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Glen Chapple

Glen Chapple
Glen Chapple 2009.jpg
Personal information
Full name Glen Chapple
Born (1974-01-23) 23 January 1974 (age 43)
Skipton, Yorkshire, England
Nickname Chappy, Boris
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast
International information
National side
Only ODI (cap 191) 13 June 2006 v Ireland
Domestic team information
Years Team
1992–2017 Lancashire (squad no. 3)
Career statistics
Competition ODI FC LA T20
Matches 1 315 283 66
Runs scored 14 8,725 2,062 301
Batting average 14.00 24.16 17.77 13.08
100s/50s 0/0 6/37 0/9 0/1
Top score 14 155 81* 55*
Balls bowled 24 54,449 12,165 1,300
Wickets 0 985 320 68
Bowling average 26.71 28.55 23.32
5 wickets in innings 39 5 0
10 wickets in match n/a 3 n/a n/a
Best bowling 7/53 6/18 3/36
Catches/stumpings 0/– 104/– 66/– 16/–
Source: Cricinfo, 7 April 2016

Glen Chapple (born 23 January 1974) is an English cricketer. He is an all-rounder, and represented the national team in a One Day International, as well as performing well for Lancashire over many years. He bowls right-arm fast-medium, and is a right-handed batsman. With six first-class centuries to his name, Chapple shares with Mark Pettini the record for fastest first-class century, scored against declaration bowling by Glamorgan in 1993, coming off just 27 balls.

Chapple played a single One Day International for England, against Ireland in 2006 but was injured after bowling one over. After Stuart Law left the club, Chapple was appointed as Lancashire's captain from the 2009 season onwards and led the county to victory in the 2011 County Championship. That year he became the fifth player to score 7,000 runs and take 700 wickets for Lancashire. In 2012 he was named as one of Wisden's five Cricketers of the Year.

Chapple's most notable achievements include winning the Gold Award for his 6/18 in the 1996 Natwest Trophy final against Essex at Lord's. He shares with Mark Pettini the record for fastest ever first-class century; he scored it against Glamorgan at Old Trafford in 1993 from just 27 balls and 21 minutes, although this was against the bowling of Matthew Maynard and Tony Cottey in an attempt to set up a declaration.


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Wikipedia

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