Matthew Walker (English cricketer)

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Matt Walker
England
Personal information
Full name Matthew Jonathan Walker
Nickname Walks
Born 2 January 1974 (1974-01-02) (age 34)
Gravesend, Kent, England
Height 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)
Role Batsman
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Domestic team information
Years Team
1993 – present Kent (squad no. 20)
First-class debut 30 March 1993: Kent v Zimbabwe B
List A debut 17 July 1994: Kent v Worcestershire
Career statistics
FC LA T20
Matches 177 250 37
Runs scored 9674 5497 745
Batting average 37.20 28.48 25.68
100s/50s 25/40 3/34 –/1
Top score 275* 117 58*
Balls bowled 1822 886
Wickets 21 30
Bowling average 51.47 24.66
5 wickets in innings 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a
Best bowling 2/21 4/24
Catches/stumpings 121/– 67/– 3/–

As of 18 August 2007
Source: [1]

Matthew Jonathan Walker (born January 2, 1974 in Gravesend, Kent) is an English cricketer, who has played for Kent County Cricket Club throughout his career.

[edit] Early career

Walker made his first appearance for Kent in a second-team match against Lancashire in 1990. He continued to play in the second eleven for two seasons, after which he was called up to the England Under-19 squad for their tour of Pakistan.

The tour started poorly for Walker, only making one score of note in the "Test" series. However, he managed to average 48.00 in the limited-overs games that followed.[1] He continued to appear for the England under-19 team until the end of the West Indian tour of England, by which time he had earnt an average of 42.07 from 12 youth Tests.

[edit] First-class career

Walker was selected for Kent's first-team for the first time during the side's 1993 pre-season tour of Zimbabwe. Against a Zimbabwean 'B' team, Walker scored 23 not out and 16 in a drawn match.[2] Despite the promise shown on the tour, Walker would not play for the first-team for another fifteen months.

His List A debut came on July 17, 1994, in an Sunday League match against Worcestershire. In nine matches that season, Walker averaged 23.37.[3]

In first-class cricket, Walker has three seasons where he has finished with a batting average of over fifty; in 1996, 2004 and 2006. 1996 saw Walker hit the highest score of his career to date, on his way to 606 runs at an average of 60.60.[4] Against a Somerset attack without Andrew Caddick, Walker compiled 275 not out in nine-and-a-half hours before his captain Trevor Ward declared the innings at 616/7. The Daily Telegraph's Christopher Martin-Jenkins wrote of the innings: "It was an innings of style and substance, memorable for powerful driving through the off-side and hearty pulling whenever a perservering but ordinary Somerset attack became impatient with line and length and tried to extract a spring in the pitch which simply was not there."[5] It remains the highest score by a Kent batsman at the St Lawrence Ground.[6]

Despite the talent he had shown during his innings against Somerset, he found the next few seasons difficult. In an interview with All Out Cricket magazine, he said "I’d had a bit of first team cricket, and was dropped and managed to work my way back into the team in the second half of the year but just couldn’t get it right."[7] For four seasons, between 1997 and 2000, Walker consistantly averages in the mid-twenties, scoring just one century in the process. Since then, he has scored over one thousand runs in a season on three occasions.

Walker's most productive season in terms of run-scoring was 2006, in which he scored 1,419 runs at the average of 61.19. In the game against Lancashire that year, he came close to adding a second career double-century to his name. However, he was dismissed on 197, run out after collapsing with cramp.[8][9] His run-scoring throughout 2006 earnt him Kent's Player of the Year award.

Walker was appointed List A captain of Kent for the second half of the 2005 season, following the resignation of David Fulton. However, he was unable to lead the team any higher than eighth in the second division of the Pro40 League.

In 2007, Walker hit the highest score of the innings in Kent's victory over Gloucestershire in the Twenty20 Cup Final.[10]

[edit] References

Preceded by
David Fulton
Kent CCC List A Captain
2005
Succeeded by
Robert Key