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词条 Morné Morkel
释义

  1. Early career

  2. International career

     National recognition   Final years  

  3. Domestic career

     South African domestic career  England   Indian Premier League  

  4. Personal life

  5. References

  6. External links

{{short description|Cricket player of South Africa.}}{{EngvarB|date=May 2015}}{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2015}}{{Infobox cricketer
| name = Morne Morkel
| image = Morne Morkel.jpg
| country = South Africa
| fullname = Morne Morkel
| nickname = Morras, Haydos, Lobster
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1984|10|6}}
| birth_place = Vereeniging, Transvaal, South Africa
| heightft = 6
| heightinch = 5
| batting = Left-handed
| bowling = Right-arm fast
| family = Albie Morkel (brother)
| role = Bowler
| club1 = Easterns
| year1 = 2003/04–
| clubnumber1 = 65
| club2 = Titans
| year2 = 2004/05–
| club3 = Kent
| year3 = 2007
| club4 = Yorkshire
| year4 = 2008
| club5 = Rajasthan Royals
| year5 = 2009–2010
| club6 = Delhi Daredevils
| year6 = 2011–2013
| clubnumber6 = 65
| club7 = Kolkata Knight Riders
| year7 = 2014–2016
| clubnumber7 = 65
| club8 = St Lucia Zouks
| year8 = 2016
| club9 = Surrey
| year9 = 2018–present
| clubnumber9 = 65
| international = true
| internationalspan = 2006–2018
| testdebutdate = 26 December
| testdebutyear = 2006
| testdebutagainst = India
| testcap = 300
| lasttestdate = 30 March
| lasttestyear = 2018
| lasttestagainst = Australia
| odidebutdate = 6 June
| odidebutyear = 2007
| odidebutagainst = Asia XI
| odicap = 89
| odishirt = 65
| lastodidate = 16 February
| lastodiyear = 2018
| lastodiagainst = India
| T20Idebutdate = 11 September
| T20Idebutyear = 2007
| T20Idebutagainst = West Indies
| T20Icap = 28
| lastT20Idate = 15 September
| lastT20Iyear = 2017
| lastT20Iagainst = Pakistan
| T20Ishirt = 65
| columns = 4
| column1 = Test
| matches1 = 86
| runs1 = 944
| bat avg1 = 11.65
| 100s/50s1 = 0/0
| top score1 = 40
| deliveries1 = 16,498
| wickets1 = 309
| bowl avg1 = 27.66
| fivefor1 = 8
| tenfor1 = 0
| best bowling1 = 6/23
| catches/stumpings1 = 25/–
| column2 = ODI
| matches2 = 117
| runs2 = 268
| bat avg2 = 9.24
| 100s/50s2 = 0/0
| top score2 = 32*
| deliveries2 = 5,760
| wickets2 = 188
| bowl avg2 = 25.32
| fivefor2 = 2
| tenfor2 = n/a
| best bowling2 = 5/21
| catches/stumpings2 = 31/–
| column3 = FC
| matches3 = 138
| runs3 = 1,898
| bat avg3 = 13.95
| 100s/50s3 = 0/4
| top score3 = 82*
| deliveries3 = 25,323
| wickets3 = 522
| bowl avg3 = 25.07
| fivefor3 = 20
| tenfor3 = 2
| best bowling3 = 6/23
| catches/stumpings3 = 48/–
| column4 = LA
| matches4 = 150
| runs4 = 374
| bat avg4 = 9.84
| 100s/50s4 = 0/0
| top score4 = 35
| deliveries4 = 7,173
| wickets4 = 225
| bowl avg4 = 26.13
| fivefor4 = 3
| tenfor4 = n/a
| best bowling4 = 5/21
| catches/stumpings4 = 40/–
| date = 27 March
| year = 2019
| source = http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/46538.html Cricinfo
}}

Morne Morkel (born 6 October 1984)[1] is a South African cricketer who played all formats of the game for South Africa and currently plays for Surrey in English domestic cricket. He has played for Rajasthan Royals, Delhi Daredevils and Kolkata Knight Riders in the Indian Premier League. He is a right-arm fast bowler with "genuine pace" according to former South African fast bowler Allan Donald,[2] and a useful lower order left-handed batsman.

Morkel made his Test debut in 2006 and, even though was dropped due to poor form in 2009 (with his elder brother Albie Morkel taking his place) and injury concerns in 2015, he went on to play 86 Tests. In March 2018, he became the fifth bowler for South Africa to take 300 Test wickets. He also played 117 ODIs and 44 T20Is, making his debut in both forms in 2007.

