MICHAEL HUSSEY

Michael Edward Killeen Hussey is a former international cricketer, who played all forms of the game. Hussey is also widely known by his nickname 'Mr Cricket'. Hussey was a relative latecomer to both the Australian one-day international and Test teams, debuting at 28 and 30 years of age in the respective formats, with 15,313 first-class runs before making his Test debut. With his time representing Australia, Hussey won multiple ICC titles with the team: the 2007 Cricket World Cup, the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy, and the 2009 ICC Champions Trophy.

An accumulator who is virtually impossible to distract at the crease, Michael Hussey waited a decade before becoming an overnight star. Others might have given up, or at least relaxed, during all that time in the backblocks of the Sheffield Shield and County Championship, but Hussey maintained the intensity and was soon living in a statistical world occupied by few others. Since watching Allan Border in the 1982 Boxing Day Test and immediately switching to a left-handed stance in the backyard in tribute to his new-found hero, Hussey had aspired to become a cricketer.

Michael Hussey was bought up on the northern outskirts of Perth, across the road from Mullaloo Beach. Hussey attended Whitford Catholic Primary School and Prendiville Catholic College. After finishing school, he won a scholarship to the Australian Cricket Academy, where his contemporaries included Brett Lee and Jason Gillespie. He played his cricket at nearby Wanneroo, where he also tended the scoreboard during ‘A’ grade matches for free hotdogs and cokes, and the chance to watch a young Damien Martyn – four years his senior but a world away on so many other levels – flay the visiting attacks.

Soon enough he was making his way into the big time, touring India with an Australia U-19s squad in 1994 and attending the Cricket Academy in Adelaide under Rod Marsh a year later. Hussey initially played for his native Western Australian Warriors, and his career total of 6471 runs ranks eighth in the list of that state's run-makers in the Sheffield Shield. He then moved to England, where in July 2001 he scored an unbeaten 329 (a Northamptonshire club record) at Wantage Road in his side's 633 for six declared on the way to a 10-wicket victory. He later captained Northamptonshire. In August 2003 he surpassed his own Northamptonshire record, when he scored 331 not out against Somerset at Taunton. The truth was however, Hussey didn't see a way into the Australian side. Langer and Hayden had just cemented their places in the XI and the list of domestic bats he felt were ahead of him in the queue was not short. He looked at the two openers, he looked at the aggressive Ricky Ponting and the free-wheeling Adam Gilchrist, and he decided that was what he needed to be

Hussey earned a Cricket Australia contract in 2004/05 after excelling in the ING Cup. Statistically, Hussey's international career was very successful, with his career batting average in Tests being 51.52 and in ODIs 48.15. He was a very occasional medium pace bowler, bowling only 98 overs in his Test career, 23 of them in 2008. On 28 December 2008, Day 3 of the Boxing Day Test, he got his first Test wicket, Paul Harris caught by Mitchell Johnson. He ended with figures of 1/22. He took two wickets in One Day Internationals. Hussey debuted for the Australian One-day team against India on 1 February 2004 at his home WACA ground in Perth. In this match Hussey made 17 not out helping Australia win the match by five wickets.

In the third Super Series match on 9 October 2005, Hussey became the first person to hit the roof of the Telstra Dome. Hussey had also come second overall in the Allan Border medal his first year in international cricket. In November 2006, Hussey became the ICC's ODI Player of the Year at the annual ICC Awards in Mumbai. He was also named in its World ODI XI in 2006 and as 12th man in 2007. In the 2007 Commonwealth Bank Triangular Series, Australia were in trouble while chasing a target against England, and in a later match New Zealand. Both times Hussey guided the Australians to victory, and on both occasions was the only recognised batsman at the crease at the end of the match.

Hussey led Australia in the Chappell–Hadlee Trophy after selectors rested captain Ricky Ponting and vice-captain Adam Gilchrist. The first match against New Zealand saw a 10-wicket loss, the first time Australia had lost by this margin in their One Day International history, although Hussey top scored with 42 off 96 balls. Hussey's record as captain was further marred when Australia lost the top place in the ODI rankings to South Africa for the first time since they were introduced in 2002 after losing to New Zealand two days later. Hussey top-scored for Australia with an aggressive 105 off 84 before another loss in the final match left him with a captaincy record of four losses from four matches.

