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Chris Read
Personal information
Full name
Christopher Mark Wells Read
Born (1978-08-10) 10 August 1978 (age 45)
Paignton, England
NicknameReados
Height5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
Role Wicket-keeper
International information
National side
Test debut (cap  595)1 July 1999 v  New Zealand
Last Test5 January 2007 v  Australia
ODI debut (cap  155)23 January 2000 v  South Africa
Last ODI28 October 2006 v  West Indies
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1995–1997 Devon
1997 Gloucestershire
1998–2017 Nottinghamshire (squad no. 7)
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 15 36 350 333
Runs scored 360 300 16,483 5,564
Batting average 18.94 17.64 37.46 29.13
100s/50s 0/1 0/0 27/92 2/24
Top score 55 30 * 240 135
Catches/ stumpings 48/6 41/2 1056/53 319/73
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 1 July 2020

Christopher Mark Wells Read (born 10 August 1978) is an English former cricketer who was the captain of Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club. He played for the England cricket team in 15 Tests and 36 ODIs. He was a wicket-keeper.

Personal life

Chris is married to Louise and together they have two children, a son named Caleb Mattias Wells Read, who was born on 3 May 2009, and a daughter named Callista Lily Read. On 4 November 2007 Read ran the New York City Marathon to raise money for Bowel Cancer UK in honour of his first cricket coach, Trevor Ward, who died of the disease. Read finished 4,358th out of over 38,000 runners.

Domestic career

Read played for Devon in a NatWest Trophy match at the age of 16, and in 1997 made a single AXA Life League appearance for Gloucestershire, claiming an NBC Denis Compton Award that year. After an England A tour to Kenya and Sri Lanka in the winter - making his first-class debut in Nairobi - Read was picked up by Nottinghamshire for the 1998 season. By June he had established himself in the side and he claimed 42 dismissals that summer as well as making 401 runs.

County years

Several years in the international wilderness followed, Read being overlooked in favour of first Paul Nixon and then James Foster as keeper-in-waiting in preparation for the retirement of Alec Stewart. Left to concentrate on his county cricket career, Read claimed 68 dismissals in 2002 and worked at his batting, that year averaging nearly 35 with another hundred coming against Northamptonshire. He made a one-day century against the same opponents early in 2003 and with Stewart's retirement from international one-day cricket, he was recalled by England that year, playing in all ten ODIs.

Return to county cricket

In the 2004 English season, Jones was preferred for the series against New Zealand and West Indies in both Tests and One-Day Internationals, having made a century in the second Test of the New Zealand series. Read returned to Nottinghamshire and had by far his best season with the bat: he scored 807 first-class runs including two centuries, and averaged over 50. The selectors stuck with Jones, however, and by the summer of 2005 Read was not even second-choice keeper for England in ODIs, Matt Prior of Sussex being preferred for the role. Read was again overlooked in the squad for the winter tour of Pakistan, instead being selected for the second-tier ECB National Academy squad. As first choice wicket-keeper in the academy squad, Read got several opportunities to play, and had a successful tour, scoring 254 runs at an average of 66.25 in the West Indies before he had to prematurely return home to attend to a family emergency.

Read continued to be on the fringes of England squads, and was selected for the England 'A' team against the touring Pakistan side in 2006, off the back of a strong start to the county season which had seen him average 50 in both formats of the game. He took advantage of his selection, scoring an unbeaten 150 in the tour match. Soon after, Geraint Jones, who had remained first choice for England despite a slump in batting form, broke a finger in the second Test match against Pakistan in 2006; the next day Read scored a rapid 72 against Northamptonshire in a Natwest Pro 40 League game.

In September 2007, Read took over as the captain of Nottinghamshire. [1] The team were promoted in the championship that summer and Read averaged 54.17 with the bat. In 2009 Read had an excellent season with Nottinghamshire, scoring 1,203 runs at an average of 75.18 including 4 centuries in first-class cricket. His form with the bat has largely continued since.

He averaged 45.80 in 2010, as he led the team to their sixth championship. In 2013 he top-scored with 53 off 52 balls as they won the 2013 Yorkshire Bank 40 final. The next two years saw Read hit a purple patch, averaging 43.85 in 2014 and 51.35 in 2015 (topping the Nottinghamshire averages, and passing both 15,000 first-class runs and 1,000 first-class dismissals that season, with his 1000th dismissal being Paul Collingwood. [2]). This form wasn't sustained as Nottinghamshire were relegated in 2016. In March 2017, Read announced his plan to retire at the end of the season, after 20 years with the county, to become director of cricket at Uppingham School [3]]. In his final season, he led Nottinghamshire to promotion, secured in the last game when Read's 124 was crucial in getting Nottinghamshire the maximum batting points required to finish second. Nottinghamshire also won the Royal London One Day Cup in 2017, under the captaincy of Dan Christian, with Read scoring 58 off 57 balls in the final.

