Matches (12)
IPL (2)
BAN v IND [W] (1)
SL vs AFG [A-Team] (1)
PAK v WI [W] (1)
County DIV1 (4)
County DIV2 (3)

Brett Lee

Australia|Bowler
Brett Lee
INTL CAREER: 1999 - 2012

Full Name

Brett Lee

Born

November 08, 1976, Wollongong, New South Wales

Age

47y 174d

Nicknames

Bing

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Bowling Style

Right arm Fast

Playing Role

Bowler

Height

1.87 m

RELATIONS

(brother)

Brett Lee excelled as an exponent of extreme speed over a decade without achieving the all-conquering success required to earn the tag of a true Test great. Fast and with a flashy smile that added to his star quality, he finished as Australia's fourth-most successful bowler, with 310 wickets in 76 matches. For most of his career he operated as brutal support for Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie, despite frequent injuries. In his final two years he was a highly dependable attack leader until his body limited his ability in five-day contests.

At his best Lee got outswing with the new ball and reverse with the older one, making him even more difficult for batters trying to steady themselves knowing he could reach 160kph. The charging run-up and leaping celebrations added to the theatre of a bowler who made an instant impact, taking five wickets on debut at the MCG. Forty-two victims came in his opening seven Tests to gain him an A-list reputation, but he was soon in rehab after an elbow operation. His ankles were a popular site for surgery, and there were also side strains and stress fractures in a familiar cycle of breathtaking pace, painful injury and long-term layoff.

Starting by shaking up batters with short balls and yorkers, Lee went on to become a smarter operator under Ricky Ponting's captaincy, not averse to delivering containing spells on occasion. In nine Tests following McGrath's departure, hee stood up with 58 wickets at 21.55 and also won the Allan Border Medal in 2008. During that period he helped keep the rebuilding side on top of the world.

Life soon became harder again and after returning from more ankle surgery - his last act in a Test was limping off the MCG with a broken foot - he missed the 2009 Ashes with a side strain. England wasn't a kind host for Lee, who was consoled by Andrew Flintoff during his absorbing yet heartbreaking batting near-miss at Edgbaston in 2005. He was a courageous run-maker who would deflect or absorb the efforts of opposing fast bowlers as they searched for payback.

A gentleman off the field, he was aggressive on it but rarely went over the top in comparison to some of his team-mates, although his bouncers at tailenders could make for uncomfortable viewing. Lee retired from Tests at the beginning of 2010 to prolong his career in the shorter forms: in those affairs he could stay true to himself by attempting to operate at optimum speed while reducing the load on his aching body. He finally retired from all international cricket in July 2012.