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Andrew Symonds

Andrew Symonds (9 June 1975 – 14 May 2022) was an Australian international cricketer, who played all three formats as a batting all-rounder. Commonly nicknamed "Roy", he was a key member of two World Cup winning squads. Symonds was a part of the team that won both the 2003 Cricket World Cup, and four years later the 2007 Cricket World Cup. Symonds played as a right-handed, middle order batsman and alternated between medium pace and off-spin bowling. He was also notable for his exceptional fielding skills.

Andrew Symonds
Symonds in 2008, sporting his trademark zinc oxide sunscreen on his lips
Personal information
Born(1975-06-09)9 June 1975
Birmingham, West Midlands, England
Died14 May 2022(2022-05-14) (aged 46)
Hervey Range, Queensland, Australia
NicknameRoy, Symo
Height187 cm (6 ft 2 in)
BattingRight-handed
Bowling
RoleAll-rounder
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 388)8 March 2004 v Sri Lanka
Last Test26 December 2008 v South Africa
ODI debut (cap 139)10 November 1998 v Pakistan
Last ODI3 May 2009 v Pakistan
T20I debut (cap 11)17 February 2005 v New Zealand
Last T20I7 May 2009 v Pakistan
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1993/94–2009/10Queensland
1995–1996Gloucestershire
1999–2004Kent
2005Lancashire
2008–2010Deccan Chargers
2010Surrey
2011Mumbai Indians
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 26 198 227 424
Runs scored 1,462 5,088 14,477 11,099
Batting average 40.61 39.75 42.20 34.04
100s/50s 2/10 6/30 40/65 9/64
Top score 162* 156 254* 156
Balls bowled 2,094 5,935 17,633 11,713
Wickets 24 133 242 282
Bowling average 37.33 37.25 36.00 33.25
5 wickets in innings 0 1 2 4
10 wickets in match 0 0 0 0
Best bowling 3/50 5/18 6/105 6/14
Catches/stumpings 22/– 82/– 159/– 187/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 15 May 2022

After mid-2008, Symonds spent significant time out of the team, due to disciplinary reasons, including alcohol.[1] In June 2009, he was sent home from the 2009 World Twenty20, his third suspension, expulsion or exclusion from selection in the space of a year. His central contract was then withdrawn,[2] and many cricket analysts speculated that the Australian administrators would no longer tolerate him, and that Symonds might announce his retirement.[3] Symonds eventually retired from all forms of cricket in February 2012, to concentrate on his family life.[4]

In 2022, Symonds died in a single-vehicle car crash about 50 km (31 mi) outside Townsville, Queensland. He was 46.[5]

Early life

One of Symonds' birth parents was of an Afro-Caribbean background, while the other was believed to be of Scandinavian descent.[6] Symonds was adopted by parents Ken and Barbara at three months of age and they moved to Australia when he was a toddler.[7] He had three siblings. His sister, Louise Symonds, who was also adopted, was a contestant on the Australian Gladiators television series in 2008.[8] He spent the early part of his childhood in Charters Towers, northern Queensland, where his father taught at the private fee paying All Souls St Gabriels School, which Symonds attended.[9] He showed sporting prowess from a very early age. "Dad was cricket mad. He’d throw balls to me five or six days a week, before school, after school. And we’d play all sorts of games inside the house with ping-pong balls and Christmas decorations."[10] His early junior cricket was played in Townsville for the Wanderers club, father and son making the 270-kilometre return trip sometimes twice a week.[7] In 1988, Symonds' father accepted a deputy headmaster role at All Saints Anglican School[11] and the family subsequently relocated to the Gold Coast when Symonds was 12 years of age.[12] He attended the school[13] and continued his junior cricket at Palm Beach Currumbin.[14] A few years later Symonds made his Queensland Premier Cricket debut for the Gold Coast Dolphins as a 15-year-old and hit a remarkable double century in his first game.[15]

Overview of cricket career

Symonds was an aggressive right-handed batsman who could also bowl off spin or medium pace, making him a good all-rounder. He was an exceptional fielder, with a report prepared by Cricinfo in late 2005 showing that since the 1999 Cricket World Cup, he had effected the fifth equal most run-outs in One Day International (ODI) cricket of any fieldsman, with the fourth highest success rate,[16] with Ricky Ponting rating him the best fielder he had seen, and a better and more versatile one than Herschelle Gibbs and Jonty Rhodes because Symonds was taller than them, giving him better defensive coverage range and had greater throw power outside the circle.[17] He was very agile for his size and weight (medium-heavy build; 187 cm tall), had excellent reflexes, was able to take catches well and had a powerful and accurate throwing arm. His nickname was Roy, shortened from the name Leroy, after a coach from early in his career believed he resembled local Brisbane basketball player Leroy Loggins.[18] He was an AIS Australian Cricket Academy scholarship holder in 1994.[19] In 1995, after playing in his first season for English county Gloucestershire, Symonds won the Cricket Writer's Club Young Cricketer of the Year award.[20] Shortly afterwards Symonds was selected as part of the England A team that was to tour Pakistan in the winter; however, he decided not to go, instead choosing to pursue an international career for Australia. His place on the tour was later taken by Middlesex player Jason Pooley.[20]

Domestic cricket

Australian state cricket

Symonds scored more than 5,000 runs and took more than 100 wickets for the Queensland state team.[21] He scored 113 and took four wickets in a losing cause in the final of the 1998–99 Sheffield Shield season,[22] and was named man of the match in the 2002 Pura Cup final after scoring 123 runs and taking six wickets.[23][24]

English counties

Symonds played for four English counties during his career—Gloucestershire, Kent, Lancashire and Surrey.[20] His first appearance for an English county was with Gloucestershire.[25] Initially he was considered an England-qualified player, however, following his first season of county cricket in 1995 he declared that his allegiances lay with Australia when he chose not to tour Pakistan with the England A team.[20]

In August 1995, he hit a record 16 sixes in his unbeaten 254 against Glamorgan at Abergavenny.[26] In doing so, he beat the previous mark set by New Zealand's John R. Reid. Wisden reported that the 16th six "landed on a tennis court about 20 feet (6.1 m) over the boundary" and "though he was undoubtedly helped by the short boundaries, it would have been a hugely effective innings on any ground in the world". The record was equalled by Graham Napier for Essex against Surrey in 2011, and stood until May 2022 when Ben Stokes hit 17 sixes in an innings for Durham against Worcestershire.[27] Symonds added four more sixes in the second innings, to beat the old record of 17 in a match, set by Warwickshire's Jim Stewart against Lancashire at Blackpool in 1959.[26]

In July 2005, he signed for Lancashire for the rest of the English season having finished duties as part of Australia's ODI squad.[28] In April 2010, he signed for Surrey to play in the Friends Provident t20 competition.[29]

Kent

Between 1999 and 2004, Symonds played for Kent. He joined the club as an overseas player for the first time ahead of the 1999 County Championship and was also brought in as an injury replacement for Daryll Cullinan during the 2001 County Championship.[30]

He eventually made his mark in T20 cricket which was in its early days during his stint with Kent. He also featured for Kent in the inaugural edition of the 2003 Twenty20 Cup and played an influential knock of an unbeaten 96 runs off just 37 balls with a strike rate of 259.45 against Hampshire in a group stage match. His knock which came at a strike rate of over 250 was a surprise given that T20 cricket was in its very early days. His knock sealed the deal for Kent as the modest target of 146 was reached within just 12 overs.[31]

Some of his highlights came on 2 July 2004 when he hit a 43-ball 112 for Kent Spitfires in a Twenty20 Cup match against Middlesex Crusaders.[32] He scored 112 in 37 minutes and his century, which came at 34 balls, was the then world record for the fastest ever century in T20 cricket. His record stood for nine years before being surpassed by Chris Gayle, during the 2013 Indian Premier League, who did it in 30 balls.[33] Symonds' knock comprised a flurry of boundaries including 18 fours and three sixes which came at a strike rate of 260.46 and his knock helped Kent to win the rain affected match convincingly by seven wickets with 29 balls to spare.[32]

