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test top score = 134* | test top score = 134* |

Revision as of 12:13, 4 March 2006

Paul Collingwood
Source: , 2 March 2006

Paul David Collingwood MBE (born 26 May 1976, Shotley Bridge, Durham) is an English cricketer who plays for Durham and England.

Collingwood is an all-rounder who mixes natural strokeplay with the bat with reliable and occasionally dangerous medium-pace bowling. At 5'10" and an athletic and highly skilled fielder, he usually fields at backward point.

Cricketing career

Born and bred in Durham, he joined his local county side, where he became an instant favourite. He was swift to make an impression on the first-class game, taking the wicket of former England all-rounder David Capel with his first ball, and scoring 91 in his first innings against Northamptonshire.

Collingwood was voted Player of the Year by the Durham members in 2000, particularly for his one-day efforts. A back injury then saw his form peak and trough but in 2001 he hit form and excelled in the county championship and the one-day game, earning a call up to the England squad and he was selected for the NatWest Series against Pakistan and Australia in 2001.

Although not particularly successful in his debut, the selectors showed their confidence in his ability by choosing him for the one-day tour of Zimbabwe, where he starred as England secured a 5-0 whitewash. Having established himself as an integral part of the England one-day setup, the next step would be to earn a call-up to the Test squad. However, he dislocated his right shoulder while fielding in a pre-season county friendly against Lancashire and was forced to miss most of the 2003 season. Nevertheless, he was awarded a 12-month ECB contract when the winter touring squads were announced for Bangladesh and Sri Lanka where he would make his Test debut.

Although unable to establish a place in the first eleven, his all-round ability and fielding strengths made him a regular on England's overseas Test tours as 12th man. Several of the 'caught sub' entries recorded on England's scorecards can be attributed to his appearances on the field as a substitute, although they don't count towards his official statistics.

He retained his place in England's one-day side throughout the summer of 2004 despite a knee injury and scored an unbeaten 79 in the second match of the NatWest Challenge against India at The Oval as the home side won the series 2-1. Collingwood was also England's second highest run-scorer in the Champions Trophy with 141 at an average of 70.5, which included an unbeaten 80 in the opening game against Zimbabwe. He played in all 11 one-day internationals against Zimbabwe and South Africa, and was then named in the England Development Squad in May 2005, and the 14-man squad for The NatWest Series and the NatWest International Twenty20 against Australia.

On 21 June 2005, playing for England against the Bangladesh at Trent Bridge, he scored 112 not out from 86 balls, then took 6-31, the best-ever figures by an Englishman, to become the first player to score a century and take six wickets in a One Day International; Viv Richards had previously scored a hundred and taken five. Following an injury to bowler Simon Jones, Collingwood was called up for the fifth and deciding Ashes Test, and although he only scored 7 and 10 with the bat, his blocking performance in the second innings was a useful contribution to a 60-run sixth wicket stand helping England to draw the match and clinch the series.

He came back into the team for the 3rd Test against Pakistan in 2005-6, making his first and second Test 50 in both innings in a losing cause. In the ODI series he along with Durham teammates Liam Plunkett and Steve Harmison have accounted for the majority of wickets through their bowling and fielding.

In the 2006 New Year's Honours List, Paul Collingwood was awarded the MBE for his role in the successful Ashes competition.

Following his performance in Pakistan, Collingwood was added to an injury-hit England eleven for the first Test against India in March 2006. Collingwood justified his position in the team with a magnificent 134* in the first innings on 2 March, 2006, making his first Test century and steadying a wavering ship with a patient and intelligent knock.

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