In July 2014, he played for the MCC side in the Bicentenary Celebration match at Lord's. [4]

International career

Debut years

He toured Zimbabwe and South Africa with the A team the following winter, and in 1999 his maiden first-class century, a well-timed 160 against Warwickshire, brought him selection for the first Test against New Zealand at Edgbaston. Still not 21, Read made a good impression: although he failed with the bat, he claimed eight dismissals, six in the second innings alone. He was retained for Lord's, but suffered a very public embarrassment when he was bowled for zero, ducking what he thought was a beamer from Chris Cairns but was in fact a well-disguised slower ball. 37 in the second innings was followed by another duck at Old Trafford, and he was dropped, though he did play in the 1999/2000 One Day International series in South Africa.

Read prepares for wicketkeeping practice at Adelaide Oval

Return in 2004

Read was first-choice keeper for the 2003/04 tours and played in eight of the nine Tests that winter, against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and West Indies. However, for the final Test of the West Indies series, in Antigua, he was replaced by Kent wicket-keeper Geraint Jones. This would be the game in which Brian Lara made his world-record score of 400 not out. Read was retained for the one-day squad however, winning the man-of-the match award in the first game of that series, for a quickfire unbeaten 27 in a rain-affected run chase.

On 31 July Read was recalled to the England squad as a replacement for Jones. Chairman of Selectors David Graveney stressed that this was down to Jones' poor form with the bat rather than his injury. Read took advantage of the opportunity with 38 in the first innings of the 3rd Test against Pakistan, and then completing his first Test half-century, shepherding the tail in the second innings whilst making 55, to add to a sharp performance (four catches and a stumping) behind the wickets. Despite finishing the summer as first choice, Read was passed over for a 12-month central contract for 2007 - the England selectors deciding to keep their options open by not contracting any wicket-keeper.

Prior to the first Test in the 2006-2007 England Ashes tour of Australia, Read was dropped in favour of Geraint Jones. England coach Duncan Fletcher said that Jones would be "a better prospect for batting at number seven". [5] Notts Director of Cricket, Mick Newell, responded to Fletcher's decision by calling his selection "bizarre". [6]

Read was selected to play for two tour matches for England between the Second and Third Tests. In the first, against Australia Chairman's XI, Read was dismissed for a duck. In the two-day match against Western Australia, Read scored 59 not out while Jones, playing as a batsman, went for a first ball duck. [7] Under increased pressure, Jones retained his place for the third Test but failed to score in either innings - the first and second ducks of his Test career - leading to Read being selected for the fourth Test. Though he struggled with the bat in the final two Tests, he took 6 catches in the first innings of the fourth Test, becoming only the 3rd player in Test history to take 6 dismissals in an innings twice. [8] Read repeated that performance with another 6 dismissals in the first innings of the 5th Test in Sydney, making him the first, and so far only, keeper in Test history to achieve the feat in successive Tests. For the subsequent one-day tournament, and the following World Cup, Read was overlooked for selection, with Paul Nixon taking over the wicketkeeper position. The following summer, the Test wicketkeeping position was given to Matt Prior, who scored a century on his Test debut and retained his place for the subsequent one-day matches.

Career best performances

Updated 9 September 2010

Batting
Score Fixture Venue Season
Tests 55 England v Pakistan Headingley 2006
ODI 30* England v South Africa Old Trafford 2003
T20I 13 England v Pakistan Bristol 2006
FC 240 Nottinghamshire v Essex Chelmsford 2007
LA 135 Nottinghamshire v Durham Trent Bridge 2006
T20 58* Nottinghamshire v Lancashire Old Trafford 2009

References

  1. ^ ESPNcricinfo Article. Retrieved 10 May 2008
  2. ^ "Read reaches 1,000 dismissals". BBC Sport. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  3. ^ "Nottinghamshire's Chris Read to retire at end of season. the Argus".
  4. ^ "MCC v Rest of the World - 5 July". Lord's. 5 July 2014. Archived from the original on 7 July 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  5. ^ " Jones to return as Ashes keeper" BBC Sport 12 November 2006
  6. ^ " Jones choice bizarre - Notts boss" BBC Sport, 13 November 2006
  7. ^ "Cricket Scorecard". BBC Sport.
  8. ^ "HowSTAT! Wicket Keeper Match/Innings Records".

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by Nottinghamshire County cricket captain
2008–2017
Succeeded by