He appeared in 49 first-class matches for Kent, scoring 3,526 runs for the club at an average of 45.20, including 12 centuries, and also taking 65 wickets.[34] He also played in 62 List A matches for Kent, scoring 1,690 runs at an average of 30.17, and took 69 wickets at an average of 21.53.[34][35] In 2020, Kent supporters named him as the club's Greatest Overseas Player in the white ball format.[36]

Indian Premier League

In February 2008, Symonds was signed by the Indian Premier League (IPL) franchise Deccan Chargers for US$1,350,000, which made him the second most expensive player in the league at that time.[37] During the 2008 competition, Symonds scored 117 not out from 53 balls against Rajasthan Royals. The Royals ended up winning the game, with Symonds conceding 19 runs from the final over, with 17 required to win.[38] Symonds started the third season convincingly, scoring two 50s in his first three games with the side in 2010.[39][40] The following year he was contracted by Mumbai Indians for US$850,000.[41]

International career

Emergence and 2003 World Cup

Although Symonds was originally qualified to play for England due to its being the country of his birth, and West Indies due to his ancestry,[42] in 1995 he decided that he wished to pursue an international career for Australia instead.[20] His international debut came on 10 November 1998, when he played in a One Day International (ODI) for Australia against Pakistan at Lahore.[43] As an ODI player, he was known for scoring runs at an excellent strike rate of over 90, with a highest score of 156.[44]

However, at the start of his international career, Symonds struggled to make an impact with the bat and ball, although his fielding was of high quality, and was not a regular member of the playing XI. Symonds was named in Australia's 2003 Cricket World Cup squad.[45] After all-rounder Shane Watson had to withdraw due to injury,[46] Shane Warne was sent home after failing a drugs test,[47] and with Darren Lehmann still serving a suspension for racial abuse,[48] Symonds made his way into the starting XI. According to former England cricketer Adam Hollioake, Symonds would not have made the 2003 World Cup squad if he had not received backing from captain Ponting.[49]

In the first match against Pakistan, Symonds scored 143 not out to guide Australia from 4/86 to 8/310 en route to an 82-run victory,[50] a performance described by Kanta Murali of The Hindu as "one of the best knocks in one-day cricket history". The innings went on to become the turning point of his career.[51] In the semi-final against Sri Lanka, Symonds top scored with 91 not out and was named Player of the Match, as Australia won by 48 runs.[52] With Australia's defeat of India in the final, they claimed their third World Cup triumph, becoming the first team to go undefeated in an edition of the tournament.[53] Following this breakthrough, The Age described Symonds "as a true one-day star", who had "become an essential part of the one-day team."[54]

He batted in five innings during the victorious 2003 World Cup campaign where he made 326 runs at an average of 163. He was also the third leading runscorer for Australia during the World Cup campaign just behind Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden.[55] He remained unbeaten in three of the five innings and his only failure with the bat in the tournament was against England where he was dismissed for a duck.[56]

ODI regular, Test debut

A tour of the West Indies followed, with Symonds playing all seven ODIs, scoring half-centuries in the third and fifth matches.[57][58] He ended as Australia's top run scorer in a 4–3 series victory.[59][60]

In March 2004, Symonds made his Test debut in Australia's tour of Sri Lanka, with the selectors citing his bowling and his power hitting against spin bowlers as "ideal" for the subcontinent conditions.[54] He replaced Simon Katich, who had scored a century and unbeaten fifty in Australia's previous Test.[61] Playing as a batsman, Symonds encountered difficulty against Muttiah Muralitharan on the dusty, spinning Sri Lankan tracks, failing to pass 25 in any of his four innings,[62] and was dropped after two Test matches in favour of Katich.[63]

He was recalled in November 2005 for South Africa's tour of Australia, following an injury to Shane Watson, as Australia's search for an all-rounder continued.[64] After five Tests, with a batting average of 12.62 and a bowling average of 85.00, he was under pressure to retain his place in the team going into the 2005 Boxing Day Test.[65] On the first day of the match, he was out caught behind for a golden duck.[66] But Symonds then took 3/50 in the South African first innings, before hitting 72 off 54 balls in the second innings and taking 2/6 with the ball.[67] For his performances in 2005, he was named in the World ODI XI by the ICC.[68]

 
Symonds batting against South Africa in 2006

At the 2006 Allan Border Medal count, Symonds would have won the One Day Player of the Year award as he polled the most votes, but was ineligible due to a drinking binge during the 2005 Ashes tour.[69]

Symonds played every ODI in the tri-nation 2005–06 VB Series. He was named Player of the Match twice in the group stage: once as he hit a half-century in the opening game,[70] and then again after scoring 32 and taking three wickets, both in victories over Sri Lanka.[71] He also scored a second half-century, reaching 65 in a win over South Africa.[72]

Having won six of their eight group stage games, Australia qualified for the best-of-three final, once again facing Sri Lanka, who finished second in the group table.[73] After going down 1–0 in the opening match, Symonds put up 151, including 13 fours and three sixes. He shared a big partnership with Ricky Ponting as Australia recorded 5/368, setting their highest ever ODI score. Symonds was named Player of the Match once again.[74] After Australia secured victory in the third game of the final, Symonds won Player of the Series honours, having scored 389 runs and recorded 11 wickets.[75] For his performances in 2006, he was named as 12th man in the World ODI XI by the ICC.[76]

After South Africa's tour of Australia, the teams both headed to South Africa in February 2006 for another series there. Symonds missed the first three ODIs through injury,[77] but returned in the fourth with a score of 76, to help Australia chase down a score of 246, and tie the series at 2–2.[78] In the fifth and final ODI, Symonds contributed 27* as Australia broke the world record score for an ODI, with 434.[79] But in what was billed "The greatest the world has seen" by The Sydney Morning Herald, South Africa successfully chased and broke the new world record, setting a new high of 438, with 1 wicket and 1 ball to spare.[80]

While batting in the second Test of the tour, Symonds was struck in the face of his helmet by a bouncer off Makhaya Ntini. Symonds required four stitches on the inside of his upper lip.[81] After scoring just 101 runs and claiming one wicket in the three Test series,[82][83] Symonds found himself dropped from the Test team for the subsequent tour of Bangladesh, with Michael Clarke taking his place.[84]

2007 World Cup

Following the retirement of Damien Martyn during the 2006–07 Ashes, Symonds was again recalled to the team.[85] Although he scored just 26 and 2 in his first Test back, he retained his place in the team for the second match.[86] In the Boxing Day Test, Symonds arrived at the crease with Australia at 5/84.[87] After a slow start to his innings he proceeded to score his maiden Test century, combining with Matthew Hayden to put on a 279 run partnership and bringing up the century with a six. Symonds was finally dismissed for 156.[88]

 
Symonds on the way to his maiden Test hundred in 2006

Although selected in Australia's 15-member World Cup squad[89] he was unavailable for selection for the first few matches because he ruptured his biceps while batting against England on 2 February 2007 in the Commonwealth Bank Tri Series.[90] Surgery was performed and Symonds underwent extensive physical rehabilitation.[91] As a result, he missed the remainder of that tournament as well as the Chappell–Hadlee Trophy in New Zealand, while Australia suffered their longest losing streak in over a decade.[92]

Symonds remarkably made a relatively quick recovery after returning for Australia's win in their last preliminary World Cup match against South Africa.[93][94] Australia reached the final, where they faced Sri Lanka. In a rain-affected game, shortened to 38/36 overs per side, Symonds scored 23 not out during Australia's innings,[95] and bowled the final ball of the tournament to seal victory in a contest that concluded in near-total darkness.[96]

