![]() Clarke in 2009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Michael John Clarke | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | 2 April 1981 (1981-04-02) (age 44) Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nickname | Pup | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 178 cm (5 ft 10 in)[1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Batting | Right-handed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Slow left-arm orthodox | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Role | Middle-order batter | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
International information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
National side |
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Test debut (cap 389) | 6 October 2004 v India | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last Test | 20 August 2015 v England | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ODI debut (cap 149) | 19 January 2003 v England | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last ODI | 29 March 2015 v New Zealand | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ODI shirt no. | 23 (previously 49) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
T20I debut (cap 1) | 17 February 2005 v New Zealand | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last T20I | 31 October 2010 v Sri Lanka | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
T20I shirt no. | 23 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Domestic team information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years | Team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1999/00–2013/14 | New South Wales | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2004 | Hampshire | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | Pune Warriors India | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career statistics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Medal record
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Source:ESPNcricinfo,2 April 2019 |
Michael John ClarkeAO (born 2 April 1981) is an Australian formercricketer. He wascaptain of theAustralian cricket team in bothTest andOne Day International (ODI) between 2011 and 2015, leading Australia to victory in the2015 Cricket World Cup. He also served as captain of theTwenty20 International (T20I) side between 2007 and 2010. With his time representing Australia, Clarke won multiple ICC titles with the team: the2007 Cricket World Cup, the2015 Cricket World Cup which he was the winning captain, and the2006 ICC Champions Trophy.
Nicknamed "Pup",[2] Clarke was a right-handed middle-orderbatsman, an occasionalleft-arm orthodox spin bowler and also aslip catcher. He representedNew South Wales at a domestic level.
Clarke retired from all forms of cricket after the final Test of the2015 Ashes series.
Clarke was born and raised inLiverpool, New South Wales.[3] He attended Marsden Road Public School and cultivated his batting skills at his father's indoor cricket centre in Liverpool after school.[3][4] Despite being a left handed person who writes and bowls with his left hand, Clarke trained to bat right handed . His junior club was theWestern Suburbs District Cricket Club.[5]
When Clarke was 17, scans revealed that he had threedegenerative discs in his lower back, a condition that would restrict his back movement through his career. Clarke underwent core strengthening exercises to ease this condition.[6]
Clarke made his first-class debut for New South Wales as a seventeen-year-old in a gameagainst the touring Indian side at theSydney Cricket Ground in December 1999.[7] He was an AISAustralian Cricket Academy scholarship holder in 1999–2000.[8] In 2002, Clarke played for Ramsbottom Cricket Club in English club cricket. He became the first player to hit a double century in the history of theLancashire League.[9]
Clarke made hisOne Day International debut in January 2003 againstEngland atAdelaide Oval.[10]
Clarke made hisTest debut atM. Chinnaswamy Stadium inBangalore in October 2004, in the first Test match of Australia's2004 tour of India. In his first innings, Clarke batted with good footwork against India's bowlers. He was not confident that he could read India's spin bowlerAnil Kumble's deliveries, so he moved to the pitch of the ball to eliminate the spin. He scored 151 runs and was named the player of the match in Australia's win.[11][12][13] He continued to play well for the rest of the tour. Despite not being considered a strong bowler, he bowled in fourth Test match atWankhede Stadium inMumbai and took six wickets for nine runs.[11][14] This remained the best bowling performance of his Test career until he retired.