In the first ODI of the 2008 Bangladesh ODI series, Hussey top-scored with 85 and received the man-of-the-match award. This coincided with his rise to second in the Reliance Mobile ICC ODI player rankings After initially being left out, Michael Hussey was named in the Australian 2011 World Cup squad as the replacement of Doug Bollinger after recovering from hamstring injury that needed surgery. In February 2012, Michael Hussey became the 13th batsman to score 5000 runs for Australia in ODI cricket, when he scored 59 runs against India at the Gabba

Hussey made his Test debut at the Gabba in Brisbane on 3 November 2005, as a replacement for fellow Western Australian batsman Justin Langer in the Australia vs. West Indies series. In the second Test, at Bellerive Oval, he scored 137 and 31 not out and was named man of the match. In the third Test at Adelaide Oval, Hussey was moved down the order to number five to accommodate the return of Langer. He made 133 not out in the first innings and 30 not out in the second, bringing his Test average to 120. On being moved down the order, Hussey proved invaluable to the Australian team, often building impressive partnerships with the tail-end batsmen, the most impressive being a 107-run 10th-wicket partnership with Glenn McGrath in the second Test of South Africa's 2005–06 tour of Australia, where Hussey would make 122. Hussey continued his remarkable batting with tail-enders against Bangladesh in their Spring 2006 2-Test series when he and Jason Gillespie (as a nightwatchman) put together a 320-run partnership, with Hussey making a then career-best 182.

On 18 April 2006 Hussey set a record as the fastest player in terms of time to reach 1,000 Test runs. He reached the milestone in just 166 days. Hussey was also the fastest player to reach the top 10 of the LG ICC cricket ratings. In the second Test of the 2006/07 Ashes, known affectionately as "Amazing Adelaide" due to Australia's improbable victory, Hussey made 91 before he was bowled (playing on) by Matthew Hoggard. In the second innings Australia was chasing 168 off 35 overs for victory for a chance to go 2–0 up in the series. After the fall of two early wickets, Ponting and Hussey, who was promoted to No. 4 instead of Damien Martyn, formed a steady partnership to guide Australia to victory. Ponting fell on 49 but the battle was well over. Hussey scored the winning runs and made 61 not out from 66 balls.

In December Hussey scored 103 runs off 156 balls—his fifth Test century—on the third day of the third match of the series at the WACA Ground in Perth, his home ground. He maintained an exceptional average of 105.25 in the 2006/07 Ashes series, which Australia won 5–0. In January after Australia's 5–0 Ashes whitewash, Justin Langer anointed Hussey to be the next leader of the team's victory song Under the Southern Cross I Stand. In the First Test against Sri Lanka at the Gabba, Hussey scored his sixth Test century with a score of 133 runs off 249 balls. He was also part of a record-breaking fourth-wicket partnership with Clarke. Their 245-run partnership is the third-highest partnership for Australia against Sri Lanka in Test matches. In the following match of the Warne-Muralidaran Trophy, Hussey scored his seventh Test century with a score of 132.

In January 2008, in the Second Test of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy at the SCG, Hussey scored his eighth Test century, against India. This was the first time he scored more than 50 runs at that ground. He ended up not out on 145, before Ponting declared. This would be Australia's 16th successive Test victory, as the Australians won in controversial circumstances. However, in the first innings of the next Test he scored his first Test duck. Hussey registered his ninth Test hundred in the First Test of the 2008 Border-Gavaskar Trophy at M. Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore Hussey claimed his first Test wicket against South Africa on the third day of the 2008 Boxing Day Test at the MCG, when Paul Harris skied a ball over Mitchell Johnson's head and the latter ran back and took a running catch as the ball fell down past his shoulder.

