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Full name Cameron Leon White
Born August 18, 1983, Bairnsdale, Victoria
Current age 25 years 57 days
Major teams Australia,Australia A,Bangalore Royal Challengers,Somerset,Victoria
Nickname Whitey, Bear
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly
Height
1.87 m
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
BF
SR
100
50
4s
6s
Ct
St
Tests
1
2
1
24
18*
24.00
27
88.88
0
0
3
0
1
0
ODIs
21
14
5
236
45
26.22
217
108.75
0
0
12
10
9
0
T20Is
2
2
2
50
40*
-
26
192.30
0
0
2
4
2
0
First-class
93
155
20
5581
260*
41.34
13
24
88
0
List A
118
99
16
2774
126*
33.42
3440
80.63
3
16
50
0
Twenty20
35
35
8
1002
141*
37.11
654
153.21
2
5
71
53
14
0
Bowling averages
Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
1
2
186
88
1
1/49
1/88
88.00
2.83
186.0
0
0
0
ODIs
21
13
262
277
9
3/5
3/5
30.77
6.34
29.1
0
0
0
T20Is
2
2
18
19
1
1/11
1/11
19.00
6.33
18.0
0
0
0
First-class
93
10692
6246
162
6/66
38.55
3.50
66.0
2
1
List A
118
3499
3106
88
4/15
4/15
35.29
5.32
39.7
4
0
0
Twenty20
35
20
280
405
17
3/8
3/8
23.82
8.67
16.4
0
0
0
Career statistics
Only Test
India v Australia at Bangalore, Oct 9-13, 2008 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut
Australia v ICC World XI at Melbourne (Dock), Oct 5, 2005 scorecard
Last ODI
Australia v Bangladesh at Darwin, Sep 6, 2008 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut
Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 9, 2007 scorecard
Last T20I
West Indies v Australia at Bridgetown, Jun 20, 2008 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut
2000/01
Last First-class
India v Australia at Bangalore, Oct 9-13, 2008 scorecard
List A debut
2001/02
Last List A
India A v Australia A at Chennai, Sep 26, 2008 scorecard
Twenty20 debut
Australia A v Pakistanis at Adelaide, Jan 13, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20
West Indies v Australia at Bridgetown, Jun 20, 2008 scorecard
Profile
Fair-haired and level-headed, Cameron White has long seemed destined to play a significant role in Australia's future. Only the precise nature of that role has baffled his admirers. Nagging legspinner? Aggressive middle-order bat? Intuitive skipper? Or a bit of all three? The over-eager Shane Warne comparisons that festooned his first-class arrival have long since died away. Indeed White is a peculiarly unAustralian-style legspinner, tall and robust, relying on changes of pace and a handy wrong'un rather than prodigious turn or flight. He can even start a spell with an offspinner or quicker ball.
He bowls a good line and does a neat line in self-deprecation too: "There's no flippers or anything exciting like that in my repertoire," he professed a while back, "I'm just trying to get my leggie right." What is not in doubt is his cricket sense, nor his maturity. Captaining Victoria in 2003-04 at the age of 20, the youngest skipper in their history, he won rave reviews for his cool head and warm handling of more hardened contemporaries. For all that, he remains a largely unassuming country lad. Picked to tour Zimbabwe when Stuart MacGill withdrew for moral reasons, White cancelled a fishing trip to attend the press conference then boyishly shrugged aside questions about the circumstances of his selection: "I don't really know very much about politics." He was chosen as much for his no-frills batting as his bowling; David Hookes, the late Victorian coach, felt White's best chance of representing Australia was to earn a top-six spot. For a long while it looked more like the way forward, until the retirement of Brad Hogg in early 2008 opened up an ODI spin position. White was given the first chance to secure the role and even won a call-up to the Test squad in India when Victoria's first-choice legspinner Bryce McGain went down with a shoulder injury.
Until 2008, it had been only White's batting that had been of any real value on the international scene. Playing eight CB Series games in 2006-07, he started by showing his impressive muscle, thumping a 32-ball 45 in the second match, but he was unable to offer a repeat until he crashed 42 from 19 deliveries in the Chappell-Hadlee Series. Between those innings he had been dropped for the tri-series finals and missed the World Cup squad, mainly because his bowling was unconvincing. After finishing the season with the Bushrangers, capturing 437 Pura Cup runs at 39.72 and nine wickets at 49.77, he held on to his Cricket Australia contract before heading to England for more plunder at Somerset. A more productive 2007-08 domestic season brought him back into the national frame. Although his six Pura Cup wickets cost 47 each, he scored 748 runs at 49.86 and guided Victoria into the first-class, one-day and Twenty20 finals.
As far back as December 2002 his hero Warne had predicted: "I think he's a [future] Australian player provided he sticks to the way he plays and doesn't try to be someone different." White made his limited-overs debut during the Super Series a year after missing a first Test cap when Nathan Hauritz was preferred in India. He had little impact and lost his national deal after a below-average Pura Cup season in 2005-06. White had a wonderful 2006 as Somerset's captain, giving the strongest indication yet that he was focusing heavily on his batting. He feasted on the county bowlers, scoring 1190 first-class runs at 59.5 and his 55-ball Twenty20 century was a record. That led him into a better home summer that featured Pura Cup and FR Cup centuries, although he was sometimes criticised for not taking enough bowling responsibility.