Josh Hazlewood

Australia

Personal Information
Born
Jan 08, 1991 (32 years)
Birth Place
Tamworth, New South Wales
Height
1.96 m
Role
Bowler
Batting Style
Left Handed Bat
Bowling Style
Right-arm fast-medium
ICC Rankings
 
Test
ODI
T20
Batting
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Bowling
10
2
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Career Information
Teams
Australia, Australia U19, New South Wales, Sydney Sixers, Australia A, Mumbai Indians, Chennai Super Kings, Cummins XI, Finch XI, Royal Challengers Bangalore
It won't be wrong to define Josh Hazlewood as the modern day adaptation of the legendary Glenn McGrath. The similarity isn't hard to make out - smooth run up to the crease with the intention...
Full profile
Batting Career Summary
M Inn NO Runs HS Avg BF SR 100 200 50 4s 6s
Test 66 79 39 475 39 11.88 1055 45.02 0 0 0 67 2
ODI 85 31 24 121 23 17.29 133 90.98 0 0 0 13 3
T20I 41 7 5 22 13 11.0 14 157.14 0 0 0 2 1
IPL 27 6 6 19 7 0.0 28 67.86 0 0 0 1 0
Bowling Career Summary
M Inn B Runs Wkts BBI BBM Econ Avg SR 5W 10W
Test 66 123 13737 6404 245 6/67 9/115 2.80 26.14 56.07 10 0
ODI 85 84 4467 3513 132 6/52 6/52 4.72 26.61 33.84 3 0
T20I 41 41 922 1181 58 4/12 4/12 7.69 20.36 15.9 0 0
IPL 27 27 603 810 35 4/25 4/25 8.06 23.14 17.23 0 0
Career Information
Profile
It won't be wrong to define Josh Hazlewood as the modern day adaptation of the legendary Glenn McGrath. The similarity isn't hard to make out - smooth run up to the crease with the intention being accuracy more than raw pace. The agenda would more often than not be an unerring fourth or fifth stump line with a bit of swing or seam to boot. Almost the classical fast bowler. Although not in the league of McGrath yet, there is no doubt that Hazlewood would be among the best pacers to have graced the game by the time he hangs up his boots.

Such was Hazlewood's talent from his early years that he landed a First-class debut at the age of 17 in the 2008-09 season, making him the youngest fast bowler ever to play for New South Wales. Gradually, he got initiated into the other formats in the domestic circuit and also got a surprise ODI debut in 2010 although it took another three years for him to play another 50-over game. Being young and raw,

Hazlewood clearly was a work in progress but the selectors were keeping an eye on him. A strong 2013-14 home season saw him come of age and it was only a matter of time before he took international cricket by storm.

Hazlewood debuted in Tests during the 2014-15 home series against India and started with a bang - a fifer on debut at the Gabba. It was a trailer of what was to come as he climbed up the ladder steadily to become one half of Australia's lethal new-ball attack along with Mitchell Starc. If his partner was a devastating left-arm pacer who relied a lot on speed through the air, Hazlewood's mantra was to stick to the basics of line and length. The policy worked for him and complemented Starc beautifully too.

With Starc being injury prone, Hazlewood had to shoulder a lot of extra responsibility at times and he showed that he relished the baggage. While showing his skills at home and also overseas on seamer-friendly conditions, Hazlewood also bowled with a lot of heart in the sub-continent, making ample use of reverse swing along with his accuracy to trouble batsmen. The 2015 Ashes series was an aberration for him as he couldn't quite make use of pitches that had movement in them. Having said that, the first tour of England for any visiting fast bowler is a challenge and to be fair to Hazlewood, he was still a rookie in international cricket.

Hazlewood shone in the 2017-18 Ashes campaign at home as the Aussies regained the urn after five years. Apart from being a successful Test bowler, Hazlewood did well in ODIs as well. His unrelenting accuracy has stifled a lot of batsmen and he has also tried to add up a few variations up his sleeve to suit the format. Although pace isn't exactly his strength, the 2017-18 season saw Hazlewood improve his speeds considerably, clocking around 87-88 mph on an average quite consistently. While the pace improved, the accuracy stayed and meant that Hazlewood's efficiency had doubled.
However, there was a setback of some sorts as Hazlewood was overlooked for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. In Test cricket, he remained a strong resource with his nagging lines and ability to move the ball but struggled to nail down his spot in Australia’s limited overs setup. Brushing the disappointment of the World Cup aside, Hazlewood turned up for the 2019 Ashes and had a great campaign. He picked up 20 wickets from 4 games at an average of 21.85.

Hazlewood eventually found his way back into Australia’s white-ball plans and was included in their squad for the 2021 T20 World Cup after an impressive run in the BBL. He had an excellent tournament, one which Australia went on to win, as he picked up 11 wickets from 7 games. In 2022, he was bought by the Royal Challengers Bangalore for the IPL. He retained his spot for the following 2022 T20 World Cup but didn’t have a notable tournament. Although initially a part of Australia’s squad for the World Test Championship Final, he was withdrawn due to injury. He went on to play the following Ashes series and picked up 16 wickets in 4 games.

Hazlewood was named in Australia’s squad for the 2023 Cricket World Cup.

Written by Hariprasad Sadanandan, Kumar Abhisekh Das & Anurag Hegde
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