The Australian team returned home in November 2004 and Clarke played his first home Test matchagainst New Zealand atThe Gabba inBrisbane. He scored another century, finishing with 141 runs, and was again named player of the match.[11][15] After his early success in the team, Clarke began to struggle and didn't score another century in the following six Test series he played.[12] His struggles began in the2005 Ashes series in England. He played a strong innings in the 1st Test match atLord's in July 2005, reaching 91 quickly. England responded with defensive bowling tactics to slow him down, and Clarke tried to improvise with aggressive shots and was dismissed.[11][16] Clarke's form dropped after this innings, and he struggled to score runs for the rest of the year. He stayed in the team until November 2005, during Australia's seriesagainst the West Indies. In the first Test match atBellerive Oval inHobart, Clarke was dismissed for 5 runs while playing a loose stroke in the first innings, and he did not bat in the second innings. He was dropped from the team following this match.[11][17]
After being dropped from the national team at the end of 2005, Clarke focused on changing his batting technique to tighten his defence and play with a straighter bat. He performed well in Australian domestic cricket and returned to the national team in 2006.[11] His initial return came in Australia's first evertour of Bangladesh in April 2006, but after this tour he was dropped again.[12] He next returned to the team for the2006–07 Ashes series whenShane Watson was injured and unable to play. He scored centuries in the second and third matches at Adelaide Oval and theWACA, he scored back-to-back centuries to cement his place in the team.[12][18][19]
Clarke then helped Australia retain the2007 Cricket World Cup in theWest Indies where they did not lose a game. AfterDamien Martyn's retirement he was elevated to number five in the batting line up. He had a superb tournament making four 50s including a 92 and a 93* against theNetherlands and South Africa. He also made an unbeaten 60 against South Africa in the semi-final to guide Australia into the final at Barbados, against Sri Lanka. He was named as 12th man in the 'Team of the Tournament' by ESPNcricinfo for the 2007 World Cup.[20]
Clarke's results in international matches[21] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Matches | Won | Lost | Drawn | Tied | No result | |
Test[22] | 115 | 64 | 32 | 19 | 0 | - |
ODI[23] | 245 | 167 | 64 | - | 1 | 13 |
T20I[24] | 34 | 18 | 14 | – | 1 | 1 |
Last Updated: | 23 August 2015 |
Clarke faced only four balls for three runs in theICC World Twenty20, when Australia were knocked out by India in the semi-final. Two weeks later he made 130 against India in the first of a seven-match ODI series.[25] He did not maintain that form in the remaining 6 matches mustering up just one fifty. He opened the batting in the final two games after a hip injury ruled outMatthew Hayden and he made twogolden ducks. In the tour-endingTwenty20 match Clarke dropped back down the order with the return of Hayden, and scored 25 not out in a heavy defeat.
On 9 November 2007, Clarke notched up his fifth Test century against Sri Lanka in a two Test series. Clarke shared a 245 run partnership withMike Hussey at theGabba in Brisbane, Hussey departed on 133 but Clarke went on and had a partnership with Symonds who made 53*, the pair were unbeaten whenRicky Ponting declared the innings, Clarke top scoring with 145 not out.
On 6 January 2008, Clarke dismissedHarbhajan Singh,RP Singh andIshant Sharma in the second last over of the day, with just six minutes remaining, to claim the final three wickets and win the Test match for Australia (at one stage he was on a hat trick, dismissing Harbhajan Singh and RP Singh on consecutive deliveries).[26] His innings figures were 3 for 5 in 1.5 overs. Australian captainRicky Ponting had declared that morning, setting India a total of 333 to chase and allowing Australia arguably too little time to bowl out the visitors. Clarke's wickets ensured that Australia retained theBorder–Gavaskar Trophy in 2008 and kept their world record equalling 16 match win streak alive.
After the retirement ofAdam Gilchrist, in April 2008 Clarke was named vice-captain of the Australian side.[27] Clarke missed the start ofAustralia's 2008 tour of the West Indies following the death of Bingle's father, meaning Hussey took over as vice-captain for the start of the tour.[citation needed] Soon after Clarke joined up with the squad, he scored a century in the second Test in Antigua, going on to captain the side in the final two One Day Internationals, both of which were won, in the absence through injury of Ponting.
He was named man of the series in the two-Test series against New Zealand in Australia with scores of 110, 98 and 10, as well as being the top run-scorer in the three-Test series against South Africa in Australia.[citation needed] Clarke won the 2009 Allan Border Medal in a tie with Ricky Ponting both scoring 41 points, and was named Test Cricketer of the Year.[28] For his performances in 2009, he was named in the World Test XI by the ICC.[29]
On 5 December 2007, Cricket Australia named Clarke as captain of Australia for their one-off Twenty20 game against New Zealand in Perth, after deciding to rest Ponting and Hayden.[30]
Michael Clarke's record as captain | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Matches | Won | Lost | Drawn | Tied | No result | Win % | |
Test[31] | 47 | 24 | 16 | 7 | 0 | – | 51.06% |
ODI[32] | 74 | 50 | 21 | - | - | 3 | 67.57% |
T20I[33] | 18 | 12 | 4 | – | 1 | 1 | 66.67% |
Clarke was named as captain of Australia's Twenty20 side in October 2009,[34][35] taking over fromRicky Ponting, who retired from Twenty20 International cricket to prolong his career.[36][37] In January 2011, Clarke was named as stand-in captain for the fifth Test of the2010–11 Ashes Series at theSCG, replacing the injured Ricky Ponting. He announced his retirement fromTwenty20 International cricket on 7 January 2011,[38] to concentrate on the longer forms of the game.[39] When Ponting stood down from the captaincy of the Australian Test and ODI sides after the2011 World Cup, Clarke was appointed as his permanent replacement in both roles.[40]
