Generated with Avocode. Generated with Avocode.
1st December 2017 News

#EngAusXI: Wicketkeeper

Phil Mustard, Martin Speight or Andrew Pratt; who will be voted as wicketkeeper in Durham’s combined England-Australia XI first-class XI?

You have chosen your top five in the batting order with Michael Di Venuto, Mike Hussey, David Boon, Dean Jones & Paul Collingwood all getting the nod.

The Australian-dominated XI is about to get another English touch alongside Collingwood with three Englishmen up for this week’s vote.

Read the below information & cast your vote at the bottom of the page!

England’s Royal London ODI against Australia at Emirates Riverside next summer is fast heading for a sellout. For tickets, call Box Office on 0844 499 4466 or visit the online booking system.

 

Phil Mustard

Legendary wicketkeeper Phil Mustard leads almost every wicketkeeping stat across his 14-year spell at the Club.

The 35-year-old managed a whopping 619 catches & 19 stumpings in 185 first-class matches, racking up nearly 7,500 runs during that time with five centuries & 45 fifties, becoming an integral part in all of Durham’s major successes.

He also played 12 times at international level, made up of ten One-Day Internationals & two T20 Internationals.

 

Martin Speight

Ex-Sussex & Durham University man Martin Speight never quite hit the heights as a batsman for Durham but his glovework did set Club records.

He set the record for catches in 1998 with 61 & his record of 197 still remains second only to Mustard in the all-time standings for Durham.

A keen artist, Speight’s closest innings to three figures came in a match-saving 97 not out against Hampshire in 1998, electing to intelligently shield Steven Lugsden from the strike.

 

Andrew Pratt

The eventual successor to Speight behind the stumps, Andrew Pratt was a talented glovesman & elder brother to batsman Gary.

His chance came in 2001 after injury to Speight & he seized it with both hands, using his skills in standing up to the stumps to complete 71 catches & 18 stumpings in all competitions that season.

Once touted as a replacement for England’s Alec Stewart, Pratt finished with 150 first-class catches after playing his final match in 2004.

powered by Typeform

 

Related Articles

Events

2025 Vitality Blast T20 schedule confirmed

Women

Draw revealed for first ever Vitality T20 Women’s County Cup with Durham travelling to Somerset

News

Durham Cricket win Best Digital Creative Content at ECB Business of Cricket awards

Women

Kyle Coetzer and Nathan Rimmington appointed Women’s Assistant Coaches