Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Mitchell Marsh

Mitchell Marsh

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Mitchell Marsh
Personal information
Full nameMitchell Ross Marsh
Born20 October 1991 (age 24)
AttadaleWestern Australia, Australia
NicknameBison[1]
Height193 cm (6 ft 4 in)[2]
Batting styleRight-handed bat
Bowling styleRight-arm fast-medium, Right-armmedium
RoleAll-rounder
RelationsGeoff Marsh (father)
Shaun Marsh (brother)
Melissa Marsh (sister)
International information
National side
Test debut22 October 2014 v Pakistan
Last Test1 December 2015 v New Zealand
ODI debut(cap 190)19 October 2011 v South Africa
Last ODI23 January 2016 v India
T20I debut(cap 54)16 October 2011 v South Africa
Last T20I3 February 2014 v India
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2009—presentWestern Australia
2010Deccan Chargers
2011–2013Pune Warriors India
2011— presentPerth Scorchers
2016— presentRising Pune Supergiants
Career statistics
CompetitionTestODIT20IFC
Matches1530460
Runs scored437870622,724
Batting average23.0039.5520.6630.61
100s/50s0/11/60/04/15
Top score87102*36211
Balls bowled1,465930424,923
Wickets25291100
Bowling average34.5230.1462.0027.21
5 wickets in innings0101
10 wickets in match0000
Best bowling4/615/331/306/84
Catches/stumpings6/–13/-1/-31/-
Source: Cricinfo, 23 February 2016
Mitchell Ross Marsh (born 20 October 1991 in PerthWestern Australia) is an Australian cricketer who is contracted domestically to Western Australia and the Perth Scorchers. Marsh has represented Australia at One Day International (ODI) and Twenty20 International (T20I) level, making his debut in both formats during the 2011–12 season.

Personal life[edit]

The son of Geoff Marsh and brother of Shaun Marsh, both of whom have played Test matches for the Australian national side.
He was raised in PerthWestern Australia, where he attended Wesley College, and made his senior debut for the state team at the age of 17, becoming the youngest person to play in the Australian domestic one-day tournament.

Domestic career[edit]

Marsh made his debut for the Warriors at the age of 17 in February 2009 in a Ford Ranger Cup game at Bunbury. He became the youngest ever player in an Australian domestic one-day game and Western Australia's youngest debutant for 70 years.[3]In April 2009, he was given the opportunity to play for Australia's Under 19s squad against India, in Australia.
Marsh was handed the captaincy for the 2010 U-19 Cricket World Cup. Under his leadership Australia won the tournament, Marsh having a successful tournament scoring 201 runs, including a match winning 97 in the semi-final against Sri Lanka. Marsh was drafted to the Deccan Chargers for the 2010 IPL.
Marsh was selected by the Sahara Pune Warriors who are coached by his father, Geoff Marsh for US$ 290,000 in the IPLAuction 2011. He played in five matches, scoring a total of 50 runs and taking 7 wickets.[4]
He is a right-handed all-rounder who bowls medium-fast (averaging 130 km/h ) deliveries, but his pace has risen steadily in 2015 to fast-medium (140 km/h average), Marsh has additionally played for the Pune Warriors India and Deccan Chargers in the Indian Premier League (IPL).
Playing for Australia A against India A in July 2014 at Allan Border Field, Marsh scored 211 runs batting seventh in Australia's first innings, his first double century. He and Sam Whiteman, who scored 174 runs, put on 371 runs for the seventh wicket, an Australian record and the second-highest seventh-wicket partnership recorded, behind the 460-run record set by Bhupinder Singh and Pankaj Dharmani during the 1994–95 season. The previous Australian record, set by Queenslanders Cassie Andrews and Eric Bensted, had stood since the 1934–35 season.[5]

International career[edit]

