Paul Collingwood
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Paul David Collingwood | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Shotley Bridge, County Durham, England | 26 May 1976|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nickname | Colly, Brigadier Block | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Batting | Right-handed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Right-arm medium | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Role | All-rounder | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
International information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
National side |
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Test debut (cap 622) | 2 December 2003 v Sri Lanka | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last Test | 3 January 2011 v Australia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ODI debut (cap 162) | 7 June 2001 v Pakistan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last ODI | 11 March 2011 v Bangladesh | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ODI shirt no. | 5 (previously 50) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
T20I debut (cap 1) | 13 June 2005 v Australia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last T20I | 13 September 2017 v Pakistan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
T20I shirt no. | 5 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Domestic team information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years | Team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1995–2018 | Impi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career statistics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: ESPNcricinfo, 27 September 2018 |
Paul David Collingwood
He captained his county club, Durham County Cricket Club, for the final six seasons of his career.[1][2][3] A batting all-rounder, whose batting combined natural strokeplay with great tenacity, Collingwood also bowled reliable medium pace. Described as a "natural athlete", he was regarded as one of the finest fielders of his time, usually fielding at backward point or at third or fourth slip in Tests; he also deputised as wicket-keeper for England.[1][4][5][6]
His
He announced his retirement from Test cricket in January 2011, during the fifth Test of the 2010–11 Ashes series.[15] He finished on a high, becoming a three-times Ashes winner as England won a series in Australia for the first time in 24 years, with three innings victories contributing to a 3–1 win. He retired from first-class and List A cricket in September 2018.[16]
Having retired from playing, Collingwood moved into coaching. He was part of the coaching team for Scotland and for Durham CCC, before joining the staff of the England Cricket Team in 2014 as a limited-overs specialist and fielding coach. In February 2022, he was named interim head coach of the men's England cricket team.
Early and personal life
Collingwood was born and brought up in Shotley Bridge, near Consett, County Durham, by parents David and Janet,[17][18] along with his elder brother Peter, and was educated at Blackfyne Comprehensive School, now known as Consett Academy.[1][19] Introduced to cricket "on the playing fields of Blackfyne Comprehensive School", Paul was able to "force his way into Shotley Bridge's Under–13s team at the age of just nine".[20][21]
As a teenager, his father, who still remains a member of the Shotley Bridge Cricket Club,[18] persuaded him to give up football and concentrate on cricket.[22] Collingwood still makes regular visits to his old cricket club: "...he is a brilliant role model for the kids and his success is an inspiration to follow...".[23]
He currently lives in Northumberland, divorced from former wife Vicky, whom he married in February 2005 in Cape Town, South Africa, and their three daughters Shannon (born September 2006),[24] Keira (born 24 February 2008),[25] and Hannah Mae (born 9 February 2011). He is a big fan of
Domestic career
County cricket
Paul Collingwood signed for
Paul had talent... but I don't think he had any more [talent] than a number of lads who came through with him at the time...He had terrible luck with his back, he missed an awful lot of cricket, and a lesser character could well have decided to call it a day. To his credit, Paul came back and worked harder than he'd ever done before. He couldn't bowl as much at the start, so he did an awful lot more batting and, straight away, there were obvious signs of talent there. By the time he forced his way into the Under-19 team he was batting at the top of the order and the following year he was offered a professional contract.
Collingwood made his first–class debut against Northamptonshire in 1996, at Durham's Riverside Ground. He made an immediate impression by taking the wicket of former England all-rounder David Capel with his first ball, and scoring 91 in his first innings.[26] However, his early years as a first-class player were characterised by steady and relatively modest performances with bat and ball: in each season from 1996 to 2000, his batting average was between 20 and 30 and his bowling average was between 30 and 60.[27][28]
His breakthrough began in 2000, when he was voted Player of the Year by the Durham members, particularly for his one-day efforts.[17] His form varied following a back injury, but he hit his stride in 2001, when he excelled both in the County Championship and in the one-day game.[17] In the six English seasons from 2001, Collingwood has exceeded a batting average of 40 four times and achieved a bowling average of less than 40 on three occasions.[27][28]
Recognising his need to improve his all-round game Collingwood took himself off to Australia for their 2000–01 season where he played for the long-established Richmond Cricket Club in the tough Melbourne Premier League. At the end of the season Collingwood was awarded the prestigious Jack Ryder Medal for the best player in the league (an award he shared), and was the first – and so far only – Richmond player to ever receive it.