Allegations of racial taunts

In 2007, crowds at the One Day Series in Vadodara, Nagpur and Mumbai were seen to offend Symonds with monkey chants. After the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) initially denied the incident at Vadodara took place (claiming it was a confusion with worshipping Hanuman the monkey god), further incidents occurred at the other grounds in the series.[97][98]

During the subsequent Sri Lankan tour of Australia in late 2007, Symonds had good form with the bat but suffered an ankle injury, which ruled him out for the remainder of the Test series.[99] He then returned for 2007–08 Australia–India series.[100]

 
Symonds playing for Australia against India in 2008

During the second Test against India on 2 January 2008, Symonds completed his second Test century. He came to the crease with Australia struggling at 119/4. After his initial partners, Michael Clarke (1) and then Adam Gilchrist (7), were dismissed in quick succession, Australia found themselves in dire shape at 134/6. Symonds and Brad Hogg then put on a record 7th wicket partnership at the Sydney Cricket Ground (also a record for Australia vs. India) of 173 until Hogg was dismissed for 79. At stumps on the first day, Symonds was not out on 137, and Australia 376/7. By the end of the innings, Symonds finished on 162 not out, when the Australians were finally bowled out for 463. He further went on to score 62 not out in the second innings.[101] In January 2008, Indian spin bowler Harbhajan Singh received a three-match ban after a complaint that he had racially abused Symonds during the third day of the Second Test at the SCG. It was alleged that Harbhajan called Symonds a "monkey" after Symonds confronted him over touching fellow Australian player Brett Lee. The case was decided by the match referee, Mike Procter, in a hearing held after the match.[102]

On 29 January 2008, after the hearing of the appeal, at Adelaide by ICC appeals commissioner John Hansen, the racism charge on Harbhajan Singh was not proved and the three Test ban was lifted. However, a lesser charge (Level 2.8 offence) of using abusive language was applied and Harbhajan was fined 50% of his match fee. Hansen later admitted that he "could have imposed a more serious penalty if he was made aware by the ICC of the bowler's previous transgressions"—including a suspended one Test Match ban. The ICC claimed the "database and human errors ... played a part in Harbhajan Singh escaping a more severe penalty during his appeal hearing in Adelaide".[103] Hansen also criticised Symonds in his report accusing him of swearing at Harbhajan after a friendly gesture by the Indian bowler towards Brett Lee. It was also reported that senior players had written a letter to John Hansen requesting a downgrading of the charge. The letter was signed by Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting and counter-signed by Michael Clarke, Matthew Hayden and Symonds.[104][105] The stump microphone audio was removed immediately after the alleged incident between Harbhajan Singh and Andrew Symonds was released by Channel Nine.[106]

In his 2013 autobiography At the Close of Play, Ricky Ponting expressed his disillusionment with Cricket Australia for failing to support Symonds, who, though the victim of abuse, was painted as a villain. Daniel Brettig notes how, "duly disillusioned", Symonds "drifted from the game via a series of disciplinary problems".[107]

International career draws to a close

During the second final of the 2007–08 Commonwealth Bank Series against India on 4 March 2008, Symonds shoulder charged a male streaker who had entered the playing arena. Symonds, who had once considered a career in rugby league with the Brisbane Broncos,[108] may have faced assault charges had the man taken legal action.[109]

Symonds was set to play for Australia in the August 2008 series against Bangladesh in Darwin, but was sent home to Queensland after missing a team meeting while out fishing. Stand-in captain Michael Clarke told the media that Symonds would have to re-evaluate his desire to represent Australia: "The main concern from us is Andrew's commitment, to playing for this team and, in my opinion and I know the rest of the leadership team's opinion, you need to be committed 100 per cent."[110] As a further punishment for his misadventure, Symonds was not selected for the Australian tour of India in October 2008.[111]

After Australia lost the test series in India two-nil, Symonds was recalled for the Test series against New Zealand in November 2008.[111] He did not play any significant role in the first Test, which Australia won. After the Test, on 22 November, Symonds was reported to have been involved in a pub brawl with another patron who had attempted to hug him and have his photo taken with the cricketer. He was subsequently cleared by Cricket Australia to play in the second test.[112] He then played in the first two tests of the next series against South Africa but performed poorly and was omitted from the team for the third test due to injury; at the same time, many critics called for his omission on performance grounds. Nonetheless, for his performances in 2008, he was named in the World ODI XI by the ICC.[113]

In January 2009, Symonds gave an interview with sports comedians Roy & HG, in which he made remarks about the acquisition of New Zealand cricketer Brendon McCullum by the New South Wales Blues to play in the KFC Twenty20 final against Victoria, despite McCullum's not having played at all for the Blues previously. Sounding intoxicated, Symonds called McCullum a "lump of shit",[114] and declared that having dinner at the home of teammate Matthew Hayden was enjoyable because he could glance at Hayden's wife.[115] The interview led to his being charged with violating the Cricket Australia code of conduct. Following a hearing with general manager Michael Brown, he was fined $4,000, instructed to work with a psychologist, and indefinitely barred from selection until he was deemed to have been successfully rehabilitated.[116]

In the meantime Symonds continued to play for Queensland, but was not selected by Australia, missing three five-match series against South Africa, New Zealand and South Africa respectively. He was finally recalled in April to play ODIs against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates,[117] but was not selected for the 2009 Ashes series, with young all-rounders Shane Watson, Andrew McDonald and Marcus North being preferred.[118]

In early June 2009, Symonds was sent home from the ICC World Twenty20 tournament in England following "an alcohol-related incident".[119] Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland called a press conference to announce Symonds' dismissal, which marked the end of his international cricket career.[3] His Cricket Australia contract was also reviewed[120] and later cancelled.[2]

In June 2009, Symonds told Channel Nine's Sixty Minutes that he was not an alcoholic but a binge-drinker. "I go out and drink hard all in one hit – too fast, too much", he said.[121]

Career highlights

Tests

Debut: Against Sri Lanka at Galle, 2003–04[122]

  • Best Test bowling figures: 3/50 (vs South Africa, Melbourne, MCG, 2005–06).[123]
  • Best Test batting score: 162 not out (India, Sydney, SCG, 3 January 2008).[124]
One Day Internationals

Debut: Against Pakistan, Lahore, 1998–99[125]

Records and achievements

Symonds previously held the world records for the most sixes hit during a first-class innings (16) and during a first-class match (20), both set while playing for Gloucestershire against Glamorgan as a 20-year-old. His first innings score was 254 not out.[128]

At the time of his death, Symonds was one of only 22 players to have scored over 5,000 runs and taken more than 100 wickets in ODI cricket and one of only three Australians to have done so.[129][130] His batting average of 100 runs per inning in World Cup matches was also the highest of any player in that competition.[131]

He was named as an all rounder in Australia's "greatest ever ODI team".[132]

Rugby league

Symonds was a keen supporter of the Brisbane Broncos since childhood and was considering a switch to rugby league in 2002 when his cricket career was faltering.[133] On 21 June 2009, he played a game for the Wynnum Manly Seagulls against an all-star team featuring some noted players, including Marcus Bai and Steve Renouf. He also trained with the Brisbane Broncos.[134]

Media

Symonds made a cameo in the 2011 Bollywood movie Patiala House.[135] In 2011, he was a contestant on the Indian reality series Bigg Boss.[136] Pooja Mishra, who had already been eliminated from the show, returned to act as a translator for Symonds.[137]

Symonds worked as a guest commentator for Big Bash matches between the 2016–17 and 2018–19 seasons.[138]

Death

Symonds was killed in a single-vehicle road accident at Hervey Range, north of Townsville, Queensland, on 14 May 2022, at the age of 46.[139][140] Queensland Police said in a statement that Symonds was driving on Hervey Range Road near the Alice River Bridge when his car left the road and rolled at around 10:30 pm local time. Symonds was the only occupant of the car. Paramedics responded and attempted to revive him, but Symonds was pronounced dead at the scene.[141]

A minute's silence was observed at the start of the final day of the match between two of Symonds' former English clubs, Kent and Surrey, which was taking place when he died.[142] A silence was also observed before the start of the first day's play of the first Test between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in Chattogram.[143]

A tribute campaign, called "Fishing Rods for Roy", was launched in memory of Symonds, referring to his interest in fishing.[144] Cricket fans throughout Australia were encouraged to leave fishing rods and cricket balls outside the front of their houses as a nationwide tribute, one which mirrored the tributes after the death of Phillip Hughes in 2014.[145]

Bibliography

Author

  • Symonds, Andrew; Gray, Stephen (2007). Roy: Going For Broke. Hardie Grant Books. ISBN 978-1-74066-580-3.

