in September, Shah was being talked of as a possibility for England's winter tours of Pakistan and India.

He was selected for the England 'A' team tour of the West Indies that winter, but was called up to the squad for the first-team tour of India after England suffered several injuries. He made his Test debut in the third Test at Mumbai on 18 March 2006, making 88 in his first Test innings.

He returned to the England Test squad, after 15 months out, for the first Test match against the West Indies at his home ground of Lord's; however, he scored 6 and 4 in the two innings, in an otherwise productive England batting lineup. He was dropped from the squad for the second Test following captain Michael Vaughan's return to fitness.[3]

Shah was, however, brought back for the ODI series, including two Twenty20 internationals. While making little contribution with the bat in the first match, in which England were defeated, Shah hit a match winning 55 off 35 deliveries in the second, with England drawing the Twenty20 series 1-1.[4] He was later made man of the match. He has changed his game somewhat in recent times, and is not the classical batsman that he was in his early years; however, he still possesses a wide range of shots, with the pull shot and the fierce slap through extra cover being the most prominent.[5]

His maiden ODI century came against India at The Oval on 5 September 2007, when he made 107* off 95 balls. Later in the same match, he bowled in an ODI for the first time, and with his 17th delivery, took his first ODI wicket, the victim being the Indian captain Rahul Dravid. Shah toured Sri Lanka with England in late 2007, and then played in the ODI series against New Zealand in early 2008. While he had a disappointing ODI series, he top-scored with 96 in the first warm-up match to enhance his claims to the Test squad.[6]

In July 2008 he helped Middlesex win the Twenty20 Cup with a match winning innings in the final with 75 runs scored off just 35 balls, the highlight of which was three successive sixes over mid-wicket off Kent off-spinner James Tredwell.

On February 16 2009, in the third Test vs. West Indies, Owais Shah reached 13,000 first class runs.

He had a poor ODI series against Australia in 2009, failing to record a score of higher than 44 in all seven matches. Going into the ICC Champions Trophy he was under severe pressure for his place, but scored another 44 in the opening match against Sri-Lanka, before a match-winning 98 in the second group game against hosts South Africa, going some of the way to silencing the doubters.

He was rewarded with a new contract by the ECB also in 2009 after another solid season at both county and international level.

[edit] Indian Premier League

With England players free to participate in the second season of the Indian Premier League, Owais Shah was signed by the Delhi Daredevils for $275,000 during their second player auction.

[edit] Wellington Firebirds

On 31 August 2009 it was announced that the Wellington Firebirds had signed Shah for their domestic Twenty20 competition in December 2009. He was recommended by ex-team-mate and former Middlesex captain Stephen Fleming.[7]

[edit] Statistics

Owais Shah's One Day International Centuries
Runs Match Against Venue City/Country Year
[1] 107* 25 India The Oval London, England 2007

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] See also




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