Sunday, November 24, 2013

David Warner (cricketer)

David Warner (cricketer)

David Andrew Warner (conceived 27 October 1986) is an Australian cricketer. A fast scoring left-gave opening batsman, Warner is the first Australian cricketer in 132 years to be chosen for a national group in any organization without experience in top of the line cricket. He at present plays for New South Wales, the Delhi Daredevils and the Sydney Sixers. 

Warner is known for favouring the ethereal track with his forceful left-gave batting style, and capability to switch hit, utilizing the once more of his bat or by taking a right-gave stance. He is a physical fielder and additionally low maintenance turn bowler. His bowling style is novel in that he blends off-twist knocking down some pins with his more normal leg-rotation playing. At only 170cms Warner creates his energy from solid lower arms and utilizes his low focus of gravity to get underneath conveyances and hit them high buzzing around. In a Twenty20 match for New South Wales in 2009, he snared a six off Shaun Tait that arrived on the top of the Adelaide Oval, just a month in the wake of snaring the same bowler 20 columns over at the Scg. 

This prologue to the residential scene prompted Warner being incorporated in Australia's Twenty20 squad in January 2009.[9] Warner made his global presentation for Australia in a Twenty20 International against South Africa at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 11 January 2009. He made a quick effect, scoring 89 off 43 balls with 7 fours and 6 sixes, incorporating the then second-speediest fifty in Twenty20 International history.[10] Warner was only 11 runs short of coming to be just the second player after Chris Gayle to score a Twenty20 International century. His 89 was the second most astounding score on Twenty20 worldwide debut; and the equivalent fifth most elevated score ever in Twenty20 internationals. On 23 February 2010, playing a Twenty20 global against the West Indies at the Sydney Cricket Ground, he made a dazzling 67 off only 29 balls. His 50 coming in at only 18 balls, breaking his old record of 19 and it turned into the second speediest 50 in Twenty20 International history after Yuvraj Singh.

                                                               David Warner (cricketer)
                                                               David Warner (cricketer)
                                                               David Warner (cricketer)
                                                                 David Warner (cricketer)
                                                               David Warner (cricketer)
                                                               David Warner (cricketer)
                                                                David Warner (cricketer)

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