Full name
Alastair Nathan Cook
Born
December 25, 1984, Gloucester
Current age 28 years 176 days
Major teams England, Bedfordshire, England Lions, England Under-19s, Essex, Marylebone Cricket Club
Nickname Cooky, Chef
Playing role Opening batsman
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow
Height
6 ft 2 in
Education Bedford School
| Test debut |
India v England at Nagpur, Mar 1-5, 2006 scorecard |
| Last Test |
England v New Zealand at Leeds, May 24-28, 2013 scorecard |
| Test statistics |
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| ODI debut |
England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, Jun 28, 2006 scorecard |
| Last ODI |
England v New Zealand at Cardiff, Jun 16, 2013 scorecard |
| ODI statistics |
|
| T20I debut |
England v West Indies at The Oval, Jun 28, 2007 scorecard |
| Last T20I |
South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 15, 2009 scorecard |
| T20I statistics |
|
| First-class debut |
Essex v Nottinghamshire at Chelmsford, Sep 3-5, 2003 scorecard |
| Last First-class |
England v New Zealand at Leeds, May 24-28, 2013 scorecard |
| List A debut |
Essex Cricket Board v Essex at Chelmsford, May 7, 2003 scorecard |
| Last List A |
England v New Zealand at Cardiff, Jun 16, 2013 scorecard |
| Twenty20 debut |
Middlesex v Essex at Southgate, Jul 1, 2005 scorecard |
| Last Twenty20 |
Somerset v Essex at Taunton, Jul 24, 2012 scorecard |
Those in the know were saying that the tall, dark and handsome Alastair Cook was destined for great things very early on, and on the Ashes tour of 2010-11, he came good on a host of promises, scoring an incredible 766 runs in seven innings to anchor England's first series win in Australia for 24 years. In so doing, he went past 5,000 Test runs, having turned 26 on Christmas Day - the second youngest batsman to reach the landmark after Sachin Tendulkar. Two years later and further records had been broken as he became England's leading Test century-maker - hitting No. 23 against India in Kolkata, his third in three matches - and became the youngest player to pass 7000 runs.
It had seemed inevitable, from the moment he scored a hundred on debut against India in 2006, that he would have a prolific career and captain his country. The leadership came firstly when Andrew Strauss was rested for the Bangladesh tour in 2009, then the ODI side in 2010 before he took full control of the Test team in 2012 after Strauss retirement. It was a challenge that could have broken lesser men; an away trip to India and the ongoing Kevin Pietersen saga. It turned into a triumph as England won the Test series 2-1 and Pietersen returned to the side to play a key role.
A correct and stylish left-hander strong on the pull, Cook was thrown in at the deep end by Essex the year after he left Bedford School with a fistful of batting records, and has barely looked back since. His early England career was full of successes, although a barren spell in 2010 briefly threatened his place before a century against Pakistan at The Oval - a rather more frenetic affair than Cook's usual knocks - transformed him in time for the Ashes. Up until that point, he had looked
increasingly vulnerable outside off stump, with a tendency to play around the front pad proving costly. Cook had already lost his one-day place after a moderate run, not helped by his fielding sometimes being less than scintillating.
He captained England in the Under-19 World Cup early in 2004, scored his maiden first-class hundred later that year, and added a double-century for Essex against the Australian tourists in 2005. The following spring he was called up by the full England side when injuries struck in India. He had been in the Caribbean with the A team when the SOS came but, unfazed, stroked 60 and a magnificent century to complete a memorable debut in Nagpur. He remained consistent, seemingly at ease with the pressure, and was a shoo-in for the 2006-07 Ashes. Before that series even started Glenn McGrath paid him the honour of publicly announcing that he would be targeting Cook: it made for a tough baptism, but although he was hardly prolific (276 runs) he did manage a century in Perth.
Bowlers began to exploit that penchant for hanging on the front foot, but Cook still made his share of runs. By the time of his 25th birthday on Christmas Day 2009 he had scored far more runs (3536 to David Gower's 2548) and centuries (nine to Ian Botham's six) than any other Englishman of a comparable age. He hit three more Test hundreds in 2009 - but none of them were in the Ashes series, in which 95 at Lord's was his only score above 32 as the Aussies probed that front-pad problem.
However, further honours were just around the corner. Strauss took time off at the start of 2010, and Cook captained in Bangladesh, scoring centuries as both Tests were won. It was the prelude to the great feats in Australia to come and the evolution continued in May 2011 when he was named as Strauss' successor in the one-day captaincy. Little more than a year later, after Strauss' abrupt retirement, the Test role followed, with a demanding tour of India his first assignment. It was another challenge he ticked off.
