29 Nov, 2022 5:20 AM, Tue
He will give abroad substitution cover when Sam Billings and Colin Munro leave in January Sam Hain, the Warwickshire hitter who was brought into the world in Hong Kong and experienced childhood in Australia, has endorsed as a substitution player for Brisbane Intensity. Hain addressed Queensland and Australia youth groups, including at the 2012 Under-19 World Cup, prior to fashioning a vocation in the UK which has seen him address Britain Lions. He will prepare with Intensity all through the BBL season and afterward fill one of the opening when Sam Billings and Colin Munro leave for different associations toward the beginning of January. Hain has a noteworthy T20 record with a normal of 36 and strike-pace of 131.47 while in Rundown A cricket has the second-most elevated normal of somebody to have played something like 50 innings. "It's been a couple of years since I have come back to Queensland, so I've delighted in returning to a ton of the spots I recall from growing up,'' he said. "It's been perfect to find so many of the folks I played with in the Queensland groups and the Gold Coast Dolphins since I have over here." "I'm so eager to have the option to play in the BBL. It's been a major objective of dig for a couple of years at this point and it is a gigantic rush have the option to be a piece of things with Brisbane this late spring." Swim Seccombe, the ongoing Intensity and Queensland mentor, was responsible for the Queensland U-19 side that Hain was important for in 2011-12. "Sam was an exceptionally skilled youthful player and I know a great deal of us at QC were sorry to see him go when he settled on his decision to seek after his choices in Britain," he said. "It will be an extraordinary fit to have him back in the gathering. His playing experience is brilliant, particularly as a white competitor who knows how to control an innings and use sound judgment in the center."
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 122 | 5117 |
2 | Australia | 116 | 3936 |
3 | South Africa | 112 | 3357 |
4 | Pakistan | 106 | 2762 |
5 | New Zealand | 101 | 3349 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Babar Azam | 824 |
2 | Shubman Gill | 801 |
3 | V. Kohli | 768 |
4 | H.T. Tector | 746 |
5 | R.G. Sharma | 746 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | K.A. Maharaj | 716 |
2 | J.R. Hazlewood | 688 |
3 | A. Zampa | 686 |
4 | Mohammed Siraj | 678 |
5 | J.J. Bumrah | 665 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Mohammad Nabi | 320 |
2 | Shakib Al Hasan | 292 |
3 | Sikandar Raza | 288 |
4 | A. Vala | 248 |
5 | Rashid Khan | 239 |
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Australia | 124 | 3715 |
2 | India | 120 | 3108 |
3 | England | 105 | 3151 |
4 | South Africa | 103 | 1845 |
5 | New Zealand | 96 | 2121 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | K.S. Williamson | 859 |
2 | J.E. Root | 824 |
3 | D.J. Mitchell | 768 |
4 | Babar Azam | 768 |
5 | S.P.D. Smith | 757 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | R. Ashwin | 870 |
2 | J.J. Bumrah | 847 |
3 | J.R. Hazlewood | 847 |
4 | K. Rabada | 834 |
5 | P.J. Cummins | 820 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | R.A. Jadeja | 444 |
2 | R. Ashwin | 322 |
3 | Shakib Al Hasan | 310 |
4 | J.E. Root | 282 |
5 | J.O. Holder | 270 |
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 266 | 14108 |
2 | Australia | 256 | 10241 |
3 | England | 254 | 9660 |
4 | West Indies | 252 | 11604 |
5 | South Africa | 251 | 8287 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | T.M. Head | 844 |
2 | S.A. Yadav | 842 |
3 | P.D. Salt | 816 |
4 | Babar Azam | 755 |
5 | Mohammad Rizwan | 746 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | A.U. Rashid | 719 |
2 | Rashid Khan | 681 |
3 | P.W.H. De Silva | 674 |
4 | J.R. Hazlewood | 662 |
5 | A.J. Hosein | 659 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | P.W.H. De Silva | 222 |
2 | Mohammad Nabi | 214 |
3 | H.H. Pandya | 213 |
4 | M.P. Stoinis | 211 |
5 | Sikandar Raza | 210 |
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