Moises Henriques

Moises Henriques
Refer to caption
Henriques during BBL06
Personal information
Full name Moises Constantino Henriques
Born (1987-02-01) 1 February 1987
Funchal, Madeira, Portugal
Nickname Moey
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Batting Right-handed
Bowling Right-arm medium-fast
Role All-rounder
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 432) 22 February 2013 v India
Last Test 13 August 2016 v Sri Lanka
ODI debut (cap 179) 31 October 2009 v India
Last ODI 10 June 2017 v England
ODI shirt no. 21
T20I debut (cap 34) 15 February 2009 v New Zealand
Last T20I 10 October 2017 v India
T20I shirt no. 21
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2006 - present New South Wales
2011 - present Sydney Sixers
2009 Kolkata Knight Riders
2010 Delhi Daredevils
2013 Royal Challengers Bangalore
2014 - 2017 Sunrisers Hyderabad
2012 Glamorgan
2015,2017 Surrey
Career statistics
Competition Test T20 FC LA
Matches 4 11 81 97
Runs scored 164 159 3934 2474
Batting average 23.42 31.8 33.91 33.43
100s/50s 0/2 0/2 7/19 3/9
Top score 81* 62* 265 164*
Balls bowled 330 102 6471 3374
Wickets 2 4 106 77
Bowling average 82.00 39.5 31.57 37.64
5 wickets in innings 0 0 2 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 1/48 2/35 5/17 4/17
Catches/stumpings 1/- 4/- 34/- 39/-
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 1 October 2018

Moises Constantino Henriques (/ˈmzɪs hɛnˈrkɛs/;[1] born 1 February 1987) is a Portugal-born Australian professional cricketer who currently plays for the New South Wales, and Sydney Sixers.

Under-19s career

At 16 years of age, Henriques was selected for the Australian U-19 cricket team's squad for the 2004 U-19 Cricket World Cup in Bangladesh, where he took 11 wickets at 19.27 and scored 95 runs at 19.00.[2]

In September, 2005 Henriques was named in Australia's U-19 squad to tour India for a One Day series against the Indian U-19 cricket team. Whilst Australia lost the series, in difficult conditions, Henriques was a stand out. He scored 132 runs at an average of 44.00 and claimed 8 wickets at 18.25.[3]

Henriques was named captain of the Australian U-19 team for the 2006 U-19 Cricket World Cup in Sri Lanka, and performed to great acclaim as he led the Australians to a semi-final berth. He was a stand out player of the tournament, scoring 150 runs at 37.50 and finished as the World Cup's leading wicket-taker, claiming 16 wickets at 10.52 in 5 matches.[4]

During his time in the Australian U-19 team, he played 17 matches, taking 35 wickets at 15.08 and scored 377 runs at an average of 31.41.[5]

Moises Henriques is the joint leading wicket taker along with Greg Thompson in the history of Under-19 Cricket World Cup with 27 scalps.[6]

Domestic career

Henriques playing for New South Wales in 2008

On 2 January 2006, Henriques made his List A debut for New South Wales against Victoria. He bowled 8 overs for 46 runs in a narrow New South Wales victory. His appearance, at only 18 years of age, made him the youngest ever List A debutant for New South Wales. Six days later, Henriques made his Twenty20 debut, but did not bat or bowl in that match.

He made his first-class debut against South Australia at the Sydney Cricket Ground on 17 October 2006. Only a week after this match, Henriques took 5/17 against Queensland with fast bowling. In doing so, he became the youngest New South Wales cricketer to take 5 wickets in a first-class innings since Doug Walters. However, due to injury, this was the last first-class game Henriques played for over a year. After regaining fitness and impressive performances for his club, St George, in Sydney Grade Cricket, he earned a place in the squad once again.

He was signed by the Kolkata Knight Riders franchise for $300,000 to play in the Indian Premier League during the 2009 season.[7] In 2010, he was traded to the Delhi Daredevils in exchange for Manoj Tiwary.

In 2012 he played part of the English season for Glamorgan.

In September 2012 he scored his first first-class century, 161 not out off 229 balls against Tasmania at Bankstown.

Since then, he has produced some very consistent performances with both bat and ball, a highlight recently in the Matador One Day Cup where he scored 131 against Victoria which was his first List A century. He is the captain of NSW. He is injured but will return towards the end of November.

