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| Daniel Vettori at the University Oval in 2009 | ||||
| Personal information | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Daniel Luca Vettori | |||
| Born | 27 January 1979 Auckland, New Zealand |
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| Nickname | Dan | |||
| Height | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) | |||
| Batting style | Left-handed | |||
| Bowling style | Slow left-arm orthodox | |||
| Role | All-rounder, New Zealand captain | |||
| International information | ||||
| National side | New Zealand | |||
| Test debut (cap 200) | 6 February 1997 v England | |||
| Last Test | 11 December 2009 v Pakistan | |||
| ODI debut (cap 100) | 25 March 1997 v Sri Lanka | |||
| Last ODI | 9 November 2009 v Pakistan | |||
| ODI shirt no. | 11 | |||
| Domestic team information | ||||
| Years | Team | |||
| 1996 – present | Northern Districts | |||
| 2006 | Warwickshire | |||
| 2003 | Nottinghamshire | |||
| 2008-present | Queensland | |||
| Career statistics | ||||
| Competition | Test | ODI | FC | LA |
| Matches | 98 | 255 | 150 | 322 |
| Runs scored | 3,802 | 1,895 | 5,649 | 3,149 |
| Batting average | 30.41 | 17.07 | 30.53 | 20.44 |
| 100s/50s | 5/21 | 0/4 | 8/31 | 2/10 |
| Top score | 140 | 83 | 140 | 138 |
| Balls bowled | 24,352 | 12,111 | 35,077 | 15,529 |
| Wickets | 318 | 268 | 492 | 347 |
| Bowling average | 33.61 | 31.22 | 31.70 | 30.40 |
| 5 wickets in innings | 18 | 2 | 28 | 2 |
| 10 wickets in match | 3 | n/a | 3 | n/a |
| Best bowling | 7/87 | 5/7 | 7/87 | 5/7 |
| Catches/stumpings | 55/– | 71/– | 79/– | 102/– |
| Source: Cricinfo, 16 March 2010 | ||||
Daniel Luca Vettori (born 27 January 1979) is a cricketer who is the current captain of the New Zealand cricket team. He is the eighth player in Test history to take 300 wickets and score 3,000 runs. He is the youngest player to have represented New Zealand in Test cricket, having made his debut in 1996–97 at the age of 18. Vettori is a bowling all-rounder who bowls slow left-arm orthodox spin, he is known for his flight and guile rather than prodigious turn or pinpoint accuracy. He has a Test batting average of around 30 making him one of the more consistent and better batsmen in the New Zealand cricket team.
He was born in Auckland and brought up in Hamilton, attending Marian School and later St. Paul's Collegiate School. When available, he plays provincial cricket for Northern Districts and is also an international member of Indian Premier League team the Delhi DareDevils. Vettori also represents the Queensland Bulls in the KFC Twenty20 Big Bash. He is one of only a few international sports stars to wear prescription glasses while playing sport and is the first cricketer of Italian descent to represent New Zealand.
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Vettori made his Test debut at Wellington for New Zealand, against England, on 6 February 1997. His first Test wicket was that of Nasser Hussain, a former English cricketer. Three weeks earlier, he had made his first class debut, against the touring English side, and again his maiden wicket was Hussain. His ODI debut came a month later, against Sri Lanka, at Christchurch on 25 March 1997.
His career was in jeopardy in 2000 with a back injury, but he recovered to play a major role in New Zealand's victory in the 2004 Tri-Series with England and the West Indies in England.
Vettori was selected in the final squad for the World XI Super Series against Australia and played in all 3 ODIs and the Super Test.
As of 10 March 2008, Vettori was ranked 1st on the ICC Player Rankings for One Day bowlers and ranked 2nd and 10th for Test and One Day all-rounders respectively.
Vetorri is now the current temporary player-coach-captain of the New Zealand side, following former coach Andy Moles's resignation.
Vettori has also played for Hamilton in the Hawke Cup.