On 26 February 2018, he announced that he would retire from all forms of international cricket at the end of the four-match Test series against Australia.[3] Morkel played his last international game in March 2018 against Australia.[4]

Early career

Aged 19, Morkel began his first-class career with a match for Easterns against the touring West Indian cricket team in South Africa in 2003 and 2004.[5][6] In this match his first class career began by delivering 17 no-balls in a five-over spell costing 54 runs against West Indies' batsmen Chris Gayle, Daren Ganga and Ramnaresh Sarwan.[5] His first batting effort, however, was an unbeaten 44, which included a ninth-wicket stand of 141 with Albie as Easterns posted 313, trailing by 21.[5] He claimed his first top-class wicket by dismissing Ramnaresh Sarwan, caught by Daryll Cullinan for 72.[5]

Morkel played three further matches for Easterns in the 2003–04 season, which was Easterns' last in the SuperSport Series before South African domestic cricket was restructured.[7] He continued to struggle with no-balls, bowling 41 in 71 completed overs. He took five wickets in the season, and Easterns won the SuperSport Series shield, for the teams knocked out of the main tournament.

International career

National recognition

Having taken six wickets in the one-run victory over Eagles in the SuperSport Series as well as scoring century, and also having scored a half-century as the Titans set a target of 178,[8] Morkel was called up to the Rest of South Africa side to face India two weeks later, thus missing the Titans' clash with Lions in the SuperSport Series. Morkel took four wickets, all of them in the first innings when India fell to 69 for five, and despite Alfonso Thomas' haul of seven for 56 in the second innings, it was Morkel who replaced Dale Steyn to make his Test debut three weeks later, on the 2006–07 Boxing Day Test in Durban against India.[9]

He made his ODI debut playing for an Africa XI side again their Asian counterparts and took 3 wickets. In the following game he opened the bowling with his brother Albie and this was the first time in ODI history that two brothers have done so.

Morkel was then selected in the South African squad for the inaugural Twenty20 World Championship in South Africa, and went on to become one of the stars of the tournament, despite many feeling Twenty20 was a format with little scope for bowlers. Morkel bowled with consistent pace and accuracy, finishing with 9 wickets at 13.33 and an economy rate of 6.00, considered excellent in this form of the game.[10] This haul included a matchwinning spell of 4/17 against New Zealand, all wickets being caught behind or bowled, and he was denied his 5th wicket in his final over only due to an incorrect no-ball call when he had clean bowled the batsman.[11] This would have been the first 5 wicket hall ever taken in international Twenty20 cricket. The host nation may have gone on to be eliminated from the tournament, but Morkel's bowling, along with the big hitting of his brother Albie, was unquestionably one of their biggest positives to emerge from the event.

Morkel was subsequently selected for the tour of Pakistan, but unfortunately suffered a broken bone in his foot in the warm up match preceding the first test. The injury wasn't too severe and Morkel picked up five crucial wickets as Pakistan collapsed to 248 all out.

In October 2012, alongside Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander, Morkel was part of a South African pace attack that bowling coach (and former Test cricketer) Allan Donald called the best the country had ever produced.[12]

Final years

In August 2017, he was named in a World XI side to play three Twenty20 International matches against Pakistan in the 2017 Independence Cup in Lahore.[13]

During the third Test of the series which was his last international series, Morkel became the fifth bowler for South Africa to take 300 wickets in Tests.[14] He took two wickets in the last Test match and South Africa eventually won the match by a margin of 492 runs. The series was also won by South Africa, which was the first series win by South Africa against Australia on home soil since the series in 1969–70.

Domestic career

South African domestic career

In the 2004–05 season, Morkel played three more first class matches. Easterns, who had been placed in the second-tier UCB Provincial Cup and replaced by the franchise team Titans from Centurion, did not field Morkel for any of the first four games, but played him in their final game of the season against Border. In that Morkel took his first five-wicket-haul, though Border won by eight wickets after Easterns conceded 383 for nine and 108 for two. He also took nine wickets against the touring Zimbabweans, playing for a Combined XI of Easterns and Northerns, in which rain "rescued" the Zimbabweans from defeat.[15] Morkel earned the call up to the first-tier Titans for the final game of the SuperSport Series season, and took three for 90 on the first day,[16] which he improved to five for 122 before their opponents Western Province Boland declared. The Titans drew the match after following on, and Morkel ended the 2004–05 season with 20 first class wickets at a bowling average of 18.20. His no-ball ratio also improved, with 24 from 128.1 overs.

