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Alex Hales
Age:
36 Yrs
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Born | Jan 03, 1989 |
Birth Place | Hillingdon, Middlesex |
Height | 6ft 5in |
Role | Batsman |
Batting Style | Right Handed Bat |
Bowling Style | Right-arm-medium |
Teams : Desert Vipers, Rangpur Riders |
Grandson of the talented tennis player, Dennis Hales, who once forced Rod Laver to five sets at Wimbledon, Alex Hales, is known for playing with a dash of adventurism. Carrying his 6’5” frame just as elegantly, he has emerged as an aggressive and clever top-order batsman.
Hales represented the England Under-19 squad in 2008 that toured New Zealand and smashed three half-centuries. He was then included in the English Performance squad in 2009-10 and later went on to play for the England Lions for the entire 2011 summer.
Although on the international scene, Hales began his crusade with a duck against India in 2011, he fought back with a gritty knock of 62 off 48 balls against West Indies at The Oval. Later, in 2012, he fell short of a fine century by just one run and missed the record of becoming the first England player to score a T20 century, while amassing a match-winning 99 against West Indies at his home ground, Trent Bridge. He continued to play in every game for England at the World T20 in Sri Lanka in September that year, scoring 124 runs in five innings before England's campaign came to a premature halt. He, once again, came close to hitting a T20 ton when he scored a scintillating 94 off 61 balls against Australia in August 2013.
Hales has been an essential part of England's T20 squad. He was selected for their tour to West Indies in Feb/March 2014 and played the first two T20Is. Despite an important knock in the second game, he was not able to help England secure a win. Ranked as the No. 1 batsman by ICC in T20I cricket, Hales, gave a glimpse of his power-hitting in the 2014 World T20, as he smashed Sri Lanka all over the park to become the first batsman from England to score a T20I hundred. The knock also helped his side achieve a stunning victory in that game and it remained the only hundred in the entire tournament.
A massive beneficiary of England's 2015 World Cup drubbing and the subsequent overhaul, Alex Hales stood out in the 'New England' side. Now with the license to play his natural aggressive strokeplay, he amassed runs at the top of the order, partnering with Jason Roy, he turned around his side's fortunes. This included a Man of the Series trophy for getting four consecutive half-centuries in South Africa. The cherry came when he lit up Trent Bridge in 2016, with his 171-run blitz against Pakistan as England piled on 444, the highest ever ODI total.
England's loss turned out to be Nottinghamshire's gain. He utilized his time out of the Test side putting together some stunning performances for his county, playing a vital role in taking his side to the title in the Royal London Cup and the Natwest T20 blast.
The limited-overs leg tour of India in Jan 2017 saw Hales picking up an injury to his hand. Having come into the series in a rich vein of form, it was a setback for him after having failed in the first two matches. He made his comeback for the tour of West Indies a couple months later and announced his return in style with a cracking century. Thereafter, Hales has enjoyed a good year although the form has dipped just a touch since later stages of the Champions Trophy. Nevertheless, he remains a vital cog of England's limited-overs outfit as well as the T20 franchises that he features for.