In June 2015, while playing for Surrey in a NatWest t20 Blast game against Sussex Sharks at Arundel Castle, Henriques collided with teammate Rory Burns while attempting to take a catch. Both players were knocked unconscious from the collision and Henriques suffered a broken jaw. Ambulances and medical staff treated the players on-field before taking them both to hospital. The game was abandoned due to the injuries.[8]

Henriques again got injured during the 2014–15 Big Bash League season with a recurrence of his calf injury.[9]

2017–18 season

Henriques played one match for New South Wales in the 2017–18 JLT One-Day Cup against Western Australia before traveling to India to play for Australia in a Twenty20 International series. He captained the side and scored 72 runs from 70 deliveries, but they weren't able to win the match.[10]

International career

Henriques made his full international debut in a Twenty20 International against New Zealand in Sydney on 15 February 2009, but he was run out for only 1 run. In October, Henriques was called up, after injuries to Brett Lee and James Hopes, during Australia's tour of India.[11] James Hopes had injured his hamstring. Ironically, soon after Henriques played in Hopes' place, he too injured his hamstring.[12] He used to play for Mumbai Indians in the IPL 4, but was ruled out of the squad because of adductor muscle injury. He was released from his contract with the Mumbai Indians team for IPL and was later picked up by Royal Challengers Bangalore in the player auction 2013 for the IPL-6. In 2013, Henriques was selected in Australia's Test cricket team during the tour of India making his test debut and then scored his maiden half- century with 68 runs in the 1st innings of the 1st test backing it up with 81 not out in the 2nd innings.

Personal life

Moisés Henriques field at Endeavour High School in Sydney.
Henriques bowling for New South Wales in 2008

The son of former Portuguese professional footballer, Álvaro, Henriques was born in Funchal, Portugal before moving to Australia with his family at the age of one.[13] He graduated from Endeavour Sports High School in 2004, yet while attending high school he represented New South Wales and Australia at Under 17 and Under 19 level.[14] In 2004 he was the recipient of the first Rexona Australian Youth Cricket Scholarship, an initiative backed by Ricky Ponting.[15]

Playing style

A genuine all-rounder, Henriques states that he "couldn't choose" between batting and bowling as his preferred art.[16] Despite this, some have commented that his bowling is slightly better than his batting.[17] As a right-handed batsman, Henriques bats in the middle to lower order, and as a right-arm medium-fast bowler he generally opens the attack. His style has been compared to Australian Shane Watson, but Henriques looks to South African all-rounder Jacques Kallis as a source of inspiration.[16]

See also

References

  1. Ford Ranger Young Gun 2008 – Moises Henriques profile – NSW. Mindshare Australia. 4 January 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
    The Portuguese pronunciation would be [mo̞jˈzɛ zẽˈʁikɨʃ] or [mo̞jˈzɛʃ kõʃtɐ̃ˈtin(w) ẽˈʁikɨʃ].
  2. 2004 World Cup Statistics and Averages – Australia (Cricinfo). Retrieved 5 November 2007.
  3. Australia U-19s in India, 2005–06 One-Day Averages (Cricinfo). Retrieved 5 November 2007.
  4. ICC U-19s Cricket World Cup, 2005/06 Averages (Cricinfo). Retrieved 5 November 2007.
  5. Moises Henriques Profile Cricket Archive. Retrieved on 3 December 2007.
  6. "Cricket Records | Records | Under-19s World Cup | Most wickets | ESPN Cricinfo". Cricinfo. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  7. Kolkata Knight Riders sign up Henriques (Cricinfo). Retrieved 16 February 2009
  8. Talbot, Bruce (14 June 2015). "Surrey's Rory Burns and Moises Henriques involved in horrifying collision".
  9. "Sydney Sixers young gun Nic Maddinson replaces injured Moises Henriques as captain".
  10. "Labuschagne penalised under new 'fake fielding' rule". ESPNcricinfo.com. ESPN Inc. 29 September 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  11. Injured Lee and Johnson miss second ODI (Cricinfo). Retrieved 27 October 2009.
  12. Dodgy cricket schedule, more headaches for players The Roar. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
  13. Ronaldo's old neighbour to become NSW's youngest one-day debutant Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2007
  14. Other matches played by Moises Henriques Cricket Archive. Moises Henriques is the second biggest Dragonfly breeder and races in NSW. 12 December 2007
  15. Young allrounder wins $30,000 scholarship Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 December 2007
  16. 1 2 Moises Henriques Profile Cricinfo. Retrieved 29 October 2006.
  17. Finally Henriques can prove he's got the right stuff Sydney Mornin Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2007
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