Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Jos Buttler

Jos Buttler
A young man with dark hair is dressed in an all white cricket kit with a blue peaked cap, large gloves and thick pads covering his lower legs.  He is crouched low behind a set of wooden stumps.
Personal information
Full name Joseph Charles Buttler
Born 8 September 1990 (age 22)
Taunton, Somerset, England
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Batting style Right-handed
Role Batsman, Wicket-keeper
International information
National side England
Only ODI (cap 226) 21 February 2012 v Pakistan
ODI shirt no. 63
T20I debut (cap 54) 31 August 2011 v India
Last T20I 10 September 2012 v South Africa
T20I shirt no. 63
Domestic team information
Years Team
2009–present Somerset (squad no. 15)
Career statistics
Competition ODI T20I FC LA
Matches 1 10 39 50
Runs scored 0 36 1,523 1,630
Batting average 0.00 7.20 30.46 60.37
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 2/7 2/11
Top score 0 13 144 119
Balls bowled 12
Wickets 0
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match n/a n/a n/a
Best bowling
Catches/stumpings 0/– 1/– 66/2 29/4
Source: CricketArchive, 11 September 2012

Joseph Charles Buttler, commonly known as Jos Buttler, (born 8 September 1990) is an English cricketer who plays for Somerset County Cricket Club. He is a right-handed batsman who also plays as a wicket-keeper. Buttler enjoyed a prolific cricket record while at school, sharing a record-breaking opening partnership while at King's College, Taunton in 2008, and the following season his school lost only one of seventeen matches under his captaincy, and he was named 2010 Young Wisden Schools Cricketer of the Year. He made his Somerset first-team debut in 2009. His performances led him to be selected to play for England at Under-19 level, touring Bangladesh, and then travelling to New Zealand for the 2010 Under-19 Cricket World Cup.

Early life and career

Buttler played extensively for Somerset's youth teams, appearing at Under-13, Under-15 and Under-17 level.[1] He made his senior club cricket debut for Cheddar before moving to Glastonbury in the 2006 season, aged just 15, claiming three catches and fifteen runs as wicket-keeper.[2] Later in the same season, he made his first appearance for Somerset Second XI, scoring 71 in the second-innings, and taking six catches in the three-day match against Nottinghamshire Second XI.[3] Playing for King's College, Taunton, he finished the 2006 season with the school's leading batting average, scoring his 447 runs at 49.66.[4] The following season saw him playing regularly for Glastonbury in the West of England Premier League, and for Somerset Under-17s, for whom he scored two centuries; an unbeaten 119 during a two-day match against Surrey Under-17s,[5] and 110 against Sussex Under-17s.[6] He once again led the batting averages for King's College, with his 358 runs coming at 51.14.[7]
A young man with light brown hair is standing on some grass.  He is wearing a burgundy, grey and black cricket uniform, large gloves and black trousers covered by black think pads on his lower legs.
Buttler keeping wicket for Somerset
The highlight of his school career came in April 2008, when he scored 227 not out during a record-breaking opening stand in a 50-over national schools game, adding 340 with Alex Barrow.[8] He captained King's during the 2008 season, and improved on his batting totals from the previous two years, scoring 851 runs, over 250 more than any other member of the team.[9] His batting average of 94.55 was the sixth highest amongst all school's batsmen reported in Wisden, while his high-score of 227* was the highest score they recorded.[10] During that 2008 season, Buttler also played for Somerset Second XI. With captain Carl Gazzard keeping wicket in the majority of these matches, Buttler played purely as a batsman, although in his final match of the season for the team, he kept wicket and claimed six catches in the first-innings against Worcestershire Second XI.[11] In the previous match, against Hampshire Second XI, Buttler had made 140 batting from number four.[12]
He made his first-class debut for Somerset in September 2009, replacing the injured Justin Langer for the County Championship match against Lancashire, scoring 30 in his only innings.[13] He retained his place in the team for the following Pro40 match against Hampshire, making his List A debut, although he was not required to bat.[14] Selected as part of the Somerset squad for the 2009 Champions League Twenty20, Buttler made his debut in the 20-over format of the game in Somerset's final match of the league stage, remaining six not out at the close of the innings.[15] Buttler again captained King's in 2009, and in the seventeen matches under his leadership they lost only once, and also won the Western School Twenty20 competition.[16] Coupled with his 554 runs for the school at an average of 61.55, and his performances for Somerset, he was named 2010 Young Wisden Schools Cricketer of the Year.[17]

