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Full name Stuart Charles Glyndwr MacGill
Born February 25, 1971, Mount Lawley, Perth, Western Australia
Current age 37 years 187 days
Major teams Australia,Devon,New South Wales,Nottinghamshire,Somerset,Western Australia
Nickname Mac
Playing role Bowler
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly
Height
1.83 m
Relations Grandfather - CWT MacGill,Father - TMD MacGill
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
BF
SR
100
50
4s
6s
Ct
St
Tests
44
47
11
349
43
9.69
715
48.81
0
0
38
2
16
0
ODIs
3
2
1
1
1
1.00
3
33.33
0
0
0
0
2
0
First-class
184
212
57
1536
56*
9.90
0
2
76
0
List A
107
41
19
171
26
7.77
0
0
22
0
Twenty20
5
2
1
13
8*
13.00
11
118.18
0
0
2
0
1
0
Bowling averages
Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
44
85
11237
6038
208
8/108
12/107
29.02
3.22
54.0
9
12
2
ODIs
3
3
180
105
6
4/19
4/19
17.50
3.50
30.0
1
0
0
First-class
184
41417
23600
774
8/108
30.49
3.41
53.5
43
6
List A
107
5228
4347
193
5/40
5/40
22.52
4.98
27.0
10
4
0
Twenty20
5
5
104
144
6
3/42
3/42
24.00
8.30
17.3
0
0
0
Career statistics
Test debut
Australia v South Africa at Adelaide, Jan 30-Feb 3, 1998 scorecard
Last Test
West Indies v Australia at North Sound, May 30-Jun 3, 2008 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut
Australia v Pakistan at Sydney, Jan 19, 2000 scorecard
Last ODI
Australia v India at Adelaide, Jan 26, 2000 scorecard
ODI statistics
First-class debut
1993/94
Last First-class
West Indies v Australia at North Sound, May 30-Jun 3, 2008 scorecard
List A debut
1997
Last List A
South Australia v New South Wales at Adelaide, Nov 8, 2006 scorecard
Twenty20 debut
Durham v Nottinghamshire at Chester-le-Street, Jun 13, 2003 scorecard
Last Twenty20
Yorkshire v Nottinghamshire at Leeds, Jun 24, 2003 scorecard
Profile
An old-fashioned operator with a gargantuan legbreak and majestic wrong'un, Stuart MacGill has the best strike-rate and worst luck of any modern spin bowler. His misfortune was to play alongside Shane Warne in an age when Australia, the land of Grimmett and O'Reilly, paradoxically frowned on the concept of fielding two wrist-spinners at once. After showing they could work in tandem with 13 wickets against Pakistan at Sydney in 2005, MacGill hoped - almost pleaded - for more double-act opportunities. Playing seven matches in 2005-06, he dismantled the World XI with nine victims and accepted 16 wickets in the two-game series against Bangladesh. The following season, after injuring his knee on John Buchanan's boot camp, he didn't play a Test, but encouragement came when Warne left international cricket at the end of the Ashes. While most in Australia wondered how the team would cope, the announcement was welcomed by the rest of the world and the next line of spinners. At 36, MacGill, who entered the ranks of grumpy older men when a 2006-07 argument with a grade umpire led to a two-match suspension, had the most reasons to be cheerful.
MacGill has stayed philosophical throughout his career, eagerly running in and invariably running amok. He bewitched 53 wickets in 11 Tests during Warne's 12-month drugs ban in 2003-04, yet was maligned for bowling one boundary-ball per over; a shade unfairly, considering that was the standard modus operandi for all leggies pre-Warne. A batting duffer and increasingly feckless fielder, he played only three one-day internationals despite collecting 193 domestic scalps at a stupefying rate of one every 27 balls. Unusually for a bowler, MacGill seldom smiles upon taking a wicket. Instead he lets out a roar of accomplishment. "People ask me why I don't smile - it's because it's really hard," he said in 2003-04. "Test cricket's hard ... I'll take a wicket and there'll be an explosion of emotion." It is one of MacGill's many quirks.
He is a wine connoisseur who learned later in life to enjoy the taste of beer, and he once read 24 novels on a tour of Pakistan. The son and grandson of Western Australian state players, he socialises with friends who aren't cricketers and is often portrayed as a thinker, a misfit, the odd man out. It is something he plays down. But the praise lavished on his decision to boycott Zimbabwe in 2004 because of moral concerns continued an unwelcome pattern: he has long generated headlines for being out of the Australian team rather than for his performances in it. Following Warne's retired, he had a chance to fix the imbalance, but he struggled on his return to the Australia side against Sri Lanka in 2007 and subsequently was diagnosed with carpal-tunnel syndrome. His wrist required surgery and in the following May, against West Indies, he failed to make an impact and announced his retirement during the second Test in Antigua. Cricinfo staff May 2008