His knock of 151 against South Africa at Cape Town was nominated to be one of the best Test batting performance of the year 2011 by ESPNcricinfo.[41]
In January 2012, in the second Test of Australia'shome series against India and after a string of Test centuries since becoming captain, Clarke became the first Australian batsman since Matthew Hayden in 2003 to score a triple hundred. He joined with Ricky Ponting (134) in a partnership of 288, then added 334 with Michael Hussey (150*) before declaring on 329*, having started his innings with the score at 37/3.[42] This match against India was the 100th Test to be played at theSydney Cricket Ground, and Clarke's score was both the highest ever made in an Australia-India Test (surpassingV. V. S. Laxman's 281 from the 2000/01 season) and the highest ever achieved at the ground. The ground high score record had been held for more than a century by EnglishmanReg "Tip" Foster's 287 scored in the 1903/04 season.[43] Clarke led Australia to a 4–0 win and was named the player of the series,[44] having scored 626 runs at an average of 125.20.[45] His knock was nominated to be one of the best Test batting performance of the year by ESPNcricinfo.[46] He joined his triple century in Sydney with a double-century (210) in the first innings of the fourth Test inAdelaide. His 386-run partnership with Ponting (who scored 221) was the fourth-highest in Australian Test history.[47] Following theFrank Worrell Trophy 2012,Ian Chappell said Clarke "is quickly establishing a well-deserved reputation for brave and aggressive captaincy. His entertaining approach is based on one premise: trying to win the match from the opening delivery. This should be the aim of all international captains, but sadly it isn't."[48]
On 22 November 2012, Clarke scored a double century against South Africa at the Adelaide Oval.[49]
Three weeks before the2013 Ashes series, Clarke requested to stand down from his role as a selector,[50] which also coincided with the sacking of coachMickey Arthur and the naming ofDarren Lehmann as his successor. After losing the 2013 Ashes in England, Clarke led Australia to a 5–0 victory in the2013–14 Ashes series.[51] Australia later gained the No. 1 Test ranking fromSouth Africa after a long span of 4 years and 9 months (from August 2009 to April 2014), when Australia defeated South Africa 2–1 in a 3 match Test series, duringAustralia's tour of South Africa in 2014.
Under his captaincy, Australia made their lowest Test score (47 all out) in 109 years,[52][53] and shortest first innings (18.3 overs, 60 all out) in Test cricket history,[54][55][56][57] and their worst-ever series defeat against India in Test history, which is also the first 4–0whitewash for Australia against any side since 1969.[58][59][60] Several of his teammates have criticised his captaincy.Mitchell Johnson described the team atmosphere as 'toxic' under his captaincy,[61][62] whileMichael Hussey described the dressing room was stressful and tense.[63][64] Several former players includingJohn Buchanan[65][66][67]Andrew Symonds,[68][69]Matthew Hayden,[70][71] andSimon Katich[72][73][74] spoke against his captaincy. Katich, a former team mainstay, blamed Clarke for effectively ending his career once he became captain in revenge for a post-match incident several years earlier which saw Katich grab Clarke by the throat following a row about the singing of Australia's team song in the dressing room.[75]
Clarke suffered a hamstring injury on 14 November 2014, which put him in doubt to play at the beginning of the2014–15 Border–Gavaskar Trophy. The series was rescheduled after the death ofPhillip Hughes on 27 November, and Clarke was able to recover in time for the first Test atAdelaide Oval, for which Hughes was named as Australia's honorary 13th man.[76][77] On the first day of the match, Clarke scored 60 runs before suffering a back injury (a flare-up of his degenerative back condition).[6] Heretired hurt from the innings, but returned to batting the next day. Because of his injury, Clarke couldn't play in his usual style and focused on wrist-work. He scored a century, finishing his innings with 128 runs.[78][79] This was the last century he scored in his career.[80]
Clarke captained the Australian team for2015 Cricket World Cup.[81] Clarke starred in the final againstNew Zealand, top scoring with a score of 74 off 72 balls, as Australia won their fifth World Cup title. He wasbowled when nine runs were required to win.[citation needed]
Clarke announced that he would retire from One Day Cricket at the conclusion of the 2015 Cricket World Cup.[82][83] Clarke played 244 ODIs, made 7907 runs at an average of 44.42 with 8centuries and 58 half-centuries. He led his country in 73 matches, of which Australia won 49.[84]
Clarke captained Australia for the last time in the2015 Ashes series. Clarke batted poorly during the series, failing to score above 50 in any innings.[80] Australia lost the series after the fourth Test match atTrent Bridge with one match remaining. Following the match, Clarke announced that he would retire from international cricket at the end of the series.[80]
On 1 May 2012, Clarke made his debut in theIndian Premier League forPune Warriors India.[85]
In 2013, Clarke was named captain of theSydney Thunder in Australia'sTwenty20Big Bash League;[86] however, due to injury and international team commitments, he never actually played a game for the Thunder.[87]
He also signed with theMelbourne Stars ahead ofBBL|05,[88] being announced in April as captain and wearingShane Warne's iconic number 23[89] in a two-season deal. However, he backed out of that deal in September of that year,[90] taking an "extended break from cricket" after retiring from the international game,[91] before announcing his retirement from all formats due to injury lot long after.
