Angus Fraser

Cricket Player

Angus Fraser was born in Higher End, England, United Kingdom on August 8th, 1965 and is the Cricket Player. At the age of 58, Angus Fraser biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

Date of Birth
August 8, 1965
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Higher End, England, United Kingdom
Age
58 years old
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Profession
Cricketer, Journalist
Angus Fraser Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 58 years old, Angus Fraser has this physical status:

Height
198cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Angus Fraser Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Angus Fraser Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Angus Fraser Life

Angus Robert Fraser MBE (born 8 August 1965) is the current Middlesex Cricket managing director.

He was a former English cricketer, photographer, and England selector during forty-six Test matches and forty-two Internationals for England.

Fraser, according to cricket commentator Colin Bateman, was "a reliable, insightful, and hard-working bowler."

Early life

Fraser, a native of Billinge, Lancashire, was educated at the Gayton High School in Harrow, London, and Orange Hill High School in Edgware, Greater London.

Personal life

Denise and two children, Alex and Bethan, now live in Pinner. Fraser won the U15 Middlesex Schools Association County Cup in 2008, where his son was in the squad.

Fraser is a fan of and regular visitor to Wealdstone Football Club.

Source

Angus Fraser Career

Cricket career

Fraser began his Middlesex life in 1984, helping the county championship be crowned in 1985, 1990, and 1993. He also helped Middlesex win the 1988 NatWest Trophy, winning by 3-36 in the final, and the 1990 Refuge Assurance Cup.

In 1989 against Australia, he made his Test match debut with England against Australia. He took his first five-wicket haul in Tests in 1990, assisting England in their first Test victory over the West Indies in sixteen years and 30 Tests. However, England missed his contributions when he was forced to withdraw from this series due to injury, as was the case during the Ashes series the following winter. He was out of Test cricket for two and a half years because of a hip injury, but he made an immediate impact on his return to the Oval in 1993, taking eight wickets as England defeated Australia in their first Test victory over Australia in 18 Tests and six and a half years.

Fraser's best hour came in the Barbados Test match of the 1993/94 West Indies tour, when he struck 8–75 in the first innings to help set up a historic win, West Indies' first defeat at Bridgetown in more than a century. In a Test match and against the same opposition, this time at Port of Spain, Trinidad, and Tobago, he recorded his best-first-class cricket bowling figures of 8–53. Despite taking eight wickets in that innings and Test career best match figures of 11-110, he was not named Man of the Match for the Victorious West Indies team, Carl Hooper. Fraser toured the West Indies three times, and as of 2022, he took more Test wickets in the West Indies as a visitor bowler.

His one-day international best score of 38 not out was made late in the innings at number 10, which included a massive six off Steve Waugh and nearly pulled Australia back from the brink of defeat against Australia during the 1990/91 tour (Australia defeated by three runs). In 1998, Robert Croft and the batsman saved the Third Test at Old Trafford against South Africa in another fine moment with the bat. Fraser went out to face Allan Donald's bowling, "If he knocks me through all three [stumps], he probably will, but good luck," Fraser said. However, he survived. It was a red-inker and in retrospect one of the series's most important innings. Fraser's short innings in the next two Tests helped the team reclaim control in the series, with Fraser taking three fivefers in the next two Tests to help England win an unexpected series victory. He has also visited New Zealand and South Africa, as well as participating in one-day tournaments in Asia, representing England. He used the name "Gussy Hitter" on his bat throughout his career, the blade of which was designed by his mother.

Fraser played for England for the first time in 1999, the first time in cricket. Fraser, a Lancashire boy, played all of his county cricket for Middlesex until 2002; he served as county captain from 2001 to 2002.

Before that, he served as the cricket reporter for The Independent newspaper (2002-2009) until his appointment to Middlesex County Cricket Club's newly created position in January 2009. He is a regular contributor to BBC's Test Match Special and a cricket analyst for Sky Sports.

Fraser, who was one of the year's greatest cricketers, appeared in Wisden's 1996 edition.

Fraser served as the playing director of cricket for Middlesex County Cricket Club from 2009 to 2021. In July 2021, he took over the club's academy for the first time.

[2]

He served as a selector for the England cricket team for a brief period after 2014.

Source

England defeated Scotland in their 150th anniversary match, with tape for a crossbar, a pitchside ref, swapping keepers, and only halftime because no goals were scored

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 10, 2023
JAMES SHARPE: a 700-word article chronicled the events of the 24th annual Birmingham Cattle Show, a showcase of the finest 'fat cattle, sheep, pigs, roots, corn, and implements' Another study on the same network was much less prominent. A football match between England and Scotch Elevens was played at Hamilton Crescent, Glasgow, on Saturday afternoon.' It was all about 124 words, and that included the teams. How different football has been these days.

After allotting England at Lord's, South Africa's great ALLAN DONALD is lauded

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 24, 2022
BY RICHARD EDWARDS, a complete biography, The call from South Africa's fastest players who demolished England at Lord's top rate in history is a big call. But one former Proteas great insists that it is not outlandish, and that it could well be spot-on. During his playing days, Allan Donald was known as White Lightning and was one of the fastest bowlers of his generation, with a speed of over 90 mph. When England spearheaded a South Africa line-up capable of mixing it with the best, he was on the receiving end of some of his fastest spells during the 1990s. He grouped up with Shaun Pollock and Jacques Kallis to form a formidable force.