On 26 August 2009, Daniel Vettori became the eighth player and second left-arm bowler (after Chaminda Vaas) in history to take 300 wickets and score 3000 test runs, joining the illustrious club.[1]
He took his 300th Test wicket in Sri Lanka in 2009, becoming only the second New Zealand bowler (after Richard Hadlee) to pass that mark[1] and he is currently New Zealand's leading ODI wicket-taker.[2]
Vettori has three 10 wicket hauls in Test cricket, against Sri Lanka, Australia and Bangladesh. His best innings figures were achieved at Auckland in 1999–2000 against Australia where he took 7/87. He finished with career best match figures in that game, taking 12/149. They are the second best ever by a New Zealander, with only Richard Hadlee having taken more in a match. With another 12 wicket effort, against Bangladesh in Chittagong, he became the only New Zealander to have taken a dozen wickets in a Test on two occasions.
He is the bowler to have most frequently dismissed Shane Warne in Tests, getting him out nine times, most notably for 99 in a Test at Perth. Ironically, in the 1st Test against Pakistan in 2009–10 season, Vettori was himself dismissed for 99,[3] while chasing a world record in centuries batting from position number 8.
Prior to becoming captain on a permanent basis in 2007, Vettori had captained the Black Caps in ODI cricket on occasions such as when regular captain Stephen Fleming was not available. As of the end of 2006, he had led New Zealand in 11 games, winning eight of them.
He captained New Zealand at the inaugural Twenty20 World Championship in South Africa.[4] Subsequently, it was announced that Vettori would captain the Black Caps in all forms of the game: Twenty20s, ODIs and Tests. Initially, he was announced to only be captain of the former two.[5]
Vettori's captaincy has had a rocky start, losing a Test series in England first up. Vettori also attracted some criticism in the following ODI series when he engaged in angry shouting from the balcony at The Oval, regarding a controversial run out that had occurred. He then refused to shake hands with the England team after the match.[6] This contrasted with Fleming's more languid, laid back style.[citation needed]
Vettori has matured into a useful lower-order batsman, having scored 3,000 Test runs, including five centuries (134 against Pakistan 2009, 140 against Sri Lanka 2009,137* against Pakistan in 2003 ,127 against Zimbabwe in 2005 and 118 against India in 2009) as well as several half-centuries. Although it took Vettori 47 Tests to score his first 1,000 runs at an average of 17.24, the second thousand took him just 22 Tests at a rate of 42.52 per innings.
In December 2006, Vettori began establishing himself as more of an all-rounder, batting at number 5 for New Zealand in the one-day series against Sri Lanka.
On 4 December 2009, despite the Black Caps only scoring 99 runs against Pakistan, Vettori became the highest Test run scorer batting at no.8 spot, a record previously held by Shane Warne. For the third Test against Pakistan that started on 11 December 2009, Vettori promoted himself to no.6 in the batting order, it is presumed he will bat at this position in future Test matches.
| Daniel Vettori's Test Centuries[7] | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | Runs | Match | Against | City/Country | Venue | Year | Result |
| [1] | 137* | 49 | Hamilton, New Zealand | Seddon Park | 2003 | Drawn | |
| [2] | 127 | 63 | Harare, Zimbabwe | Harare Sports Club | 2005 | Won | |
| [3] | 118 | 90 | Hamilton, New Zealand | Seddon Park | 2009 | Lost | |
| [4] | 140 | 94 | Colombo, Sri Lanka | Sinhalese Sports Club | 2009 | Lost | |
| [5] | 134 | 97 | Napier, New Zealand | McLean Park | 2009 | Drawn | |
| Daniel Vettori's One Day International 5-Wicket Hauls[9] | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | Figures | Match | Against | City/Country | Venue | Year | Result |
| [1] | 5-30 | 137 | London, England | Lord's | 2004 | Won | |
| [2] | 5-7 | 210 | Queenstown, New Zealand | Queenstown Events Centre | 2007 | Won | |
Vettori is married to Mary O'Carroll. He moved from Hamilton to Auckland to live with her but has continued playing for the Northern Districts Knights.[10] They have a son named James [11](born 8 March 2009).[12]
A biography of Vettori was published in August 2008.[13] Daniel Vettori is first cousins with David Hill a former one test five-eighth for the New Zealand All Blacks and is now playing with Super14 franchise Western Force.
| Preceded by Stephen Fleming |
New Zealand national cricket captain (interim) 2005/6 |
Succeeded by Stephen Fleming |
| Preceded by Stephen Fleming |
New Zealand national cricket captain 2007/8 |
Succeeded by incumbent |
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