Described as the most exciting batsman to emerge since David Gower retired, Michael Vaughan provides a view of his own achievements during 2002. He also contemplates the controversy that surrounded England's ill-fated World Cup mission, and discusses the real story behind the decision not to go to Zimbabwe. Vaughan's thoughts about Nasser Hussain, the captain he has served most, and his other international and county colleagues are also shared. Every aspect of an intense and exciting year gets Vaughan's complete consideration - from being given out handled ball in India to clean bowling Sachin Tendulkar, from being targeted by Glenn McGrath to winning the Player of the Series award in the Ashes battle, and on to the World Cup fiasco.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Praise for Michael Vaughan: "I'd pay to watch him bat " Nasser Hussein
He could even be the best English batsman I have opposed during my career. - Steve Waugh, in 'Ground Rules'
" A class act who has the rare ability to score against quality bowling". Telegraph
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Höhe: 236 mm
Breite: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-340-83093-2 (9780340830932)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Michael Vaughan was born in Manchester in 1974. He made his county debut with Yorkshire in 1993, and his England debut against South Africa in 1999. In 2002, his international career took off; he scored six centuries during the course of the year, four of these during the summer against Sri Lanka and India. In the subsequent Ashes series in Australia, Michael Vaughan was named Player of the Series. He is one of the leading batsmen in the world, and was made captain of the England team in the summer of 2003.