Steven Lynch
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September 3, 2003
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Having made his Essex Second XI debut at 16 and scored plenty of runs in schools cricket for Bedford, Alastair Cook makes his first-class debut aged 18 against Nottinghamshire
at Chelmsford. The boy wonder duly registered his maiden fifty in the second innings, unbeaten at the top of the order with 69.
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May 19, 2004
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Having scored a number of fifties without getting to a hundred after seven first-class games, Cook records his first century in a run-glut against Leicestershire
at Chelmsford.
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September 3, 2005
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As Australia were floundering on their 2005 tour, Cook and a young Ravi Bopara really stuck the boot in. They shared a 370-run second-wicket stand as Cook made a rapid
214 from 238 deliveries against an attack that included Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie, Shaun Tait, Stuart MacGill and Michael Kasprowitz.
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March 1st, 2006
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With England shedding players by the minute, Cook was plucked out of the academy team in West Indies and flown into his Test debut, opening the innings against India at
Nagpur. Aged 21, he was the epitome of
sang froid, with a nerveless first-innings 60 followed by an unbeaten 100 in the second innings. The man destined since boyhood for Test cricket didn't disappoint.
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May to July 2006
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Back to back hundreds against Pakistan at
Lord's and
Old Trafford confirmed his status as the Next Big Thing. Batting at number three, behind Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss, it looked like England had settled the pivotal position for the foreseeable future...
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May to June 2007
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The West Indies proved far more hospitable opposition and Cook marked a return to form with hundreds in the first Test at
Lord's and the third Test at
Old Trafford as England completed an easy 3-0 victory. It was Cook's sixth century in 17 Tests.
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December 2007
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Following 0 and 4 in the first Test of England's overseas tour to Sri Lanka in
Kandy, Cook overcame his reputation as an uncertain player of spin with a pair of fifties in
Colombo and his seventh Test hundred, in the second innings at
Galle.
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March 5, 2008
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Having developed a reputation as a cumbersome fielder and clumsy catcher, Cook set about putting the record straight in New Zealand. In the first Test at
Hamilton Cook snaffled six memorable catches at gully, leaping and diving to great effect.
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25 January 2009
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The chiselled, public-school tones, the masses of runs in his early years and the tenuous feeling from England's management that he was 'made of the right stuff', meant Cook had long been earmarked as leadership potential. Following the fiasco that saw England fire Kevin Pietersen as captain, Cook was appointed right-hand man to Andrew Strauss before England's tour of the West Indies.
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March 2, 2009
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With the pressure for a Test hundred mounting, Cook would have felt the hurdle insurmountable after he was out for 94 in the third Test against West Indies at
Bridgetown . However, he held his nerve and in the second innings, and used the friendly pitch and friendlier bowling to record an unbeaten 139. It was his highest Test score and his relief was palpable when Cook said he was pleased to "get the monkey off my back".
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December 26, 2009
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Yet he discovered a monk-like discipline to battle through to a 263-ball 118 and set up England's victory at
Durban two days after his 25th birthday. Resisting all temptation outside off stump he grafted his way back into form and followed up with a pair of fifties in the next Test at
Cape Town.
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January 18, 2010
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Having answered his critics he was duly
appointed England captain for their tour of Bangladesh as Strauss decided to rest. It completes a journey that seemed inevitable from when he was breaking records as a schoolboy in Bedford.
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January 8, 2011
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Attains greatness in an unforgettable
performance in Australia, scoring 766 runs in seven innings, including three centuries - 235 not out at Brisbane, 148 at Adelaide and 189 at Sydney. His series tally is second only to Wally Hammond's 905 in 1928-29 for an England batsman in Ashes cricket.
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(Jun 18, 2013)
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(Jun 16, 2013)
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(Jun 15, 2013)
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(Jun 12, 2013)
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(Jun 7, 2013)
Jun 16, 2013
Alastair Cook plays a ramp over the keeper's head
© Getty Images
Jun 16, 2013
Alastair Cook sweeps to the leg side
© AFP
Jun 16, 2013
Alastair Cook pulls to the leg side
© AFP
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NBC Denis Compton Award 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
Young Cricketer of the Year 2005
Awarded the MBE in June 2011
ICC Test Cricketer of the Year 2011
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2012