Clarke won theAllan Border Medal, considered to be the most prestigious individual prize in Australian cricket, four times, in 2005, 2009 (jointly withRicky Ponting), 2012 and 2013. Only Ponting had won it as many times.[92] He was also awarded the Men's Test Player of the Year at theAllan Border Medal ceremony by the CA in 2009, 2012, 2013 and 2014.[93]
He won theSir Garfield Sobers Trophy, thereby winning the Cricketer of the Year 2013 and also the Test Cricketer of the Year 2013.[94] He was named as aWisden Cricketer of the Year in 2010Wisden Cricketers' Almanack.[95] He was namedWisden Leading Cricketer in the World for the year 2012 in 2013Wisden Cricketers' Almanack.[96] For his performances in 2012, he was named as captain of the World Test XI and ODI XI by the ICC.[97] He was also named in the World Test XI by the ICC in 2013.[98] He was also named in the Test XI of the year by ESPNcricinfo for 2012 and 2013.[99][100]
In June 2020, Clarke was made anOfficer of the Order of Australia in theQueen's Birthday Honours, "for distinguished service to cricket as a player at the national and international level, through leadership roles, and to the community."[101] Three months later, he was inducted as aCricket NSW Life Member.[102]
Score | Fixture | Venue | Season | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Test | 329* | Australia vIndia | SCG,Sydney | 2012[114] |
ODI | 130 | India vAustralia | M. Chinnaswamy Stadium,Bangalore | 2007[115] |
T20I | 67 | New Zealand vAustralia | AMI Stadium,Christchurch | 2010[116] |
FC | 329* | Australia vIndia | SCG,Sydney | 2012[114] |
LA | 130 | India vAustralia | M. Chinnaswamy Stadium,Bangalore | 2007[115] |
T20 | 67 | New Zealand vAustralia | AMI Stadium,Christchurch | 2010[116] |
Clarke was in a relationship with modelLara Bingle until March 2010.[12] Clarke and Bingle became engaged in early 2008, and in May 2008, Clarke withdrew from the Australian cricket team's2008 tour of the West Indies due to the death of Bingle's father.[117] The pair never married, and they ended their relationship in March 2010, with Clarke leaving the Australian cricket team's ongoingtour of New Zealand to call off their engagement.[118]
Clarke married business owner and modelKyly Boldy on 15 May 2012.[119][120] The couple went to school together atWestfield Sports High School in Sydney and have one daughter.[121][122] They announced their separation on 12 February 2020 and said that they had officially separated 5 months earlier.[123] In 2020, Clarke dated fashion business ownerPip Edwards, but their relationship ended in early 2021.[124]
He was very close to former Australian Test openerPhillip Hughes, and was distraught at the 25-year-old's unexpected death after being hit in the neck by a short-pitched delivery during aSheffield Shield match at theSCG in November 2014. Clarke gave an emotional speech at Hughes's funeral.[125] He requested Cricket Australia to retire Hughes's shirt number, 64, which was accepted.[126]
In 2016, Clarke published an autobiography,My Story.[127]
In September 2019, Clarke had a skin cancer removed from his forehead. He was first diagnosed with skin cancer in 2006 and became an ambassador for theCancer Council in 2010.[128]
In January 2023, Clarke and his partner Jade Yarbrough were involved in a public dispute in Noosa. The incident, which was caught on camera, appears to show Yarbrough slap Clarke and accuse him of cheating on her.[129] Yarbrough's brother-in-law andToday Show hostKarl Stefanovic was also involved in the incident.[130]
Between 2016 and 2018, Clarke was a cricket commentator forNine's Wide World of Sports.[131][132] In 2020, Clarke began co-hosting theBig Sports Breakfast radio show.[133]
... to play for his junior club, the Western Suburbs District Cricket Club.
With only six minutes to spare as the shadows lengthened Michael Clarke picked up the last three wickets from only five balls as Australia sneaked home.