Durham only achieved first-class status in 1992.
This stood in marked contrast to the previous season, when Collingwood was available to Durham for four of the five Tests, before his England recall for the final Ashes Test; he "pushed his claims for a Test recall with three centuries in four innings in the Frizzell County Championship."[17] In just 13 appearances in the County Championship in that 2005 season, Collingwood scored 1103 runs and took 21 wickets, averaging 55.15 and 31.90 respectively.[32]
In the traditional reward for services to a county, Durham awarded Collingwood a
Indian Premier League
With England players free to participate in the
International career
England debut
Collingwood's form for Durham in 2001 earned him a call-up to the England
Collingwood played in all seven matches of the 2002 NatWest Series against India and Sri Lanka, ending on the losing side in the final to India.[45] Neither his batting nor bowling during this series were particularly impressive, averaging less than 24 with the bat and taking only five wickets in the series,[46] but he went on to make his first ODI century in the 2002/2003 VB Series victory against Sri Lanka at the WACA.[47] While this performance cemented his position in the England one–day setup, he dislocated his right shoulder while fielding in a pre–season county friendly against Lancashire and was forced to miss most of the 2003 season.[48] Nevertheless, he was awarded a 12-month ECB contract when the winter touring squads were announced for Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. With Nasser Hussain suffering from a bout of 'flu,[49] Collingwood made his Test debut against the Sri Lankans in the First Test at Galle in December 2003,[9][17] becoming the 622nd Englishman to play Test cricket.[50] It was during this game that he established his position as one of the best English fielders, with five catches and a run-out in the drawn match.[9] Since then his performances in the field have drawn comparisons with South African specialist fielder, Jonty Rhodes.[1]
With the selection of pace bowler
He retained his place in England's one-day side throughout the summer of 2004 despite a knee injury, and scored an unbeaten 79 in the second match of the NatWest Challenge against India at The Oval, with England winning the series 2–1.[53] Collingwood was also England's second highest run-scorer in the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy, scoring 141 runs at an average of 70.5,[54] which included an unbeaten 80 in the opening game against Zimbabwe.[55] He played in all 11 ODIs against Zimbabwe and South Africa,[56][57] and was then named in the England Development Squad in May 2005,[58] and the 14-man squad for the NatWest Series against Bangladesh and Australia and the NatWest International Twenty20 against Australia that summer.[59]
Ashes 2005
On 21 June 2005, playing for England against Bangladesh at Trent Bridge, Collingwood scored 112 not out from 86 balls and then took six wickets for 31 runs.[60] These were the best–ever bowling figures by an Englishman in an ODI,[61] and made Collingwood the first player to score a century and take six wickets in an ODI.[62] This performance surpassed the previous best all–round ODI performance, that of Viv Richards, who scored a hundred and took five wickets against New Zealand in Dunedin in the 1986/1987 season.[63] Another highlight that was produced that same series was a stunning mid-air catch off the bowling of Steve Harmison to dismiss Matthew Hayden during the Natwest Series ODI at Bristol.[64] This catch was included in BBC Sport's list of "Classic catches" in cricket.[65]
Collingwood also played in England's inaugural Twenty20 International match, held at the Rose Bowl, where a useful contribution of 49 and the wickets of Brett Lee and Jason Gillespie helped jump-start England on its pursuit of the Ashes, with 100-run defeat of Australia.[66]
Collingwood was selected for the Test squad at the outset of
Success in Pakistan and India