The 2006–07 season began with the renamed Standard Bank Cup, now known as the MTN Domestic Championship, where Morkel missed the first four games and instead played provincial cup cricket for Easterns. However, after the Titans had lost three successive games, Morkel replaced Pieter de Bruyn in the eleven, and conceded 17 runs from nine overs as the Titans successfully defended 213 in 45 overs against former internationals Murray Goodwin and HD Ackerman of the Warriors. With Morkel, the team won two and lost three games, but still finished last in the league stage and did not qualify for the semi-finals. However, no bowler in the MTN Championship with more than five wickets had a lower bowling average than Morkel's 19.[17]

Morkel went on tour to Pakistan with South Africa Academy in August 2005, taking six wickets in two four-day matches, which did not have first class status. His wickets included four former Pakistani Under-19 players, all them batsmen or allrounders. He also went through without bowling a no-ball, but that problem returned when he played for the Titans in the 20 Club Championship in Leicester, England in September. Morkel bowled two overs, with three no-balls and two wides, cost 41 runs, and the Titans lost by 67 after getting bowled out in 18 overs.

Morkel did not play in any of the first five first class games for the Titans in 2005–06, and also missed the first four Standard Bank Cup one-day games. However, after taking one for 24 from seven overs on one-day debut, where the team won by six wickets, he was retained for the remaining six games. He was responsible for one of ten four-wicket-hauls in the Standard Bank Cup that season, taking four for 41 as the Titans bowled out Cape Cobras for 189 to win by 19 runs and secured a top-two finish in the league stage. He took nine wickets at an average of 18.22 overall, but was dropped for Ethy Mbhalati in the semi-final, which the Titans won by ten wickets. He was then named in the initial eleven for the final, but he was subbed off for his brother Albie when the Titans were at 86 for six; the Titans lost by two wickets after Albie took three for 13. He was then given all six games for the Titans in Pro20, taking four wickets with an economy rate of 7.63 – largely increased by 60 runs in six overs in his last two matches, the last of which, the semi-final, had been shortened to a 7-over affair. He also played two first class matches in the SuperSport Series, contributing six wickets to the Titans' two victories, but was nevertheless dropped for the final three games and the final.

England

Morkel has played in England for Kent County Cricket Club and began the 2008 season deputising for Rana Naved at Yorkshire. Rumours that he had been part of the second round of auctioning for the Indian Premier League, and signed a $60,000 contract with Rajasthan Royals, initially put Morkel's move to Yorkshire into doubt. However, Yorkshire were assured that he had not signed a contract to play in the IPL.[18]

On his Yorkshire debut against Nottinghamshire, Morkel picked up a hamstring injury which meant his time with Yorkshire was cut short.[19] He played in only one County Championship game for Yorkshire.[1]

Following his retirement from international cricket, Morkel signed a two-year contract with Surrey as Kolpak registered player.[20]

Indian Premier League

Morne Morkel played for Rajasthan Royals in the first three seasons of the Indian Premier League. In the edition of the league Morkel took 25 wickets in 16 matches and collected the Purple Cap for the best wicket-taking bowler playing for Delhi Daredevils. He last played for Kolkata Knight Riders in the 2016 Indian Premier League.

Personal life

Morkel hails from an Afrikaner family and is the youngest of three children of Albert and Mariana Morkel.

He proposed to partner Roz Kelly, an Australian sports journalist,[21] in October 2013, and the couple got married in December 2014.[22] They have a son, Arias Flynn(born 2015).[23]