Contributor

References

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External links

andrew, symonds, june, 1975, 2022, australian, international, cricketer, played, three, formats, batting, rounder, commonly, nicknamed, member, world, winning, squads, symonds, part, team, that, both, 2003, cricket, world, four, years, later, 2007, cricket, wo. Andrew Symonds 9 June 1975 14 May 2022 was an Australian international cricketer who played all three formats as a batting all rounder Commonly nicknamed Roy he was a key member of two World Cup winning squads Symonds was a part of the team that won both the 2003 Cricket World Cup and four years later the 2007 Cricket World Cup Symonds played as a right handed middle order batsman and alternated between medium pace and off spin bowling He was also notable for his exceptional fielding skills Andrew SymondsSymonds in 2008 sporting his trademark zinc oxide sunscreen on his lipsPersonal informationBorn 1975 06 09 9 June 1975Birmingham West Midlands EnglandDied14 May 2022 2022 05 14 aged 46 Hervey Range Queensland AustraliaNicknameRoy SymoHeight187 cm 6 ft 2 in BattingRight handedBowlingRight arm mediumRight arm off breakRoleAll rounderInternational informationNational sideAustralia 1998 2009 Test debut cap 388 8 March 2004 v Sri LankaLast Test26 December 2008 v South AfricaODI debut cap 139 10 November 1998 v PakistanLast ODI3 May 2009 v PakistanT20I debut cap 11 17 February 2005 v New ZealandLast T20I7 May 2009 v PakistanDomestic team informationYearsTeam1993 94 2009 10Queensland1995 1996Gloucestershire1999 2004Kent2005Lancashire2008 2010Deccan Chargers2010Surrey2011Mumbai IndiansCareer statisticsCompetition Test ODI FC LAMatches 26 198 227 424Runs scored 1 462 5 088 14 477 11 099Batting average 40 61 39 75 42 20 34 04100s 50s 2 10 6 30 40 65 9 64Top score 162 156 254 156Balls bowled 2 094 5 935 17 633 11 713Wickets 24 133 242 282Bowling average 37 33 37 25 36 00 33 255 wickets in innings 0 1 2 410 wickets in match 0 0 0 0Best bowling 3 50 5 18 6 105 6 14Catches stumpings 22 82 159 187 Source ESPNcricinfo 15 May 2022After mid 2008 Symonds spent significant time out of the team due to disciplinary reasons including alcohol 1 In June 2009 he was sent home from the 2009 World Twenty20 his third suspension expulsion or exclusion from selection in the space of a year His central contract was then withdrawn 2 and many cricket analysts speculated that the Australian administrators would no longer tolerate him and that Symonds might announce his retirement 3 Symonds eventually retired from all forms of cricket in February 2012 to concentrate on his family life 4 In 2022 Symonds died in a single vehicle car crash about 50 km 31 mi outside Townsville Queensland He was 46 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 Overview of cricket career 3 Domestic cricket 3 1 Australian state cricket 3 2 English counties 3 2 1 Kent 3 3 Indian Premier League 4 International career 4 1 Emergence and 2003 World Cup 4 2 ODI regular Test debut 4 3 2007 World Cup 4 4 Allegations of racial taunts 4 5 International career draws to a close 5 Career highlights 6 Rugby league 7 Media 8 Death 9 Bibliography 9 1 Author 9 2 Contributor 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditOne of Symonds birth parents was of an Afro Caribbean background while the other was believed to be of Scandinavian descent 6 Symonds was adopted by parents Ken and Barbara at three months of age and they moved to Australia when he was a toddler 7 He had three siblings His sister Louise Symonds who was also adopted was a contestant on the Australian Gladiators television series in 2008 8 He spent the early part of his childhood in Charters Towers northern Queensland where his father taught at the private fee paying All Souls St Gabriels School which Symonds attended 9 He showed sporting prowess from a very early age Dad was cricket mad He d throw balls to me five or six days a week before school after school And we d play all sorts of games inside the house with ping pong balls and Christmas decorations 10 His early junior cricket was played in Townsville for the Wanderers club father and son making the 270 kilometre return trip sometimes twice a week 7 In 1988 Symonds father accepted a deputy headmaster role at All Saints Anglican School 11 and the family subsequently relocated to the Gold Coast when Symonds was 12 years of age 12 He attended the school 13 and continued his junior cricket at Palm Beach Currumbin 14 A few years later Symonds made his Queensland Premier Cricket debut for the Gold Coast Dolphins as a 15 year old and hit a remarkable double century in his first game 15 Overview of cricket career EditSymonds was an aggressive right handed batsman who could also bowl off spin or medium pace making him a good all rounder He was an exceptional fielder with a report prepared by Cricinfo in late 2005 showing that since the 1999 Cricket World Cup he had effected the fifth equal most run outs in One Day International ODI cricket of any fieldsman with the fourth highest success rate 16 with Ricky Ponting rating him the best fielder he had seen and a better and more versatile one than Herschelle Gibbs and Jonty Rhodes because Symonds was taller than them giving him better defensive coverage range and had greater throw power outside the circle 17 He was very agile for his size and weight medium heavy build 187 cm tall had excellent reflexes was able to take catches well and had a powerful and accurate throwing arm His nickname was Roy shortened from the name Leroy after a coach from early in his career believed he resembled local Brisbane basketball player Leroy Loggins 18 He was an AIS Australian Cricket Academy scholarship holder in 1994 19 In 1995 after playing in his first season for English county Gloucestershire Symonds won the Cricket Writer s Club Young Cricketer of the Year award 20 Shortly afterwards Symonds was selected as part of the England A team that was to tour Pakistan in the winter however he decided not to go instead choosing to pursue an international career for Australia His place on the tour was later taken by Middlesex player Jason Pooley 20 Domestic cricket EditAustralian state cricket Edit Symonds scored more than 5 000 runs and took more than 100 wickets for the Queensland state team 21 He scored 113 and took four wickets in a losing cause in the final of the 1998 99 Sheffield Shield season 22 and was named man of the match in the 2002 Pura Cup final after scoring 123 runs and taking six wickets 23 24 English counties Edit Symonds played for four English counties during his career Gloucestershire Kent Lancashire and Surrey 20 His first appearance for an English county was with Gloucestershire 25 Initially he was considered an England qualified player however following his first season of county cricket in 1995 he declared that his allegiances lay with Australia when he chose not to tour Pakistan with the England A team 20 In August 1995 he hit a record 16 sixes in his unbeaten 254 against Glamorgan at Abergavenny 26 In doing so he beat the previous mark set by New Zealand s John R Reid Wisden reported that the 16th six landed on a tennis court about 20 feet 6 1 m over the boundary and though he was undoubtedly helped by the short boundaries it would have been a hugely effective innings on any ground in the world The record was equalled by Graham Napier for Essex against Surrey in 2011 and stood until May 2022 when Ben Stokes hit 17 sixes in an innings for Durham against Worcestershire 27 Symonds added four more sixes in the second innings to beat the old record of 17 in a match set by Warwickshire s Jim Stewart against Lancashire at Blackpool in 1959 26 In July 2005 he signed for Lancashire for the rest of the English season having finished duties as part of Australia s ODI squad 28 In April 2010 he signed for Surrey to play in the Friends Provident t20 competition 29 Kent Edit Between 1999 and 2004 Symonds played for Kent He joined the club as an overseas player for the first time ahead of the 1999 County Championship and was also brought in as an injury replacement for Daryll Cullinan during the 2001 County Championship 30 He eventually made his mark in T20 cricket which was in its early days during his stint with Kent He also featured for Kent in the inaugural edition of the 2003 Twenty20 Cup and played an influential knock of an unbeaten 96 runs off just 37 balls with a strike rate of 259 45 against Hampshire in a group stage match His knock which came at a strike rate of over 250 was a surprise given that T20 cricket was in its very early days His knock sealed the deal for Kent as the modest target of 146 was reached within just 12 overs 31 Some of his highlights came on 2 July 2004 when he hit a 43 ball 112 for Kent Spitfires in a Twenty20 Cup match against Middlesex Crusaders 32 He scored 112 in 37 minutes and his century which came at 34 balls was the then world record for the fastest ever century in T20 cricket His