He made his Test match debut for Australia against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates on 22 October 2014.[6]
In September 2011, he was named in Australia's Twenty20 squad to tour South Africa.[7] Later, when Brett Lee withdrew due to injury, he was added to the Australian One Day International squad as well.[8]
In October he made a spectacular dĂ©but for Australia in the second Twenty20 match, scoring 36 runs including four sixes, three of which were hit in the final over of the Australian innings.[9]
In August 2014, he scored 89 runs against Zimbabwe in first match of the Tri-series at Harare Sports Club. He batted at no. 3 and added 109 runs for the fourth wicket with Glenn Maxwell at more than 12-an-over, with Marsh also having contributed to partnerships of 47 and 33 with Aaron Finch and George Bailey.[10]
Bowling in the second match of the 2015 Cricket World Cup, Marsh took 5 wickets, helping Australia record a 111 run win over England.[11]
His maiden ODI century came during the fifth ODI against India on 23 January 2016 at SCG. His unbeaten 102 was not enough to win the match, where Indian batsman Manish Pandey, who also scored his maiden century of 104*, took the game away from Australia. Australia lost the match by 6 wickets.[12]
Despite his lack of form as a batsman, on 15 February 2016, Marsh became the second Australian bowler since Jason Gillespie to dismiss Brendon McCullum in both innings of 2 test matches.[13][14] On 20 February 2016, Marsh, at gully, took a one-handed catch off the bowling of James Pattinson, but was called back for no-ball.

Beyond cricket[edit]

Marsh was also a talented Australian rules footballer early in his career and represented Western Australia at the 2008 AFL Under 18 Championships.[15]

International record[edit]

ODI 5 Wicket hauls[edit]

#FiguresMatchOpponentVenueCityCountryYear
15/3315 EnglandMelbourne Cricket GroundMelbourneAustralia2015

International centuries[edit]

One Day International centuries[edit]

One Day International centuries of Mitchell Marsh
#RunsMatchAgainstCity/CountryVenueYearResult
1102*27 IndiaAustralia SydneyAustraliaSydney Cricket Ground2016Lost

International Awards[edit]

One-Day International Cricket[edit]

Man of the series awards[edit]

#SeriesSeasonMatch PerformanceResult
1Australia in England2015134 runs, 8 wickets 4 ct. (5 Matches) Australia won the series 3-2.[16]

Man of the Match awards[edit]

NoOpponentVenueDateMatch PerformanceResult
1ZimbabweHarare Sports ClubHarare25 August 201489 (83 balls, 7x4, 4x6); 5-0-15-1 ; 1 ct. Australia won by 198 runs.[17]
2South AfricaHarare Sports ClubHarare2 September 201486* (51 balls, 5x4, 7x6); 5-0-23-2 ; 1 ct. Australia won by 62 runs.[18]
3EnglandLord'sLondon5 September 201580* (63 balls, 5x4, 1x6) Australia won by 64 runs.[19]
4EnglandOld TraffordManchester13 September 20156-0-27-4 ; DNB Australia won by 8 wickets.[20]
5New ZealandWestpac StadiumWellington6 February 20166-0-30-2 ; 1 ct. ; 69 (72 balls: 9x4, 1x6) Australia won by 4 wickets.[21]

Career best performances[edit]

Batting
ScoreFixtureVenueSeason
Test87Australia v PakistanSheikh Zayed Cricket StadiumAbu Dhabi2014 [22]
ODI102*India v AustraliaSydney Cricket GroundSydney2016 [23]
T20I36Australia v South AfricaNew Wanderers StadiumJohannesburg2011 [24]
FC211Australia A v India AAllan Border FieldBrisbane2014 [25]
LA104Western Australia v TasmaniaWACAPerth2013 [26]
T2077*Perth Scorchers v Sydney SixersWACAPerth2012 [27]
Bowling
ScoreFixtureVenueSeason
Test4/61Australia v West IndiesMCGMelbourne2015 [28]
ODI5/33Australia v EnglandMCGMelbourne2015 [29]
T20I1/30Australia v IndiaMCGMelbourne2011 [30]
FC6/84Western Australia v QueenslandWACA GroundPerth2011 [31]
LA5/33Australia v EnglandMCGMelbourne2015 [29]
T204/6Western Australia v New South WalesWACAPerth2010 [32]

References[edit]

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