Hussey played in all five Tests of the 2009 Ashes Series in England, scoring 276 runs in 8 innings with a series average of 34.5. He scored two half centuries, one at Lord's in the Second Test, which England won, and one in the Third Test at Edgbaston, which ended in a draw. He scored his tenth Test century in Australia's second innings in the Fifth and final Test at The Oval, where he scored 121, potentially saving his Test career after a long run without a century. He also took five catches through the series.

In the summer of 2009/10 Hussey scored his eleventh Test century. Australia were playing Pakistan and were losing badly when Hussey proved his abilities in batting with the tail end, scoring an unbeaten 134 at the SCG. This innings with Peter Siddle, who scored 38, potentially saved the match as Australia went from a terrible position to a reasonable one and ended up winning the match with Hussey named man of the match for his heroic effort. In the first Test of the Frank Worrell Trophy against the West Indies in 2009 at the Gabba, Hussey took his second Test wicket after Dwayne Bravo hooked a short ball straight to deep backward square leg which was caught comfortably by Ben Hilfenhaus.

Prior to the 2010/11 Ashes series, Hussey was experiencing poor form in the lead-up to the series with speculation that he could be dropped. He retained his Test position after registering a second innings century against Victoria in the Sheffield Shield on 20 November, a few days prior to the First Ashes Test. In the First Test, Hussey scored a magnificent 195, his highest Test score, in a partnership of 307 with Brad Haddin, the highest partnership ever at the Gabba, later broken by Alastair Cook and Jonathan Trott in the next innings; the Test ended in a draw. In the Second Test, he scored 93 in the first innings following up with a 52 in the next. The next match, at the WACA Ground, he helped Australia to a 267 run win scoring 61 and 116.

In the 2011 Test tour of Sri Lanka, Hussey scored 95 & 15 in the First Test which earned him the Man of the Match honour. In the second Test he made 142 and took two wickets, including a vital one in Kumar Sangakkara, and took a spectacular one-handed full length diving catch in the gully and also being rewarded with the Man of the Match honour. In the third Test, he made 118 in the 1st innings. In the first Test Match of 2012, Hussey scored an unbeaten 150 not out to help the Aussies to 659/4(dec). He was involved in a 344 run partnership with Michael Clarke, who managed to score an unbeaten 329 not out. He was praised for his efforts and he once again cemented himself in the team after being under some serious pressure from critics and selectors.

Hussey started the 2012/13 Australian summer well with a century against South Africa in the first Test at the Gabba. A partnership with Michael Clarke proved to be vital, as the pair put on more than 200 runs during the fourth and fifth days. This feat was repeated in the 2nd Test at the Adelaide Oval with another century (103), and a 272 run partnership with Clarke. Hussey registered his 19th and final Test hundred in the First Test of the 2012-13 Warne-Muralidaran Trophy at the Bellerive Oval in Hobart, an elegant 115 runs. He played his final Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground, the last of Australia's three match series against Sri Lanka. In the first innings he was run out by Michael Clarke for 25, while in the second he guided Australia to victory with 27 not out.

Hussey was part of Australia's 2007 ICC World Twenty20 squad which was knocked out in the semi-finals. He played in all of Australia's matches, scoring 65 runs with a best of 37 before injuring a hamstring, which prevented his participation in Australia's tour of India that followed. In May 2010, he scored 60 runs off 24 balls in the semi-final of the ICC World Twenty20 to help defeat Pakistan and secure a place for Australia in the final. It is considered to be one of the most stunning run chases in Twenty20 cricket.

Hussey announced his retirement from international cricket after the 2012 Boxing Day Test in Melbourne. His last Test appearance was the New Year's fixture against Sri Lanka at the SCG in January 2013. He planned to play out the rest of the Australian summer in limited overs cricket but was surprisingly dropped with Australian selectors who were planning for the 2015 World Cup and gave Phillip Hughes and Usman Khawaja an opportunity at ODI level. He delayed his announcement until before the Sydney Test, fearing that he would be dropped before the Australian summer season was over.

He is now a popular TV commentator and is currently a coach with the Chennai SuperKings in the Indian Premier League. an ambassador for the Women and Infants Research Foundation (WIRF), Starlight and the WA Cricket Foundation.