record stood for nine years before being surpassed by Chris Gayle during the 2013 Indian Premier League who did it in 30 balls 33 Symonds knock comprised a flurry of boundaries including 18 fours and three sixes which came at a strike rate of 260 46 and his knock helped Kent to win the rain affected match convincingly by seven wickets with 29 balls to spare 32 He appeared in 49 first class matches for Kent scoring 3 526 runs for the club at an average of 45 20 including 12 centuries and also taking 65 wickets 34 He also played in 62 List A matches for Kent scoring 1 690 runs at an average of 30 17 and took 69 wickets at an average of 21 53 34 35 In 2020 Kent supporters named him as the club s Greatest Overseas Player in the white ball format 36 Indian Premier League Edit In February 2008 Symonds was signed by the Indian Premier League IPL franchise Deccan Chargers for US 1 350 000 which made him the second most expensive player in the league at that time 37 During the 2008 competition Symonds scored 117 not out from 53 balls against Rajasthan Royals The Royals ended up winning the game with Symonds conceding 19 runs from the final over with 17 required to win 38 Symonds started the third season convincingly scoring two 50s in his first three games with the side in 2010 39 40 The following year he was contracted by Mumbai Indians for US 850 000 41 International career EditEmergence and 2003 World Cup Edit Although Symonds was originally qualified to play for England due to its being the country of his birth and West Indies due to his ancestry 42 in 1995 he decided that he wished to pursue an international career for Australia instead 20 His international debut came on 10 November 1998 when he played in a One Day International ODI for Australia against Pakistan at Lahore 43 As an ODI player he was known for scoring runs at an excellent strike rate of over 90 with a highest score of 156 44 However at the start of his international career Symonds struggled to make an impact with the bat and ball although his fielding was of high quality and was not a regular member of the playing XI Symonds was named in Australia s 2003 Cricket World Cup squad 45 After all rounder Shane Watson had to withdraw due to injury 46 Shane Warne was sent home after failing a drugs test 47 and with Darren Lehmann still serving a suspension for racial abuse 48 Symonds made his way into the starting XI According to former England cricketer Adam Hollioake Symonds would not have made the 2003 World Cup squad if he had not received backing from captain Ponting 49 In the first match against Pakistan Symonds scored 143 not out to guide Australia from 4 86 to 8 310 en route to an 82 run victory 50 a performance described by Kanta Murali of The Hindu as one of the best knocks in one day cricket history The innings went on to become the turning point of his career 51 In the semi final against Sri Lanka Symonds top scored with 91 not out and was named Player of the Match as Australia won by 48 runs 52 With Australia s defeat of India in the final they claimed their third World Cup triumph becoming the first team to go undefeated in an edition of the tournament 53 Following this breakthrough The Age described Symonds as a true one day star who had become an essential part of the one day team 54 He batted in five innings during the victorious 2003 World Cup campaign where he made 326 runs at an average of 163 He was also the third leading runscorer for Australia during the World Cup campaign just behind Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden 55 He remained unbeaten in three of the five innings and his only failure with the bat in the tournament was against England where he was dismissed for a duck 56 ODI regular Test debut Edit A tour of the West Indies followed with Symonds playing all seven ODIs scoring half centuries in the third and fifth matches 57 58 He ended as Australia s top run scorer in a 4 3 series victory 59 60 In March 2004 Symonds made his Test debut in Australia s tour of Sri Lanka with the selectors citing his bowling and his power hitting against spin bowlers as ideal for the subcontinent conditions 54 He replaced Simon Katich who had scored a century and unbeaten fifty in Australia s previous Test 61 Playing as a batsman Symonds encountered difficulty against Muttiah Muralitharan on the dusty spinning Sri Lankan tracks failing to pass 25 in any of his four innings 62 and was dropped after two Test matches in favour of Katich 63 He was recalled in November 2005 for South Africa s tour of Australia following an injury to Shane Watson as Australia s search for an all rounder continued 64 After five Tests with a batting average of 12 62 and a bowling average of 85 00 he was under pressure to retain his place in the team going into the 2005 Boxing Day Test 65 On the first day of the match he was out caught behind for a golden duck 66 But Symonds then took 3 50 in the South African first innings before hitting 72 off 54 balls in the second innings and taking 2 6 with the ball 67 For his performances in 2005 he was named in the World ODI XI by the ICC 68 Symonds batting against South Africa in 2006 At the 2006 Allan Border Medal count Symonds would have won the One Day Player of the Year award as he polled the most votes but was ineligible due to a drinking binge during the 2005 Ashes tour 69 Symonds played every ODI in the tri nation 2005 06 VB Series He was named Player of the Match twice in the group stage once as he hit a half century in the opening game 70 and then again after scoring 32 and taking three wickets both in victories over Sri Lanka 71 He also scored a second half century reaching 65 in a win over South Africa 72 Having won six of their eight group stage games Australia qualified for the best of three final once again facing Sri Lanka who finished second in the group table 73 After going down 1 0 in the opening match Symonds put up 151 including 13 fours and three sixes He shared a big partnership with Ricky Ponting as Australia recorded 5 368 setting their highest ever ODI score Symonds was named Player of the Match once again 74 After Australia secured victory in the third game of the final Symonds won Player of the Series honours having scored 389 runs and recorded 11 wickets 75 For his performances in 2006 he was named as 12th man in the World ODI XI by the ICC 76 After South Africa s tour of Australia the teams both headed to South Africa in February 2006 for another series there Symonds missed the first three ODIs through injury 77 but returned in the fourth with a score of 76 to help Australia chase down a score of 246 and tie the series at 2 2 78 In the fifth and final ODI Symonds contributed 27 as Australia broke the world record score for an ODI with 434 79 But in what was billed The greatest the world has seen by The Sydney Morning Herald South Africa successfully chased and broke the new world record setting a new high of 438 with 1 wicket and 1 ball to spare 80 While batting in the second Test of the tour Symonds was struck in the face of his helmet by a bouncer off Makhaya Ntini Symonds required four stitches on the inside of his upper lip 81 After scoring just 101 runs and claiming one wicket in the three Test series 82 83 Symonds found himself dropped from the Test team for the subsequent tour of Bangladesh with Michael Clarke taking his place 84 2007 World Cup Edit Following the retirement of Damien Martyn during the 2006 07 Ashes Symonds was again recalled to the team 85 Although he scored just 26 and 2 in his first Test back he retained his place in the team for the second match 86 In the Boxing Day Test Symonds arrived at the crease with Australia at 5 84 87 After a slow start to his innings he proceeded to score his maiden Test century combining with Matthew Hayden to put on a 279 run partnership and bringing up the century with a six Symonds was finally dismissed for 156 88 Symonds on the way to his maiden Test hundred in 2006 Although selected in Australia s 15 member World Cup squad 89 he was unavailable for selection for the first few matches because he ruptured his biceps while batting against England on 2 February 2007 in the Commonwealth Bank Tri Series 90 Surgery was performed and Symonds underwent extensive physical rehabilitation 91 As a result he missed the remainder of that tournament as well as the Chappell Hadlee Trophy in New Zealand while Australia suffered their longest losing streak in over a decade 92 Symonds remarkably made a relatively quick recovery after returning for Australia s win in their last preliminary World Cup match against South Africa 93 94 Australia reached the final where they faced Sri Lanka In a rain affected game shortened to 38 36 overs per side Symonds scored 23 not out during Australia s innings 95 and bowled the final ball of the tournament to seal victory in a contest that concluded in near total darkness 96 Allegations of racial taunts Edit Main article Second Test 2007 08 Border Gavaskar