Following the successful Ashes campaign in 2005, Collingwood was selected to tour with England to Pakistan and India in 2005–06. He played in the First Test in against Pakistan in Multan in 2005, but scored only 13 runs in his two innings and took no wickets.[70] He was dropped for the Second Test as Michael Vaughan returned,[71] but came back into the team for the Third Test against Pakistan when the top–order was reshuffled after Andrew Strauss returned to England for the birth of his first child.[72] Despite Collingwood making his maiden Test 50 and following it with another in the second innings,[73] England lost the match and consequently the three-match series 2–0.[74] In the ODI series, he and Durham teammates Liam Plunkett and Steve Harmison accounted for the majority of the wickets taken by England, through a combination of their bowling and fielding.[75]
Following his performance in Pakistan, Collingwood was called into the England team for the First Test against India in March 2006 after injury and illness respectively to Vaughan and Marcus Trescothick.[76] Collingwood justified his position in the team with a magnificent 134 not out in the first innings on 2 March 2006, his first Test century.[77] Collingwood thus became the first Durham player to make a Test century for England.[78] Following this innings, The Times, which had been among the critics of Collingwood's MBE, ran the headline, "MBE? Give this man a knighthood!"[79]
Sri Lanka and Pakistan in 2006
Collingwood kept his place for the first three Tests against Sri Lanka in the summer of 2006.[80] Uncharacteristically, he dropped two catches during the First Test at Lord's,[81][82] but he scored an unbeaten half-century.[83] He went on to make up for the dropped catches in the Second Test at Edgbaston, where he took five catches in two innings while playing his usual batting style as foil (with Andrew Flintoff) to Kevin Pietersen's 142 in the first innings.[84] In the subsequent Twenty20 International match against Sri Lanka, he took 4–22, the best bowling record in Twenty20 Internationals, but still ended on the losing side.[85]
He then followed this up with an important innings in the First Test against Pakistan later that summer, scoring his second Test century.[86] On this occasion he was the dominant partner, batting for most of his innings with rookie Alastair Cook. When Cook departed, he continued with Ian Bell to complete his 150 before at last being removed by Danish Kaneria for 186.[87] This score proved to be England's highest of the series.[88]
Collingwood took his first Test
Ashes 2006/07
Following a successful summer, Collingwood was selected later in 2006 for both the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy squad and Ashes touring party.[92][93] However, after two lacklustre defeats to India and Australia,[94][95] critics such as Geoffrey Boycott and some fans began to question the coaching staff's placement of him in the batting order.[96]
The return of Andrew Flintoff following an injury would reignite the ongoing debate about which two of Cook, Bell and Collingwood should be included in the team, with many speculating that Collingwood would be the man to miss out.[97] With the sudden departure of Marcus Trescothick from the tour just over a week before the First Test, the debate was settled for the time being.[97]
The first ball of the First Test, at the
England fared no better in the Third and Fourth Tests, losing them both, with Collingwood picking up only 60 with the bat in his four innings.[107][108] During the Fifth Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground in January 2007, Australia's Shane Warne revived the controversy of Collingwood's MBE with clearly audible "sledging" at Collingwood's expense.[109] Collingwood's performance during this Test was mediocre, scoring 27 and 17 with the bat and not being called upon to bowl a single ball, as Australia won comfortably by ten wickets.[110]
Despite the series ending with a 5–0 whitewash by Australia, Collingwood finished the series ranked 14th in the LG ICC World Rankings for Test batsmen.[111]
The
World Cup 2007
Flush with confidence and in form from the tri-series victory, Collingwood and the English arrived in the Caribbean with high hopes. However, two unimpressive performances by the team during the warm-up matches against Bermuda[122] and Australia,[123] followed by defeat to New Zealand in the first Group match[124] dampened expectations. This was coupled with the removal of Andrew Flintoff from the vice-captaincy due to an incident of unruly behaviour,[125] which led to speculation that Collingwood would be in line for the captaincy should either Michael Vaughan or Andrew Strauss be unavailable. However, all such discussion came to nought as Vaughan remained in charge, despite the reprimanding of Flintoff.
