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Michael Slater

Australian cricketer


Summary

Australian cricketer

FieldValue
nameMichael Slater
imageMichael Slater.jpg
captionSlater in 2008
countryAustralia
fullnameMichael Jonathon Slater
birth_date
birth_placeWagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia
nicknameSlats
height173 cm
battingRight-handed
bowlingRight arm medium
internationaltrue
testdebutdate3 June
testdebutyear1993
testdebutagainstEngland
testcap357
lasttestdate20 August
lasttestyear2001
lasttestagainstEngland
odidebutdate9 December
odidebutyear1993
odidebutagainstSouth Africa
odicap114
lastodidate24 May
lastodiyear1997
lastodiagainstEngland
club1New South Wales
year11991/92–2003/04
club2Derbyshire
year21998–1999
columns4
column1Test
matches174
runs15,312
bat avg142.83
100s/50s114/21
top score1219
deliveries125
wickets11
bowl avg110.00
fivefor10
tenfor10
best bowling11/4
catches/stumpings133/–
column2ODI
matches242
runs2987
bat avg224.07
100s/50s20/9
top score273
deliveries212
wickets20
bowl avg2
fivefor2
tenfor2
best bowling2
catches/stumpings29/–
column3FC
matches3216
runs314,912
bat avg340.85
100s/50s336/69
top score3221
deliveries3133
wickets33
bowl avg337.66
fivefor30
tenfor30
best bowling31/4
catches/stumpings3116/–
column4LA
matches4135
runs43,395
bat avg426.52
100s/50s42/27
top score4115
deliveries412
wickets40
bowl avg4
fivefor4
tenfor4
best bowling4
catches/stumpings431/–
medaltemplates
date7 December
year2009
sourcehttp://content-aus.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/7629.html Cricinfo

| 100s/50s1 = 14/21 | catches/stumpings1 = 33/– | 100s/50s2 = 0/9 | catches/stumpings2 = 9/– | 100s/50s3 = 36/69 | catches/stumpings3 = 116/– | 100s/50s4 = 2/27 | catches/stumpings4 = 31/–

Michael Jonathon Slater (born 21 February 1970) is an Australian former professional cricketer and former television presenter. He played in 74 Test matches and 42 One Day Internationals for the Australia national cricket team. He was a part of the Australian squad which finished as runners-up at the 1996 Cricket World Cup.

Early life

Family life and education

Slater was born in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, and lived in both Wagga and Junee for his childhood. His parents, Peter and Carole and two older siblings had emigrated from the north-eastern coast of England in 1966 to Launceston, Tasmania, Australia where his father taught high school agriculture and science.

After three years, the family moved and his father became a teacher in agriculture at Wagga Wagga Agricultural College. Slater's mother left the family in 1983, when he was just 12 years old. He later wrote about tough personal times that followed, claiming that his education standards slipped after his mother left the family and that sport became the "only thing [he] could focus on properly". However, it was later revealed that Slater suffers from manic depression (bipolar disorder). He has claimed that school bullying accentuated his academic difficulties in Years 9 and 10 and claimed that he once ran home after it was suggested that some bullies "were planning to get [him] after school".

Early cricket career

Slater wrote: "My family was always involved in sport, so from an early age it just seemed natural for me to play any game that was on offer." When aged 11, Slater was selected in the New South Wales Primary School Sports Association cricket and hockey teams. He also made the state under-12 hockey team in 1981 and went on to be selected in the Under-13, -15 and -17 hockey teams. Slater wrote that, in his early teenage years, he turned towards cricket.

Slater joined an inner-western Sydney Under-16 side over a Christmas holiday to further develop his cricketing career. After topping the batting averages in the Under-17s, in the following season, he was chosen as captain of the New South Wales Under—16 team. The carnival was not a success for him but his team performed "well". Slater claimed that he hurt his Achilles tendon in an accident at school when he was seventeen and played a couple of hockey games following the accident but limped off the field and subsequently had surgery in the lead-up to the Under-17 national cricket carnival. Slater claimed he was informed that, because of his injury, his "dream of playing cricket for Australia was over". However, after an operation, he returned to cricket and was selected in the Under-19 state team for the national championships in Brisbane. He attended the Australian Institute of Sport Australian Cricket Academy in 1989.

After an injury to the captain, Slater captained the state under-19 team but he and his team under-performed. The following year, he was vice-captain for the Under-19 carnival in Canberra and scored a century in the opening match. In a victorious final against Victoria, Slater scored another century, becoming one of the leading run-scorers in the series.

Cricket career

A specialist right-handed batter as well as a very occasional right-arm medium-pace bowler, Slater represented the New South Wales Blues in Australian domestic cricket and played English county cricket with Derbyshire. His Australian club was the University of NSW Cricket Club, for whom he scored 3873 runs in 77 first-grade innings, with a high score of 213 not out. Slater went on to Test cricket, opening the batting with mixed success, scoring 5,312 runs and 14 centuries at an average of 42. He was generally unsuccessful in One-Day International games, averaging a lowly 24.07 and, after a string of failures, was eventually dropped from the national limited-overs side for good in 1997.

Throughout his career, Slater was susceptible to the "nervous nineties": of the 23 times he reached a score of 90 in a Test innings, he was dismissed nine times before reaching 100.

Slater played for New South Wales in the 1991/92 Sheffield Shield season. He made quick progress to the Australian side, being selected for the Ashes tour of England in 1993, when he was 23 years of age, narrowly beating Queenslander Matthew Hayden to the opening berth alongside vice/captain Mark Taylor, who also grew up in Wagga Wagga. In his debut match, he scored a half-century, before compiling his maiden century in the following Test match at Lord's, famously kissing the Australian coat of arms on his helmet to celebrate achieving the milestone. He continued his good form into the subsequent home series against New Zealand in 1993–94, netting 305 runs at an average of 76.25. In the 1994–95 return Ashes series in Australia, Slater was the leading run-scorer in the series with 623. The following season saw him notch his first double-century, against Sri Lanka at the WACA in Perth.

