Full Name

Stephen Craig Cook

Born

November 29, 1982, Johannesburg, Transvaal

Age

41y 111d

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Bowling Style

Right arm Medium

Playing Role

Opening Batter

RELATIONS

(father),

(brother)

With textbook technique and a temperament to match, Stephen Cook seemed an obvious candidate for international honours from an early age but ended up being a late bloomer, much like his father Jimmy. Cook was schooled at the King Edward VII School, two years below Graeme Smith and the pair occasionally opened the batting together. While Smith was aggressive and unorthodox in his approach, Cook was as correct as they come, with a serene cover drive and a confident pull shot in his repertoire.

Cook made his provincial debut the season after Smith, in the 2000/01 season in which he also played for South Africa's under-19 team. He was part of the age-group side that competed in the 2002 World Cup, alongside both Smith and Hashim Amla. Cook finished as South Africa's second highest run-scorer and only centurion at the event but unlike Smith and Amla, it would be many years before he would make his mark higher up.

In a strong Gauteng and later Lions set-up, Cook had to fight for a place as a regular in the early years, but by the mid-2000s had established himself as a reliable opener. In the 2008-9 season, he shattered the South African first-class record for the highest individual score. In a marathon innings of two minutes short of 14 hours at the crease, Cook scored 390, eclipsing Daryll Cullinan's 337 scored sixteen before. Cook was also part of a 365-run sixth-wicket stand with Thami Tsolekile, also a record in South African cricket. That season Cook entered the first-class top ten run-scorers list and he stayed there for seven seasons, without a national call-up.

The following summer, 2009-10, he notched up over 1000 first-class runs, a feat seldom achieved in South Africa's six-franchise system. He was promoted to Lions' four-day captain ahead of the 2014-15 season, in which he led them to the trophy and topped the run-charts.

Recognition finally came in January 2016, sixteen years after he made his domestic debut, when Cook was named in the South African XI to play England in the Centurion Test. The wait was worth it. He became the sixth South African to score a century on debut and guided the team to their only victory of the four-match series.

ESPNcricinfo staff

Stephen Cook Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100s50s4s6sCtSt
Tests1119063211733.26140245.073266060
FC229422331539639039.57--4860--1370
List A170165125874127*38.39748778.451142--310
T20s232305546624.08465119.130273130

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests11112160---8.00-000
FC229-822485113/423/4244.093.5474.7000
List A170-24324861/21/241.336.1240.5000
T20s23------------
Stephen Craig Cook

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Test

Recent Matches of Stephen Cook

Photos of Stephen Cook

Stephen Cook reacts to Quinton de Kock's missed stumping
Stephen Cook was hit on the hand while fielding
Stephen Cook steadies under a catch
Stephen Cook leaves during a watchful opening spell
Dean Elgar and Stephen Cook added 64 for the first wicket
Stephen Cook raises his bat after reaching his half-century