The tournament was uneventful for Collingwood and the English, as he and the team were soon left by the wayside after qualification into the Super Eight round. Unimpressive victories over
2007 season
Collingwood and the team opened their first home Test at Lord's with a dominant first innings against the West Indies, as Collingwood's score of 111 joined Alastair Cook, Ian Bell, Matt Prior and Kevin Pietersen in becoming the first ever group of five Englishmen to score centuries at Lord's in the same match.[132][133] This was followed up during the opposition innings with his second Test wicket, that of Dwayne Bravo.[132] He then added his second century of the series at Durham's home ground at Chester-le-Street during the fourth Test, hitting 128 from 188 balls as part of a 169-run seventh-wicket stand with Prior before being bowled by Corey Collymore.[134] Following his good form in the Test series, Collingwood was named as captain of the England team for the two Twenty20 Internationals and three One-Day International games against the West Indies,[3] following previous captain Michael Vaughan's resignation of the position of captain in the format four days before.[3] Of the Twenty20s, England lost the first but won the second to draw Collingwood's first Twenty20 International series as a captain. While only contributing 27 from 24 balls in the second match,[135] Collingwood outshone the other English batsmen with his individual effort during the first, hitting 79 runs from just 41 deliveries.[136] The England team continued into the 50-over ODI matches, winning the first by a comfortable 79 under Collingwood's captaincy, though the man himself hit only 5 runs.[137] He went on to captain the one-day side against India, where they won the 1st ODI but lost an entertaining 2nd ODI at Bristol by 9 runs. After the 2nd ODI Collingwood was fined half of his match fee for a slow over rate. England eventually won the closely fought series 4–3.
Collingwood was fined £1000 during the
2008
Collingwood enjoyed a successful Test series away in New Zealand in early 2008, scoring 244 runs from three matches at 40.66, passing 50 three times.[139] His ODI game also enjoyed success – 151 runs at 50.33 with two half-centuries from his four ODI matches.[140] Collingwood had a less successful home series, however, scoring only 32 runs in three matches, 24 of these in one innings, and ended the series with an average of just 10.66.[139] His home ODI series was one of great controversy. While playing in the fourth match, he appealed controversially for the run-out of Grant Elliott after Elliott had collided with Ryan Sidebottom and injured himself. While this action drew criticism from the New Zealand dressing room, there was separate incident in this match (relating to an inadequate England over-rate), for which the ICC banned Collingwood for four limited-overs internationals. This was for a second offence in twelve months relating to England, with Collingwood as captain, completing its overs outside of the time limit. Pietersen was called upon to take over as captain.[141]
Collingwood's poor form continued into the first Test of South Africa's tour of England in July 2008, as he scored only seven runs in his first innings at Lord's,[142] although replays suggested an umpiring error, the ball hitting not his bat but only his pad.[143] He was left out of the side for the following Test at Headingley, making way for Andrew Flintoff,[144] but was recalled for the third Test at Edgbaston, scoring a century and giving England a chance of beating South Africa and levelling the series.
