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Sarah Elliott (cricketer)

Sarah Elliott
Sarah Elliott.jpg
Personal information
Full name Sarah Jane Elliott (née Edwards)
Born (1982-01-04) 4 January 1982 (age 35)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm off spin
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 161) 22 January 2011 v England
Last Test 10 January 2014 v England
ODI debut (cap 104) 1 September 2005 v England
Last ODI 7 March 2010 v New Zealand
Domestic team information
Years Team
2000/01– Victorian Spirit
Career statistics
Competition Tests WODI WT20I WNCL
Matches 3 22 7 82
Runs scored 238 416 21 1740
Batting average 47.60 32.00 4.20 22.89
100s/50s 1/1 0/4 0/0 0/10
Top score 104 96 7 92
Balls bowled 231 78 12 1024
Wickets 2 2 1 25
Bowling average 50.00 28.00 12.00 22.16
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a n/a n/a
Best bowling 1/14 2/14 1/2 3/22
Catches/stumpings 2/- 9/– 2/– 23/–
Source: CricInfo, 1 July 2014

Sarah Jane Elliott (née Edwards, born 4 January 1982) is a female international cricketer for Australia. A right-handed batsman who also bowls leg spin, she made her international debut in 2005, but did not gain a regular position in the team until 2010.

Edwards made her senior debut for Victoria mid-way through the 2000–01 season soon after turning 19. At this stage of her career, Edwards was a specialist batsman and did not bowl her first ball in senior cricket until six years later. She was not productive with the bat in her first two seasons, and was dropped after making a duck in her only innings of the third season. Up to this point, she had made only 165 runs at 11.00. She regained her place in the 2003–04 season but averaged less than 10. Nevertheless, she was selected for the Australian Under-23 team and made 51 and 97 in matches against the Sri Lankan national team. Edwards made her breakthrough in the 2004–05 WNCL, scoring 281 runs, more than she had made in her first four seasons combined. She was selected for the 2005 tour of England, but was not selected in the Tests; she made her One Day International (ODI) debut in the last match but neither batted or bowled. Edwards was then dropped from the national team and did not play for Australia again until a solitary ODI at the start of the 2006–07 season. After scoring 332 runs in the WNCL season, she was given a consistent run in the national team for the first time, playing in just over half the matches during the year. She made only 37 runs at 7.40 and spent most of the following season's international fixtures watching from the sidelines as a reserve, playing in only two ODIs.

Edwards started the 2008–09 season by making her top-score in ODIs, 96, in her only innings in the series against India. However, she had a poor WNCL season with the bat, averaging 19.40. Although she began bowling regularly for the first time at senior level, and was successful with 11 wickets, Edwards was dropped from the ODI team, missing the 2009 World Cup and World Twenty20.

In 2009–10 Edwards performed strongly with both bat and ball, scoring 300 runs and taking 14 wickets and was recalled to the national team. She played in all eight ODI matches against New Zealand in the Rose Bowl series at the end of the season, the first time she had played a full series for the national team. Edwards does not bowl regularly at international level as Lisa Sthalekar and Shelley Nitschke—who are also spin bowling all-rounders—are ranked among the top ten bowlers in the world and do most of the slow bowling for Australia. She was a part of the team that won the 2010 World Twenty20, playing in all but one match.


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