André Nel

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André Nel
Personal information
Full name André Nel
Born (1977-06-15) 15 June 1977 (age 47)
Germiston, South Africa
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Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right–arm Fast Medium
Role Bowler
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 281) 7 September 2001 v Zimbabwe
Last Test 7 August 2008 v England
ODI debut 12 May 2001 v West Indies
Last ODI 3 September 2008 v England
T20I debut 21 October 2005 v New Zealand
Last T20I 19 September 2008 v New Zealand
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 36 79 132 220
Runs scored 337 127 1,692 482
Batting average 9.91 12.70 15.38 11.47
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 0/2 0/1
Top score 34 30* 96 58
Balls bowled 7,630 3,801 25,915 10,654
Wickets 123 106 446 302
Bowling average 31.86 27.68 27.38 26.03
5 wickets in innings 3 1 14 4
10 wickets in match 1 n/a 1 n/a
Best bowling 6/32 5/45 6/25 6/27
Catches/stumpings 16/– 21/– 53/– 49/–
Source: CricketArchive, 29 December 2013

André Nel (born 15 July 1977) is a South African cricketer who played Test cricket and ODIs as a fast bowler but has since retired opting to play county cricket for Surrey.

International career

In January 2005 against England he took 6/81 in the first innings of the Test.[1] These remained his best innings bowling figures until South Africa's tour of the West Indies in April 2005 when in the 3rd Test at Kensington Oval he took 6/32 to go with his first innings 4 wickets.[2] This gave him his first 10 wicket haul in Test cricket and he was subsequently named man of the match.

Nel went on to take 14 wickets during his side's tour of Australia later in 2005, finishing the year with 36 victims at 20.72.[3]

He has constantly troubled Brian Lara in Test cricket, having dismissed him on 8 occasions.[4]

In the first test[5] of the Bank Alfalah Test Series versus Pakistan in Karachi, Nel became the 11th South African to reach the milestone of 100 dismissals in Test cricket,[6] when he dismissed the Pakistani nightwatchman, Mohammad Asif on 5 October 2007.

In early 2008, coloured paceman Charl Langeveldt was controversially selected in the Test team for tour of India, at the expense of Nel. This was widely believed to be due to an order from Cricket South Africa to select more non-white players in the team as part of its transformation policy, rather than performance. Langeveldt declined his selection, citing the controversy over the selection, and Nel was reported to have been considering retirement.[7]

He announced his retirement from international cricket on 25 March 2009.[8]

County Cricket

After the 2007 World Cup, carrying a highly aggressive and respected reputation, Nel joined the English County of Essex, making his debut for the 2005 and 2006 Pro 40 Champions against the side he first experienced the English game with, Northamptonshire.

Indian Premier League

André Nel has been signed by Mumbai Indians, an Indian Premier League franchise. He joined the Mumbai Indians as a replacement to West Indian cricketer, Dwayne Bravo, who returned home for national duty after the game against Deccan Chargers on 18 May 2008.

Controversies

Nel has been involved in controversies both on and off the field and he has been fined for a number of ICC Code of Conduct breaches during his career.

File:Andre Nel Bfdefence.jpg
In the nets in Australia, 2005

In February 2001 he hit the headlines after bursting into tears when he felled Allan Donald with a fiery bouncer in a domestic first-class match. It emerged later that he had been following instructions from his coach Ray Jennings to target Donald.[9] Later in the year during the tour of the West Indies he, along with four other teammates, was found guilty of smoking marijuana.[10]

During 2003 he was sent home from a South Africa A tour of Australia after being pulled over for drunk driving.[11] During the 2005 Boxing Day Test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground he was the subject of racial taunts, in Afrikaans, from fans in Bay 13.

His enthusiastic and aggressive approach on the field also gets him into trouble and he was notably brought before the match referee for making offensive facial gestures to Chris Gayle and subsequently fined half of his match fee.[12] He is also known to be verbally aggressive towards batsmen. This behaviour came back to bite him during India's First Test on their 2006 tour of South Africa, when he verbally admonished Sreesanth, an Indian bowler, after Sreesanth had trouble evading a delivery targeted at his upper-body. Nel gestured to his heart, indicating that he felt Sreesanth lacked courage. The very next ball Sreesanth charged Nel and hit him for a six and danced around him in joy and defiance.

Often referred to as a gentle giant off the field, Nel has attributed his eccentric onfield behaviour to his alter ego an oxygen starved mountain man known as Gunther.[13]

It was revealed that Nel had had an extra-marital affair with Jelena Kultiasova while he was playing cricket in England.

On 1 October 2010, Nel attempted suicide after three more women, one of them a prostitute, told of having slept with him.[14]

External links

References

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