Half an hour after Michael Vaughan resigned from the Test captaincy, Collingwood relinquished charge of the ODI squad because it was affecting his ability to enjoy the game. Collingwood told his wife on the night before his century against South Africa that it was time to go. He later explained, "I've found the extra workload to be very difficult [...]. It's mentally tiring, and that's the top and bottom of it. I want to have a smile on my face when I'm playing cricket, and, if I'd have kept going, I'm not sure that would have been the case."[145][146]
2009
Collingwood deputised as England wicket-keeper for an injured Matt Prior in the second home Test against the West Indies in May 2009; he enjoyed the experience and was generally successful, including effecting a catch from an edge by Shivnarine Chanderpaul.[147]
Collingwood's form in the 2009 World Twenty20 tournament wasn't good: in five innings, managing just 63 runs. More important, however, was his form in the longest version of the game, in which he had attained something like a peak. Going into the 2009 Ashes, indeed, he was relishing his best-ever run in the Test side, having hoarded three centuries in his last twelve innings.[148]
In the first Test of the
In the second Test at Lord's Collingwood succumbed to a loose first-innings dismissal, chipping part-time spinner Michael Clarke to mid-on for 16 (and earning the ire of his captain Andrew Strauss, who went on to score 161); England, poised at 302 for 3 before Collingwood's dismissal, subsided to 425 all out. Nonetheless, England's seamers bowled Australia out for 215, and in the second innings Collingwood scored a measured 54, acting as foil to the aggressive strokeplay of Matt Prior (their partnership adding 86 in twelve overs) and Andrew Flintoff (51 in eight overs). As Flintoff and Graeme Swann combined to bowl England to victory, Collingwood contributed two fine slip catches.[150]
After Lord's, however, his form tailed away considerably: tormented by Australia's seam-bowling attack, his scores for the rest of the series were 13, 0 and 4, and 24 and 1, bringing his batting average for the five-match series down to 27.78. Collingwood's difficulties with the bat seemed to affect his usually high-class catching, and he dropped three chances of varying degrees of difficulty on the final day of the series at
Against South Africa in November 2009, Collingwood surpassed Alec Stewart's record of 170 ODIs to become England's most capped player.[13][151] He held the record until May 2019, when Eoin Morgan surpassed Collingwood during England's series against Pakistan.[152]
Late career and retirement
In early 2010, Collingwood led the England Twenty20 team to the
Collingwood was then rested for the home Test series against Bangladesh, but returned for the five-match ODI series against Australia in June. During the second match, he overtook Alec Stewart's record to become England's all-time leading runscorer in the format.[14][156] Following poor batting performances in the 2010–11 Ashes series, he announced his retirement from Test cricket.[157]
For his performances in 2010, he was named in the World ODI XI by the ICC.[158]
In July 2014, he played for the Rest of the World side in the Bicentenary Celebration match at Lord's.[159] In August 2017, he was named in a World XI side to play three Twenty20 International matches against Pakistan in the 2017 Independence Cup in Lahore.[160] In the 3-match series, Collingwood only played a single match.
Coaching career
After retiring from international cricket, Collingwood associated with England and Scotland cricket teams as coach and supporting staff.
Collingwood was named as Limited Overs Consultant for England in September 2015.[163] He was appointed fielding coach for the England cricket team. On 7 February 2022, it was announced that Collingwood would serve as interim head coach of the men's England cricket team for the forthcoming West Indies Test series.[164]
Honours
He was chosen as one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 2007, alongside England teammate Monty Panesar.[165] In its rationale, Wisden describes him as having become the embodiment of "the sort of cricketer who not only made the most of his ability but was also determined to keep getting better".
Achievements
Test matches
- 1,000+ Test runs in a calendar year in 2006.[166]
- England fourth-wicket partnership record against Australia – 206 in a partnership of 310 with Kevin Pietersen in 2006.[167]
- Double century against Australia in 2007 – only the third English batsman to score a double century in Australia, and the first since Wally Hammond in 1936.[103]
- First Durham player to score a Test century for England, and first to hit one at Riverside Ground.[78]
One-Day Internationals
- Best bowling figures in an ODI by an England player – 6/31 against Bangladesh in 2005.[61][168]
- Best ODI all-round performance – 6/31 and 112* against Bangladesh in 2005.[62][168]
Twenty20 Internationals
- First English cricket captain to lead a major ICC tournament-winning side.
