*** Welcome to piglix ***

Gary Cosier

Gary Cosier
Personal information
Full name Gary John Cosier
Born (1953-04-25) 25 April 1953 (age 64)
Richmond, Victoria, Australia
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Role all rounder
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 274) 26 December 1975 v West Indies
Last Test 15 December 1978 v England
ODI debut (cap 31) 20 December 1975 v West Indies
Last ODI 16 June 1979 v Canada
Domestic team information
Years Team
1971, 1980–1981 Victoria
1974–1977 South Australia
1977–1980 Queensland
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 18 9 91 22
Runs scored 897 154 5005 432
Batting average 28.93 30.80 32.92 27.00
100s/50s 2/3 0/1 7/27 -/2
Top score 168 84 168 84
Balls bowled 899 409 5987 786
Wickets 5 14 75 19
Bowling average 68.20 17.71 30.68 25.52
5 wickets in innings 0 1 0 1
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 2/26 5/18 3/20 5/18
Catches/stumpings 14/- 4/- 75/– 8/–

Gary John Cosier (born 25 April 1953) is a former Australian test cricketer who played in 18 Tests and 9 ODIs from 1975 to 1979. Cosier's star shone very briefly following a sensational test debut, when he became only the ninth Australian to post a century in his first Test.

The stocky, redheaded Cosier was a middle-order batsman who often attacked the bowling when a more judicious method was the order of the day. Given an extended trial at international level over four seasons, he never really established himself as a Test batsman, although he was vice-captain of Australia for a brief period. He had two major highlights at Test level – a hundred on his Test debut at Melbourne against the West Indies in 1975–76, and a 168 against Pakistan the following season. Test bowlers were quick to exploit his technical deficiencies, in particular a very short backlift and abbreviated footwork. Cosier was all brute force with little finesse, but he did try to modify his technique somewhat during the 1978–79 Ashes series, when he was incongruously used as an opener.

He could back his batting with slow medium-pacers that swung alarmingly when the conditions favoured him. On the 1977 tour of England he showed in an ODI at Edgbaston that he could have been well suited to the burgeoning genre of one-day cricket when he snared five for 18. However, Cosier’s bowling was not really used in Tests and his first Test wicket did not come until his 13th match. He was also an excellent close-in fielder and secure slipper.

Born and raised in Melbourne, Cosier attended University High School, where he captained the First XI and represented the Australian junior team in the West Indies. Highlights of that trip included 96 against Barbados.

Cosier played club cricket for Northcote where his captain was Bill Lawry. He made his first-class debut aged 18 for Victoria during the summer of 1971-72, opening with Lawry. Early sports writers sometimes compared him to Lawry. Cosier was a different style of batsman but later said "Bill's influence on me was in the way he could fight out of a situation. He was incredible the way he would bat with pain and with everything running against him."


...
Wikipedia

...