First-team opportunity

When Craig Kieswetter was called up into the England one-day side in 2010, Buttler was given the chance of a prolonged run in Somerset's first team. Brian Rose, Somerset's Director of Cricket, chose not to bring in an experienced keeper to deputise, explaining that Kieswetter had been in a similar position three years earlier, and that he had good reports of Buttler's ability.[18] In his first match of the 2010 season, Buttler remained 22 not out at the close of Somerset's innings, posting his first runs in List A cricket, and he followed this up with two catches to help Somerset beat Glamorgan in their opening Clydesdale Bank 40 fixture.[19] He made his maiden first-class century in his fourth County Championship match, scoring 144 runs in an innings characterised by "dogged determination and [a] decent range of shots".[20] In his next match, he scored his debut List A half-century against Sussex. Buttler joined James Hildreth at the crease with Somerset at 109/4, requiring 183 more runs to win off 129 balls. The pair put on a partnership of 158 runs "to turn the game on its head", with Buttler making 69 in 53 balls.[21] In doing so, they set a new record partnership for the fifth-wicket against Sussex.[22] His continued batting form, which also saw him make scores of 52 and 31* in a County Championship match against Yorkshire,[23] saw him retain his place in the Somerset team upon Kieswetter's return.[24]
Buttler was named man of the match in Somerset's Friends Provident t20 semi-final victory over Nottinghamshire at the Rose Bowl, hitting an unbeaten 55 off 23 balls in a partnership of 75 with Kieron Pollard.[25]

International career

Buttler's first taste of international cricket came in July 2008, when he represented England Under-17s in two warm-up matches against New Zealand Under-19s. Batting at number five, he scored a rapid 77 not out in the 50-over contest, hitting 11 fours and 2 sixes during the 49 deliveries he faced.[26] He also played in the two-day match between the two teams, scoring 45 in the first-innings as the match was drawn.[27] In 2009, Buttler played four matches for England Under-18s, two each against Scotland A and Scotland Development XI. He scored 103 not out in the first of these matches,[28] and made starts in each of the following matches, reaching double figures on each occasion, but not scoring higher than 28.[29][30][31] Two months later, Buttler made his England Under-19 debut, appearing in the first Twenty20 against Bangladesh Under-19s. Playing as a specialist batsman, he scored 33 runs off 17 balls as England won by five wickets.[32]
During the 2009–10 English winter, Buttler toured with the England Under-19 team. He joined up with the squad in Bangladesh following Somerset's elimination from the Champions League Twenty20 for the seven-match youth ODI series. As with his previous appearance for the Under-19s, Buttler played as a specialist batsman,[33] but failed to make a significant impact until the final match when he scored 42 runs, though Bangladesh still won the match to claim the series 5–2.[34] He remained with the team for the Under-19 World Cup, where he played all but one of England's six matches, keeping wicket in three of them. He scored 91 runs in three innings, with a top-score of 78 against India in the fifth-place play-off semi-final. His batting average of 30.33 ranked him fifth on the England team.
In 2011, he was called up to the England Twenty20 International squad for the match against India, but was not required to bat in a six wicket England victory. Buttler was again called up to the Twenty20 International squad for the two matches against the West Indies in September 2011, Buttler again was not required to bat in the first match a ten wicket victory instigating a run out the second match of the series saw Buttler score just 13 runs as England lost by 25 runs.In September 2011, Buttler was called up to the Twenty20 International squad for the match against India in the return series.During the winter of 2011, Buttler was called into the England winter performance programme for a batting and wicket-keeping focussed programme in India, he was also called up for the England Lions tour of Bangladesh. The Lions lost the ODI series 3-2 with Buttler topping the Lions runs and averages charts with 161 runs at and average of 53.66 and also taking the most catches 6 and most stumpings 3. Following his impressive individual performances in Bangladesh Buttler was called up for the Lions tour of Sri Lanka.

Personality and style

A tall and strongly built cricketer, Buttler has an upright stance in the crease.[44] During his century against Hampshire in 2010, he "hit the ball hard and straight", "moving his feet decisively, playing with his bat close to his body and selecting the right balls to attack".After that innings, his Somerset captain Marcus Trescothick suggested that Buttler could challenge team-mate Kieswetter's place in the England team.

Statistics

Career Best Performances

Jos Buttler's Career Best Performances

Batting
Score Fixture Venue Season
ODI 0 England v Pakistan Dubai 2012
T20I 13 England v West Indies London 2011
FC 144 Somerset v Hampshire Southampton 2010
LA 119 England Lions v Sri Lanka A Kurunegala 2012
T20 72* Somerset v Gloucestershire Taunton 2011

Awards

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