Trophy In 2007 crowds at the One Day Series in Vadodara Nagpur and Mumbai were seen to offend Symonds with monkey chants After the Board of Control for Cricket in India BCCI initially denied the incident at Vadodara took place claiming it was a confusion with worshipping Hanuman the monkey god further incidents occurred at the other grounds in the series 97 98 During the subsequent Sri Lankan tour of Australia in late 2007 Symonds had good form with the bat but suffered an ankle injury which ruled him out for the remainder of the Test series 99 He then returned for 2007 08 Australia India series 100 Symonds playing for Australia against India in 2008 During the second Test against India on 2 January 2008 Symonds completed his second Test century He came to the crease with Australia struggling at 119 4 After his initial partners Michael Clarke 1 and then Adam Gilchrist 7 were dismissed in quick succession Australia found themselves in dire shape at 134 6 Symonds and Brad Hogg then put on a record 7th wicket partnership at the Sydney Cricket Ground also a record for Australia vs India of 173 until Hogg was dismissed for 79 At stumps on the first day Symonds was not out on 137 and Australia 376 7 By the end of the innings Symonds finished on 162 not out when the Australians were finally bowled out for 463 He further went on to score 62 not out in the second innings 101 In January 2008 Indian spin bowler Harbhajan Singh received a three match ban after a complaint that he had racially abused Symonds during the third day of the Second Test at the SCG It was alleged that Harbhajan called Symonds a monkey after Symonds confronted him over touching fellow Australian player Brett Lee The case was decided by the match referee Mike Procter in a hearing held after the match 102 On 29 January 2008 after the hearing of the appeal at Adelaide by ICC appeals commissioner John Hansen the racism charge on Harbhajan Singh was not proved and the three Test ban was lifted However a lesser charge Level 2 8 offence of using abusive language was applied and Harbhajan was fined 50 of his match fee Hansen later admitted that he could have imposed a more serious penalty if he was made aware by the ICC of the bowler s previous transgressions including a suspended one Test Match ban The ICC claimed the database and human errors played a part in Harbhajan Singh escaping a more severe penalty during his appeal hearing in Adelaide 103 Hansen also criticised Symonds in his report accusing him of swearing at Harbhajan after a friendly gesture by the Indian bowler towards Brett Lee It was also reported that senior players had written a letter to John Hansen requesting a downgrading of the charge The letter was signed by Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting and counter signed by Michael Clarke Matthew Hayden and Symonds 104 105 The stump microphone audio was removed immediately after the alleged incident between Harbhajan Singh and Andrew Symonds was released by Channel Nine 106 In his 2013 autobiography At the Close of Play Ricky Ponting expressed his disillusionment with Cricket Australia for failing to support Symonds who though the victim of abuse was painted as a villain Daniel Brettig notes how duly disillusioned Symonds drifted from the game via a series of disciplinary problems 107 International career draws to a close Edit During the second final of the 2007 08 Commonwealth Bank Series against India on 4 March 2008 Symonds shoulder charged a male streaker who had entered the playing arena Symonds who had once considered a career in rugby league with the Brisbane Broncos 108 may have faced assault charges had the man taken legal action 109 Symonds was set to play for Australia in the August 2008 series against Bangladesh in Darwin but was sent home to Queensland after missing a team meeting while out fishing Stand in captain Michael Clarke told the media that Symonds would have to re evaluate his desire to represent Australia The main concern from us is Andrew s commitment to playing for this team and in my opinion and I know the rest of the leadership team s opinion you need to be committed 100 per cent 110 As a further punishment for his misadventure Symonds was not selected for the Australian tour of India in October 2008 111 After Australia lost the test series in India two nil Symonds was recalled for the Test series against New Zealand in November 2008 111 He did not play any significant role in the first Test which Australia won After the Test on 22 November Symonds was reported to have been involved in a pub brawl with another patron who had attempted to hug him and have his photo taken with the cricketer He was subsequently cleared by Cricket Australia to play in the second test 112 He then played in the first two tests of the next series against South Africa but performed poorly and was omitted from the team for the third test due to injury at the same time many critics called for his omission on performance grounds Nonetheless for his performances in 2008 he was named in the World ODI XI by the ICC 113 In January 2009 Symonds gave an interview with sports comedians Roy amp HG in which he made remarks about the acquisition of New Zealand cricketer Brendon McCullum by the New South Wales Blues to play in the KFC Twenty20 final against Victoria despite McCullum s not having played at all for the Blues previously Sounding intoxicated Symonds called McCullum a lump of shit 114 and declared that having dinner at the home of teammate Matthew Hayden was enjoyable because he could glance at Hayden s wife 115 The interview led to his being charged with violating the Cricket Australia code of conduct Following a hearing with general manager Michael Brown he was fined 4 000 instructed to work with a psychologist and indefinitely barred from selection until he was deemed to have been successfully rehabilitated 116 In the meantime Symonds continued to play for Queensland but was not selected by Australia missing three five match series against South Africa New Zealand and South Africa respectively He was finally recalled in April to play ODIs against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates 117 but was not selected for the 2009 Ashes series with young all rounders Shane Watson Andrew McDonald and Marcus North being preferred 118 In early June 2009 Symonds was sent home from the ICC World Twenty20 tournament in England following an alcohol related incident 119 Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland called a press conference to announce Symonds dismissal which marked the end of his international cricket career 3 His Cricket Australia contract was also reviewed 120 and later cancelled 2 In June 2009 Symonds told Channel Nine s Sixty Minutes that he was not an alcoholic but a binge drinker I go out and drink hard all in one hit too fast too much he said 121 Career highlights EditTestsDebut Against Sri Lanka at Galle 2003 04 122 Best Test bowling figures 3 50 vs South Africa Melbourne MCG 2005 06 123 Best Test batting score 162 not out India Sydney SCG 3 January 2008 124 One Day InternationalsDebut Against Pakistan Lahore 1998 99 125 Best ODI bowling figures 5 18 Bangladesh Manchester Old Trafford 2005 126 Best ODI batting score 156 New Zealand Wellington Westpac Stadium 7 December 2005 127 Records and achievementsSymonds previously held the world records for the most sixes hit during a first class innings 16 and during a first class match 20 both set while playing for Gloucestershire against Glamorgan as a 20 year old His first innings score was 254 not out 128 At the time of his death Symonds was one of only 22 players to have scored over 5 000 runs and taken more than 100 wickets in ODI cricket and one of only three Australians to have done so 129 130 His batting average of 100 runs per inning in World Cup matches was also the highest of any player in that competition 131 He was named as an all rounder in Australia s greatest ever ODI team 132 Rugby league EditSymonds was a keen supporter of the Brisbane Broncos since childhood and was considering a switch to rugby league in 2002 when his cricket career was faltering 133 On 21 June 2009 he played a game for the Wynnum Manly Seagulls against an all star team featuring some noted players including Marcus Bai and Steve Renouf He also trained with the Brisbane Broncos 134 Media EditSymonds made a cameo in the 2011 Bollywood movie Patiala House 135 In 2011 he was a contestant on the Indian reality series Bigg Boss 136 Pooja Mishra who had already been eliminated from the show returned to act as a translator for Symonds 137 Symonds worked as a guest commentator for Big Bash matches between the 2016 17 and 2018 19 seasons 138 Death EditSymonds was killed in a single vehicle road accident at Hervey Range north of Townsville Queensland on 14 May 2022 at the age of 46 139 140 Queensland Police said in a statement that Symonds was driving on Hervey Range Road near the Alice River Bridge when his car