Steve Waugh biography
Steve Waugh, byname of Stephen Rodger Waugh, (born June 2, 1965, Canterbury, New South Wales, Australia), Australian cricketer who set the file for many worldwide Test appearances (168; later damaged by Sachin Tendulkar) and who, along with his twin brother, Mark, helped lead the resurgence of the Australian nationwide staff within the late twentieth century.
Waugh made his debut on the age of 20 towards India in 1985 however didn't rating a century (100 runs in a single innings) in his first 26 Tests. He was a key member of Australia’s 1987 Cricket World Cup-winning staff, however his true breakthrough got here in England in 1989 when he made 177 not out and 152 not out within the first two Tests and completed the sequence with a mean of 126. Despite one other profitable Ashes tour (Australia’s long-standing Test competitors towards England) 4 years later, it was not till the tour to the West Indies in 1995 that Waugh absolutely matured into the whole Test batsman and was thought-about one of many biggest batsmen on the earth. His 200 towards a robust West Indian assault answered the critics who had persistently questioned his approach towards short-pitched bowling. Against England in 1997, he turned solely the third Australian to attain two centuries in the identical Test.
Waugh turned Australia’s Test captain in 1999, and he led Australia’s One Day International (ODI) staff to a different World Cup victory that yr. Also in 1999, the Australian facet started a world-record streak of 16 consecutive Test wins (a mark that was equaled by one other Australian staff from 2005 to 2008). In 2002 he was faraway from Australia’s ODI staff however remained captain of the Test squad, which received the Ashes in 2002–03. He retired in 2004 and turned to philanthropy, establishing the Steve Waugh Foundation for sick youngsters. His autobiography, Out of My Comfort Zone, was printed in 2005.
