Saturday, May 28, 2016

Prosper Utseya

Prosper Utseya

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Prosper Utseya
Personal information
Full nameProsper Utseya
Born26 March 1985 (age 31)
HarareZimbabwe
Batting styleRight-handed
Bowling styleRight arm off break
RoleBowler
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 65)6 May 2004 v Sri Lanka
Last Test10 September 2013 v Pakistan
ODI debut (cap 81)20 April 2004 v Sri Lanka
Last ODI26 May 2015 v Pakistan
ODI shirt no.52
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2009–presentMountaineers
2006–2009Easterns
2004–2005Midlands
2003–2004Manicaland
2001–2003Mashonaland
Career statistics
CompetitionTestODIFCLA
Matches416182240
Runs scored1071,4062,7562,092
Batting average15.2817.1421.5315.96
100s/50s0/00/41/150/5
Top score4568*115*68*
Balls bowled7538,40914,28412,058
Wickets10132217213
Bowling average41.0046.2829.9940.15
5 wickets in innings0181
10 wickets in match0020
Best bowling3/605/367/565/36
Catches/stumpings2/–48/–33/–75/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 10 June 2015
Prosper Utseya (born 26 March 1985 in HarareZimbabwe) is a Zimbabwean cricketer. He was former captain of Zimbabwefrom 2006 to 2010. He bowls right-arm off break and is a useful right-hand batsman.

Early Life[edit]

Rising from the ranks of township cricket in Harare's Highfield suburb, he attended Churchill Boys High School (the cradle of many black Zimbabwean players), thanks to Zimbabwe Cricket Union scholarships. He uses Crown King Sport cricket gear.

Career[edit]

He was a promising talent at school level and made his first-class debut as opener for Mashonaland A at the age of 15. He scored a fifty in a tight situation in just his second Logan Cup match against Manicaland a day before his 16th birthday and soon moved into the Under-19 and Zimbabwe A sides with some notable bowling performances along the way.
While his initial place in the national team owed much to the withdrawal of several white players after Heath Streak's dismissal from captaincy, Utseya has more than earned his place since. [1]
In 2004, he was moved to Manicaland to strengthen the provincial side there, and was selected for the CFX Academy. He took his first first-class five-wicket haul with figure of 5/32 against Manicaland in October of that year. He continued to hold a place in a weakened national side and took up the captaincy from Terry Duffin in 2006.
Utseya's bowling during the tour to West Indies in May 2006 where his flight and spin belied his lack of experience and years. He was consistently able to stem the flow of runs in the middle overs, and he provided two of the series highlights and one when he comprehensively beat Brian Lara with successive deliveries in the first match in Trinidad and the other his remarkable diving, juggling boundary catch in the second.
But he struggles to take wickets at international level, Utseya is a force to be reckoned with in Zimbabwean domestic cricket. His spin-bowling partnership with Timycen Maruma has resulted in a series of domestic titles, and in 2008-09 his ten-wicket haul helped Easterns clinch a thrilling one-wicket victory in a low-scoring contest against Northerns at Alexandra Sports Club in Harare that secured the Logan Cup.
He is the first and joint world record holder for conceding the least number of runs (6 runs) in a T20 International after bowling the complete quota of overs (4 overs is the maximum quota in a T20 match).[2][3]
Utseya enjoyed a steady, if unspectacular, domestic season in 2009-10, though his franchise, Mountaineers dominated the first-class scene.
Utseya tendered his resignation as national captain after the side's disappointing performance at the T20 World Cup in May 2010 saying that he was stepping down in the interest of the team's future development. He led Zimbabwe in 67 one-day internationals, with 20 victories, and all 10 of the Twenty20 internationals the team has played.
In August 2014, Utseya reported for a suspect bowling action following the third ODI against South Africa in Bulawayo. Utseya was the fourth offspinner to have been reported for a suspect action over the last few months others are Sachithra SenanayakeKane Williamson and Saeed Ajmal.[4]
Utseya took hat trick against South Africa at Harare Sports Club and became the second Zimbabwean to claim a hat-trick when he dismissed three South African batsmen of consecutive deliveries in the third One-Day International match of the Tri-series in August 2014. Utseya accounted for the wickets of Quinton de KockRilee Rossouw and David Miller. In process, he also took his career best figure and ended innings with figure of 5/36 [5][6]

Style[edit]

He was ranked 15th in the ICC ODI Bowling Rankings in September 2006. He has a reputation for being an extremely parsimonious bowler, albeit with less wicket taking prowess. In a Cricinfo article from August 2006, he had the lowest economy rate (3.84) amongst all spinners in the history of ODI cricket. In comparison, the economy rates for Muttiah Muralitharan and Harbhajan Singh at the same time were 3.85 and 4.11 respectively.

ODI Half-centuries[edit]

No.SocreMatchOpponentVenueCityYearResult
168*86 KenyaGymkhana Club GroundNairobi2009Won
257*87 KenyaGymkhana Club GroundNairobi2009Won
367120 BangladeshSher-e-Bangla National Cricket StadiumMirpur2010Lost
452*146 IndiaHarareHarare Sports Club2013Lost

ODI Five-wicket Hauls[edit]

No.FiguresMatchOpponentVenueCityYearResult
15/35158 South AfricaHarare Sports ClubHarare2014Lost

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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