left the road and rolled at around 10 30 pm local time Symonds was the only occupant of the car Paramedics responded and attempted to revive him but Symonds was pronounced dead at the scene 141 A minute s silence was observed at the start of the final day of the match between two of Symonds former English clubs Kent and Surrey which was taking place when he died 142 A silence was also observed before the start of the first day s play of the first Test between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in Chattogram 143 A tribute campaign called Fishing Rods for Roy was launched in memory of Symonds referring to his interest in fishing 144 Cricket fans throughout Australia were encouraged to leave fishing rods and cricket balls outside the front of their houses as a nationwide tribute one which mirrored the tributes after the death of Phillip Hughes in 2014 145 Bibliography EditAuthor Edit Symonds Andrew Gray Stephen 2007 Roy Going For Broke Hardie Grant Books ISBN 978 1 74066 580 3 Contributor Edit Symonds Andrew 2007 Contributor Laugh Even Louder By Camp Quality Gosford New South Wales Scholastic Australia Pty Limited ISBN 978 1 74169 022 4 146 References Edit Player Profile Andrew Symonds CricInfo ESPN Retrieved 6 June 2009 a b Aussies rescind Symonds contract BBC News Online BBC 12 June 2009 Archived from the original on 15 June 2009 Retrieved 12 June 2009 a b Brown Alex English Peter 6 June 2009 Symonds waits to decide on future CricInfo ESPN Archived from the original on 7 June 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2009 Australian all rounder Andrew Symonds retires from cricket BBC Sport BBC 16 February 2012 Retrieved 16 February 2012 Andrew Symonds dies in a car accident aged 46 Cricbuzz com Cricbuzz Retrieved 17 May 2022 Dreadlock holiday for Rasta Roy The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 1 September 2008 a b Andrew Symonds his early years of development at Wanderers Cricket Wanderers website Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Retrieved 14 October 2007 Andrew Symonds Cricket Forever Retrieved 16 May 2022 The Official Newsletter of All Souls St Gabriels School 21 February 2003 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 Hutchinson Jane 25 March 2007 Roy to the rescue Daily Telegraph 25 March 2007 The Sunday Telegraph Inside Andrew Symonds life of paradise with wife Laura and their two kids news com au 15 May 2022 Andrew Symonds crash cricketer dies in Townsville accident Gold Coast Bulletin 17 May 2022 Nation adopts a timely hero The Age Melbourne 16 February 2003 RIP Andrew Symonds former PBCCC junior Palm Beach Currumbin Cricket Club 14 May 2022 History of the Gold Coast District Cricket Club Gold Coast Dolphins 1 June 2018 Basevi Trevor 8 November 2005 Statistics Run outs in ODIs Cricinfo Archived from the original on 19 March 2007 Retrieved 5 February 2007 cricket com au 21 May 2017 Ponting s Top Five fielders of all time retrieved 27 November 2017 Fox Sports Ashes Player Profiles Retrieved 27 December 2006 Archived 5 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Excellence the Australian Institute of Sport Canberra Australian Sports Commission 2002 a b c d e Lynch Steve Collingwood s rare honour and 551 and losing Cricinfo Retrieved 19 July 2009 Andrew Symonds was a born entertainer and a reluctant celebrity The Guardian 15 May 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Andrew Symonds Kent Cricket Retrieved 15 May 2022 Symonds We now have belief in ourselves Kent Online 17 April 2002 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Final Brisbane March 22 26 2002 Pura Cup ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 15 May 2022 Andrew Symonds the Queensland larrikin known as Roy with explosive batting Bournemouth Echo Retrieved 15 May 2022 a b Frindall Bill 1998 The Wisden Book of Cricket Records Fourth ed London Headline Book Publishing p 146 ISBN 0747222037 Ben Stokes smashes record 17 sixes as he makes 161 for Durham on his County Championship return Sky Sports 6 May 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Hobson By Richard Lancashire lifted by presence of Symonds The Times Retrieved 15 May 2022 Surrey sign Australian Andrew Symonds as second overseas player The Guardian 7 April 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Andrew Symonds profile Ment Cricket Retrieved 16 May 2022 Full Scorecard of Hampshire vs Kent South Group 2003 Score Report ESPNcricinfo com ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 a b Scorecard ESPNCricinfo Kent vs Middlesex 2nd July 2004 ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 26 July 2012 Seven innings that defined Andrew Symonds career ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 a b A force of nature How county cricket remembers Andrew Symonds and that T20 knock ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 17 May 2022 Legend Of Roy The Andrew Symonds Story Wisden Cricket Wisden 30 June 2020 Retrieved 16 May 2022 ANDREW SYMONDS 1975 2022 Kent Cricket 15 May 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Hard hitting Symonds leaves cricket fans shell shocked he was once part of Deccan Chargers 15 May 2022 Chargers lose despite Symonds century ABC News 24 April 2008 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Symonds helps Deccan to first home win Cricinfo Archived from the original on 22 March 2010 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Deccan big guns overwhelm Chennai Cricinfo Archived from the original on 17 March 2010 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Mumbai Indians share memories of Andrew Symonds 15 May 2022 Andrew Symonds Sports Pundit Retrieved 23 March 2018 Scorecard Pakistan v Australia 3rd ODI at Lahore 8 Nov 1998 Cricinfo Retrieved 19 July 2009 Andrew Symonds the Queensland larrikin known as Roy with explosive batting The Mail Retrieved 16 May 2022 Australia announces World Cup squad ESPNCricinfo com 31 December 2002 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Hand Guy 26 January 2003 Bevan still chance for World Cup Cricinfo com Australian Associated Press Retrieved 15 May 2022 On This Day 2003 Shane Warne banned for a year by ACB after failing drugs test Australia s Lehmann on racism charge TheGuardian com 17 January 2003 Andrew Symonds death Five rare and unique facts about the former Australia all rounder Hindustan Times 15 May 2022 Retrieved 16 May 2022 Full Scorecard of Australia vs Pakistan 4th Match 2002 03 ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Murali Kanta 11 April 2003 Lessons from a shock and awe final TheHindu com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Full Scorecard of Australia vs Sri Lanka 1st SF 2002 03 ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Ruthless Aussies lift World Cup news BBC co uk 23 March 2003 Retrieved 15 May 2022 a b The cap finally fits for Symonds TheAge com au 21 February 2004 Retrieved 16 May 2022 ICC World Cup 2002 03 Cricket Team Records amp Stats ESPNcricinfo com Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Full Scorecard of England vs Australia 37th Match 2002 03 Score Report ESPNcricinfo com ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Australia takes a 3 0 lead in West Indies ODI series ABC net au 22 May 2003 Retrieved 15 May 2022 West Indies ends Australia s ODI streak ABC net au 26 May 2003 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Australia in West Indies ODI Series 2003 Cricket Team Records amp Statistics ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Full Scorecard of Australia vs West Indies 7th ODI 2003 Score Report ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Zaia Alex 1 February 2019 Katich Recalls the Hurt of Being Dropped After Scoring Maiden Test Ton Sen com au Retrieved 16 May 2022 Australia in Sri Lanka Test Series 2003 04 Cricket Team Records amp Stats ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Miller Herman 28 March 2004 Inspired Langer runs show TheGuardian com Retrieved 15 May 2022 English Peter 15 April 2006 Australia v West Indies 2005 06 ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Manthorp Neil 15 April 2006 Australia v South Africa 2005 06 ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Nel gives South Africa advantage news BBC co uk 26 December 2005 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Full Scorecard of Australia vs South Africa 2nd Test 2005 06 Score Report ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Kallis Flintoff share player of the year award ABC net au 11 October 2005 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Ponting wins Allan Border Medal again SMH com au 7 February 2006 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Williamson Martin 12 January 2006 Awesome Australia off to a flier ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 English Peter 26 January 2006 Australia ease to five wicket victory ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Easy win for Aussies in