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Full name James Michael Anderson
Born July 30, 1982, Burnley, Lancashire
Current age 26 years 73 days
Major teams England,Auckland,Lancashire,Lancashire Cricket Board
Nickname Jimmy
Playing role Bowler
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Height
6 ft 2 in
Education St Theodore's RC High School; St Theodore's RC Sixth Form Centre - Burnley
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
BF
SR
100
50
4s
6s
Ct
St
Tests
29
41
23
246
34
13.66
694
35.44
0
0
27
0
13
0
ODIs
97
39
19
124
15
6.20
315
39.36
0
0
8
0
26
0
T20Is
10
2
2
1
1*
-
1
100.00
0
0
0
0
2
0
First-class
81
95
43
491
37*
9.44
0
0
35
0
List A
145
59
35
215
15
8.95
0
0
34
0
Twenty20
27
5
4
22
16
22.00
22
100.00
0
0
3
0
4
0
Bowling averages
Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
29
55
5906
3590
104
7/43
9/98
34.51
3.64
56.7
5
5
0
ODIs
97
95
4725
3859
127
4/23
4/23
30.38
4.90
37.2
7
0
0
T20Is
10
10
234
322
11
2/24
2/24
29.27
8.25
21.2
0
0
0
First-class
81
14498
8376
291
7/43
28.78
3.46
49.8
14
13
1
List A
145
6925
5493
196
4/23
4/23
28.02
4.75
35.3
7
0
0
Twenty20
27
27
577
809
25
2/24
2/24
32.36
8.41
23.0
0
0
0
Career statistics
Test debut
England v Zimbabwe at Lord's, May 22-24, 2003 scorecard
Last Test
England v South Africa at The Oval, Aug 7-11, 2008 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut
Australia v England at Melbourne, Dec 15, 2002 scorecard
Last ODI
England v South Africa at Cardiff, Sep 3, 2008 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut
Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 9, 2007 scorecard
Last T20I
England v New Zealand at Manchester, Jun 13, 2008 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut
2002
Last First-class
England v South Africa at The Oval, Aug 7-11, 2008 scorecard
List A debut
2000
Last List A
England v South Africa at Cardiff, Sep 3, 2008 scorecard
Twenty20 debut
Yorkshire v Lancashire at Leeds, Jul 14, 2004 scorecard
Last Twenty20
England v New Zealand at Manchester, Jun 13, 2008 scorecard
Profile
A strapping, genuinely quick fast bowler, James Anderson had played only three
one-day games for Lancashire in the 2002 season - he'd played more for his
club Burnley - before being called into England's VB Series squad the
following winter as cover for Andy Caddick, following an impressive stint at the Academy in Adelaide. An amazing 10-over stint in century heat at Adelaide, which cost just 12 runs, earned him a place in the 2003 World Cup, where he produced a matchwinning spell against Pakistan, before suffering a sobering last-over disaster against Australia. At this stage, however, his star was very much in the ascendancy, and when selected for the first Test of the new home season, he took five wickets in his debut innings almost to order. An ODI hat-trick - the first by an English bowler - followed against South Africa at The Oval, but from that moment on, his fortunes began to wane. South Africa's Test team made his new go-faster hairstyle seem a little foolish, and though he retained his place for the winter tours to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in 2003-04 and South Africa the following year, he was reduced to the most peripheral of net-bowling roles - and a shadow of his former self on his rare appearances in the middle. He seemed well out of the frame until injuries led to his recall at Mumbai in 2005-06 where he played a key part in England's success. But no sooner had he returned home than he broke down with a stress fracture of the lower back, ruling him out of the 2006 season. A see-saw winter followed in Australia - he was thrown back in at the deep end for the series opener at Brisbane and suffered acutely for his lack of match practice as England were thumped by 277 runs. By the one-day series, however, he had rediscovered some of his best form, only to be rested as a precaution ahead of the World Cup. Shortly before England's opening match he broke his finger and although he played through the pain he was never at his best. He wasn't alone in that, but not for the first time the way he had been managed was in question. He and Stuart Broad spearheaded a young England attack in place of the out-of-form Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard for the second Test of England's series against New Zealand in the winter of 2008, and it appeared to inspire him. His 5 for 73 helped England square the series, and though his old waywardness returned with depressing inevitability in the final Test, he was back among the wickets three games later against the Kiwis at Trent Bridge, when his hostile full-pitched late swing accounted for each of the first six wickets to fall. In addition, his batting - for so long superfluous - started to come into its own, as a brave career-best 34 against a rampant South Africa at Headingley would later prove. Rob Smyth July 2008