Slater's match-winning 123 against England at Sydney in the 1998–99 Ashes series comprised 66.84 per cent of his team's entire total. This remains the greatest proportion since Charles Bannerman made 165 not out (67.34 per cent) in the very first Test innings of all, in 1877.

Slater was dropped from the Australian Test side in late 1996 after some poor form. It took him two years to get back into the national team and things went well for a couple of years, although this period coincided with a split from his first wife and accusations of drug-taking by the Australian Cricket Board (ACB). His Ashes tour to England in 2001 was his last international series. He started off with a quick-fire 77 in his first innings of the series, including four boundaries off the first four balls he faced from Darren Gough. However, as the series went on, Slater’s form started to decline dramatically, ultimately leading to Justin Langer replacing him as opening batter. It was subsequently reported that Slater felt animosity towards Langer over this decision and became reclusive. It was later revealed that he suffered from bipolar disorder. Unable to rebuild a career in limited-overs cricket, his prolonged form slump forced him out of professional cricket after 74 Test matches.

Media work

Television

After commentating for Channel 4 in the United Kingdom during the 2005 Ashes series, Slater joined Nine's Wide World of Sports cricket commentary team in January 2006. He later appeared as a reporter on Channel Nine's health and lifestyle programme, What's Good For You?. He also appeared as a contestant on the Australian version of Torvill and Dean's Dancing on Icein 2006, becoming the fourth contestant to be eliminated.

In 2009 to 2010, he was the sports presenter for the Nine Network's Weekend Today alongside co-hosts Cameron Williams and Leila McKinnon. In 2009, he also hosted Australia's Greatest Athlete (alongside Andrew Voss), which aired on Saturday afternoons in January and February. He was co-host of The Footy Show a rugby league-based television variety programme, alongside Paul Vautin, Darryl Brohman, Erin Molan and Beau Ryan and host of The Cricket Show, both on Channel 9. In 2012, Slater called the diving at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, England for Channel 9 and Fox Sports alongside dual Australian Olympic diver Michael Murphy.

In 2018, he joined the Seven Network to commentate its coverage of the Test Cricket and Big Bash League. In 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Slater travelled to India to commentate on Indian Premier League cricket during a continued uncontrolled outbreak of the virus in India. He attracted a backlash for his criticisms of the Australian COVID-19 travel restrictions and claims that the Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, had "blood on his hands" over the handling of the pandemic. Slater was subsequently axed by the Seven Network, which chose to not renew his contract, citing "budget restraints"

Radio

Slater was a regular contributor to the Triple M Sydney radio sports panel program Dead Set Legends and was a replacement co-host for Richard Freedman on Sky Sports Radio's Big Sports Breakfast with Terry Kennedy until 2017

Notes

References

References

  1. Slater and Apter (2005), p. ix.
  2. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 9–10.
  3. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 22–23.
  4. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 10.
  5. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 18.
  6. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 26–29.
  7. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 30.
  8. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 31.
  9. Slater and Apter (2005), p. 34–35.
  10. [[Andy Zaltzman. Zaltzman, Andy]]. "[http://www.espncricinfo.com/blogs/content/story/633133.html The irony of being dismissed in the 90s in the '90s]." ''[[Cricinfo]]'', 30 April 2013.
  11. [Richard Bright]. "[http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/80512.html England frustrated by Slater's good luck]." ''[[Cricinfo]]'', 5 January 1999.
  12. (21 February 2016). "Michael Slater: 15 facts about former explosive Australian batsman".
  13. (21 February 2013). "Michael Slater: A destructive batsman and a self-destructive cricketer".
  14. (2021-10-20). "Former Test cricketer Michael Slater arrested over alleged domestic violence incident". ABC News.
  15. (2021-12-15). "Former cricketer Michael Slater arrested for allegedly breaching an AVO". ABC News.
  16. (2022-04-27). "Cricketer Michael Slater taken to hospital".
  17. (2022-05-27). "Former cricketer charged with assault".
  18. [https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-nsw/michael-slater-arrested-after-cops-were-called-to-his-home-over-concerns-for-his-welfare/news-story/4fc655d59d33f3416ce87bb985e5ea90 Slater was arrested after calling cops for help] dailytelegraph.com.au (subscription required)
  19. (2022-08-31). "Michael Slater hit with new assault charges".
  20. (2022-09-27). "Former cricketer Michael Slater rushed to hospital hours after arrest".
  21. (9 November 2022). "'Controlling': Former cricketer Michael Slater convicted of domestic violence offences". ABC News.
  22. (3 April 2023). "Cricket star Michael Slater charged with assaulting police". The Age.
  23. (21 November 2023). "Michael Slater sentenced over Noosa Heads police altercation". ABC News.
  24. (15 April 2024). "Michael Slater hit with 19 charges over alleged domestic violence".
  25. (10 December 2024). "Fresh charges levelled against ex-cricket star Michael Jonathon Slater".
  26. (22 April 2025). "Australian ex Cricketer Michael Slater Sentenced".
  27. (1 December 2025). "Michael Slater has Cricket NSW life membership revoked". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  28. Jangir, Govind. (2021-10-04). "The bubble-hopping life of a multi-format India cricketer {{!}} Cricket".
  29. "Heraldsun.com.au {{!}} Subscribe to the Herald Sun for exclusive stories".
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