Melbourne news BBC co uk 3 February 2006 Retrieved 15 May 2022 VB Series 2005 06 Table Matches win loss points for VB Series ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Rampant Australia crush Sri Lanka news BBC co uk 12 February 2006 Retrieved 15 May 2022 English Peter 14 February 2006 Gilchrist and Katich seal series ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Ricky Ponting takes top honours at glittering ICC Awards night 3 November 2006 Thompson Jenny 26 February 2006 Smith ton powers South Africa to resurgent win ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Luke Will 10 March 2006 Australia level series in thriller at Durban ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Australia breaks record in final TheAge com au 13 March 2006 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Brown Alex 14 March 2006 The greatest the world has seen SMH com au Retrieved 15 May 2022 Brown Alex 27 March 2006 Symonds linked to club confrontation SMH com au Retrieved 15 May 2022 Australia in South Africa Test Series 2005 06 Cricket Team Records amp Stats Most Runs ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Australia in South Africa Test Series 2005 06 Cricket Team Records amp Stats Most Wickets ESPNCricinfo com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Symonds dumped from Test team ABC net au Agence France Presse 8 April 2006 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Fraser Angus 12 December 2006 Martyn exit opens the Ashes door for Symonds The Independent p 50 Retrieved 15 May 2022 via Newspapers com Australia unchanged for Melbourne Cricinfo com 19 December 2006 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Symonds matures with help from his mate ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 England routed inside three days ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Tait and Haddin in World Cup squad ESPNCricinfo com 13 February 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Briggs Simon 5 February 2007 Ponting opens door to finals for England The Daily Telegraph p S30 Retrieved 15 May 2022 via Newspapers com All rounder Symonds needs surgery CNN com 3 February 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2022 English Peter 21 February 2007 Australia deny they are in crisis after Kiwi whitewash TheGuardian com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Symonds starts to throw cricinfo com Retrieved 23 March 2018 ESPNcricinfo Cricket Teams Scores Stats News Fixtures Results Tables ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 23 March 2018 Scorecard Australia v Sri Lanka World Cup 2007 Final Cricinfo Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 19 July 2009 Selvey Mike 30 April 2007 Official fumbling in the dark takes the shine off Australia s triumph TheGuardian com Retrieved 15 May 2022 Lalor Peter 18 October 2007 India makes monkey of racism row The Australian Archived from the original on 19 October 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2007 Symonds subjected to monkey chants CrinInfo Retrieved 12 October 2007 Hayden and Symonds eye comebacks ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Australia all set for MCG dominance ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Border Gavaskar Trophy 2nd Test 2007 08 Archived from the original on 3 January 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2008 Vaidyanathan Siddhartha 6 January 2008 Harbhajan gets three match ban Cricinfo Archived from the original on 9 January 2008 Retrieved 6 January 2008 ICC accepts blame for human and database errors CricInfo 31 January 2008 Archived from the original on 2 February 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2008 Doshi Anjali 29 January 2008 Racism charge against Harbhajan dropped NDTV com Archived from the original on 1 February 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2008 Harbhajan Singh cleared of racism charges Press release ICC 29 January 2008 Archived from the original on 30 January 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2008 The Australian 29 January 2008 Transcript What was said News Limited Archived from the original on 6 February 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2008 Bretting Daniel Ponting moves on from Monkeygate Retrieved 22 October 2013 Symonds hits a streaker for six Cricket Sport smh com au www smh com au 5 March 2008 Retrieved 23 March 2018 Symonds in hot water for dropping streaker abc net au 5 March 2008 Retrieved 23 March 2018 Coverdale Brydon 30 August 2008 Symonds sent home after going fishing CricInfo ESPN Archived from the original on 8 June 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2009 a b Symonds recalled as Watson left to fight with Krejza ESPNCricinfo ESPN 19 November 2008 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Symonds involved in pub incident CricInfo ESPN 24 November 2008 Archived from the original on 7 June 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2009 Ponting leads ODI Team of Year Symonds apologises to McCullum over spray Stuff February 2009 Retrieved 16 May 2022 Symonds in trouble for bad mouthing McCullum The Indian Express Retrieved 16 May 2022 Symonds fined 4000 for McCullum comments CricInfo ESPN 29 January 2009 Archived from the original on 7 June 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2009 Rajesh S 21 April 2009 Comeback chance for Shoaib and Symonds CricInfo ESPN Retrieved 6 June 2009 Brown Alex 20 May 2009 McDonald in Symonds out of Ashes squad CricInfo ESPN Archived from the original on 15 June 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2009 Australia ready for life without Symonds CricInfo ESPN 5 June 2009 Archived from the original on 8 June 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2009 Symonds kicked out of camp Fox Sports Retrieved 4 June 2009 Quoted in Booth Lawrence Myths And stereotypes The Spin 30 June 2009 1st Test Galle March 08 12 2004 Australia tour of Sri Lanka ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Vale Andrew Symonds Melbourne Cricket Club Retrieved 16 May 2022 Seven innings that defined Andrew Symonds career ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 3rd ODI Lahore November 10 1998 Australia tour of Pakistan ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Here s why Andrew Symonds was popularly called as Roy Cricket Times Retrieved 16 May 2022 Hayden backs Symonds to deliver in Tests ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 County Championship Surrey break first class record in making 671 9 at Kent BBC Sport Retrieved 13 May 2022 Andrew Symonds A look at incredible numbers amp achievements of one of the greatest modern day all rounders TimesNow 15 May 2022 Retrieved 16 May 2022 A look at Andrew Symonds prominent records and achievements CricTracker 15 May 2022 Retrieved 16 May 2022 Andrew Symonds A tale of two World Cups www icc cricket com Retrieved 16 May 2022 Australia names greatest ODI team Daily Times 28 February 2007 Archived from the original on 5 March 2007 Retrieved 1 March 2007 Marshall Matt 13 August 2009 Andrew Symonds not a distraction at training Ivan Henjak Fox Sports News Retrieved 27 June 2010 Craddock Robert 22 June 2009 Cricket Andrew Symonds plays rugby league for Wynnum Manly DailyTelegraph com au Retrieved 16 May 2022 Pal Divya 8 December 2011 I have no problem talking about Bhajji Andrew Symonds TimesofIndia IndiaTimes com Retrieved 16 May 2022 Andrew Symonds to feature in Indian Reality Big Brother The Daily Telegraph London 6 December 2011 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Pooja Misrra to re enter Bigg Boss 5 ZeeNews india com 7 December 2011 Retrieved 16 May 2022 Andrew Symonds Joins Big Bash League Commentary Team The Daily Telegraph 18 October 2016 Read Malcolm Conn Cloe 14 May 2022 Cricket world mourns as Andrew Symonds dies in car crash The Age Retrieved 15 May 2022 Andrew Symonds Dies in Car Crash in Queensland LatestLY 15 May 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Polychronis Jacob 16 May 2022 BREAKING Aussie cricket legend Andrew Symonds dies in car crash aged 46 Fox Sports Retrieved 16 May 2022 A force of nature How county cricket remembers Andrew Symonds and that T20 knock ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 16 May 2022 Chowdhury Sabyasachi 15 May 2022 Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka Cricketers play tribute to Andrew Symonds with one minute silence before Chattogram Test India Today Retrieved 16 May 2022 Rods out for Roy as tributes continue to flow for Symonds ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 17 May 2022 Agencies 16 May 2022 Fishing Rods for Roy campaign launched for Andrew Symonds as tributes keep flowing The Guardian Retrieved 16 May 2022 Camp Quality 2007 Laugh Even Louder Gosford New South Wales Scholastic Australia Pty Limited p 22 ISBN 978 1 74169 022 4 External links EditAndrew Symonds at ESPNcricinfo 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