Career performance
Test career against opponents
Batting[169] | Bowling[170] | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition | Matches | Runs | Average | High score | 100 / 50 | Runs | Wickets | Average | Best (Inns) |
Australia | 16 | 783 | 30.11 | 206 | 1 / 4 | 186 | 3 | 62.00 | 1/3 |
Bangladesh | 2 | 148 | 49.33 | 145 | 1 / 0 | 8 | 0 | – | – |
India | 8 | 597 | 45.92 | 134* | 2 / 2 | 139 | 4 | 34.75 | 2/24 |
New Zealand | 6 | 276 | 30.66 | 66 | 0 / 3 | 147 | 5 | 29.40 | 3/23 |
Pakistan | 10 | 632 | 39.50 | 186 | 1 / 3 | 180 | 1 | 180.00 | 1/33 |
South Africa | 7 | 576 | 57.60 | 135 | 1 / 4 | 118 | 0 | – | – |
Sri Lanka | 8 | 390 | 27.85 | 57 | 0 / 2 | 116 | 3 | 38.66 | 2/25 |
West Indies | 11 | 857 | 61.21 | 161 | 4 / 2 | 124 | 1 | 124.00 | 1/34 |
Overall | 68 | 4259 | 40.56 | 206 | 10 / 20 | 1018 | 17 | 59.88 | 3/23 |
ODI career against opponents
Batting[171] | Bowling[172] | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition | Matches | Runs | Average | High Score | 100 / 50 | Runs | Wickets | Average | Best |
Australia | 27 | 690 | 36.31 | 120* | 1 / 4 | 464 | 11 | 42.18 | 4/34 |
Bangladesh | 7 | 234 | 234.00 | 112* | 1 / 0 | 102 | 6 | 17.00 | 6/31 |
Canada | 1 | 62 | – | 62* | 0 / 1 | 41 | 0 | – | 0/41 |
India | 33 | 865 | 37.60 | 93 | 0 / 6 | 711 | 11 | 64.63 | 2/45 |
Ireland | 3 | 109 | 36.33 | 90 | 0 / 1 | 86 | 4 | 21.50 | 2/26 |
Kenya | 1 | 18 | – | 18* | 0 / 0 | 33 | 2 | 16.50 | 2/33 |
Namibia | 1 | 38 | 38.00 | 38 | 0 / 0 | – | – | – | – |
Netherlands | 1 | 5 | – | 5* | 0 / 0 | – | – | – | – |
New Zealand | 22 | 579 | 30.47 | 106 | 1 / 3 | 624 | 24 | 26.00 | 4/15 |
Pakistan | 13 | 315 | 31.50 | 66* | 0 / 2 | 266 | 5 | 53.20 | 2/23 |
South Africa | 14 | 318 | 39.75 | 105* | 1 / 1 | 388 | 6 | 64.66 | 2/24 |
Sri Lanka | 19 | 538 | 29.88 | 100 | 1 / 1 | 431 | 12 | 35.91 | 2/29 |
West Indies | 21 | 357 | 23.80 | 69 | 0 / 1 | 387 | 11 | 35.18 | 3/16 |
Zimbabwe | 8 | 262 | 52.40 | 80* | 0 / 3 | 233 | 7 | 33.28 | 3/16 |
Overall | 171 | 4390 | 35.98 | 120* | 5 / 23 | 3766 | 99 | 38.04 | 6/31 |
T20I career against opponents
Batting[173] | Bowling[174] | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition | Matches | Runs | Average | High Score | 100 / 50 | Runs | Wickets | Average | Best |
Australia | 3 | 69 | 23.00 | 46 | 0 / 0 | 60 | 3 | 20.00 | 2/8 |
India | 1 | 28 | 28.00 | 28 | 0 / 0 | 13 | 0 | n/a | 0/13 |
New Zealand | 3 | 83 | 27.66 | 54 | 0 / 1 | 45 | 2 | 22.5 | 1/15 |
Pakistan | 1 | 2 | 2.00 | 2 | 0 / 0 | 19 | 0 | n/a | 0/19 |
Sri Lanka | 1 | 5 | 5.00 | 5 | 0 / 0 | 22 | 4 | 5.50 | 4/22 |
West Indies | 2 | 106 | 53.00 | 79 | 0 / 1 | 38 | 2 | 19.00 | 2/21 |
Zimbabwe | 1 | 37 | 37.00 | 37 | 0 / 0 | 23 | 1 | 23.00 | 1/23 |
Overall | 13 | 330 | 25.38 | 79 | 0 / 2 | 220 | 12 | 18.33 | 4/22 |
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External links
- Paul Collingwood at ESPNcricinfo
- Paul Collingwood on Twitter