References

1. ^{{cite book|url=|title=The Yorkshire County Cricket Club: 2011 Yearbook|last=Warner|first=David|publisher=Great Northern Books|year=2011|isbn=978-1-905080-85-4|edition=113th|location=Ilkley, Yorkshire|page=374}}
2. ^Speed trial, by Telford Vice, Cricinfo, retrieved 27 December 2004
3. ^{{Cite web|url=http://cricket.co.za/news/23749/Morkel-to-retire-from-international-cricket-after-Australia-series|title=Morkel to retire from international cricket after Australia series|website=cricket.co.za|access-date=2018-02-26}}
4. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/southafrica/content/story/1138001.html|title=Morkel to retire from international cricket after Australia series|work=ESPN Cricinfo|accessdate=26 February 2017}}
5. ^{{cite web |title=West Indies tour of South Africa at Benoni, Jan 9-12 2004 {{!}} Match Summary {{!}} ESPNCricinfo |url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/series/15114/scorecard/137467/easterns-xi-vs-west-indies-west-indies-tour-of-south-africa-2003-04 |website=ESPNcricinfo |accessdate=14 September 2018 |language=en}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/446620.html|title=Morne makes his mark|publisher= ESPN Cricinfo|accessdate=5 June 2018}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://pcboard.com.pk/Players/62/62310/SuperSport_Series_Matches.html|title=SuperSport Series Matches played by Morné Morkel (26)|publisher=Pakistan Cricket|accessdate=5 June 2018}}
8. ^Bowlers lead Titans to thrilling one-run victory, by Sam Collins, Cricinfo, retrieved 27 December 2006
9. ^Filtered commentary – 2nd Test: South Africa v India at Durban, Dec 26–30, 2006, from Cricinfo, retrieved 27 December 2006
10. ^Records – ICC World Twenty20, 2007–08 – Most wickets, from Cricinfo, retrieved 9 October 2007
11. ^20th Match, Group E South Africa v New Zealand at Durban, Sep 19, 2007, from Cricinfo, retrieved 9 October 2007
12. ^{{cite news| url= http://www.3news.co.nz/Donald-rates-Proteas-pace-lineup-best-ever/tabid/415/articleID/274808/Default.aspx| work=3 News NZ | title= Donald rates Proteas pace lineup best ever| date=31 October 2012}}
13. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/pakistan/content/story/1117616.html |title=Faf du Plessis named captain of World XI to travel to Pakistan |accessdate=24 August 2017 |work=ESPN Cricinfo}}
14. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.sport24.co.za/Cricket/Proteas/morkel-joins-300-club-at-newlands-20180323 |title=Morkel joins '300 club' at Newlands |work=Sport24 |accessdate=23 March 2018}}
15. ^Rain rescues the Zimbabweans, from Cricinfo, 21 February 2005
16. ^Jacobs puts Eagles in control, from Cricinfo, 11 March 2005
17. ^[https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Seasons/RSA/2005-06_RSA_SuperSport_Series_2005-06.html Bowling in MTN Domestic Championship 2006/07 (Ordered by Average)], from CricketArchive, retrieved 27 December 2006
18. ^Club Statement 13.03.08 – Morné Morkel {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080326175606/http://www.yorkshireccc.com/archive/club_statement_morne_morkel/index.html|date=26 March 2008}} YorkshireCCC.com 13 March 2008
19. ^Morkel forced to return home with hamstring injury, from Cricinfo, retrieved 12 May 2008
20. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/23100964/surrey-confirm-morkel-capture|title=Surrey confirm Morkel capture|work=ESPNcricinfo|access-date=2018-04-10}}
21. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.thesouthafrican.com/roz-kelly-morne-morkel-wife/amp/ |title=Who is Roz Kelly?}}
22. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.instagram.com/p/wjgoPdAk-o/|title=morne_morkel on Instagram}}
23. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.instagram.com/p/7cKtjCryG4/|title=roz_kelly on Instagram}}

External links

{{commons category|Morne Morkel}}
  • {{cricinfo|id=46538}}
  • Morne Morkel's profile page on Wisden
{{Navboxes colour
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|bg= #006A4E
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|bordercolor=#FCCB12
|list1={{South Africa Squad 2011 Cricket World Cup}}{{South Africa Squad 2015 Cricket World Cup}}
}}{{Surrey County Cricket Club squad}}{{Titans cricket team}}{{Bowlers who have taken 300 or more wickets in Test cricket}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Morkel, Morne}}

21 : 1984 births|Living people|People from Vereeniging|Afrikaner people|White South African people|ACA African XI One Day International cricketers|Easterns cricketers|Kent cricketers|South Africa Test cricketers|South Africa One Day International cricketers|South Africa Twenty20 International cricketers|Titans cricketers|Yorkshire cricketers|Rajasthan Royals cricketers|Delhi Capitals cricketers|University of Pretoria cricketers|Cricketers at the 2011 Cricket World Cup|Cricketers at the 2015 Cricket World Cup|Kolkata Knight Riders cricketers|St Lucia Zouks cricketers|World XI Twenty20 International cricketers

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