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Simon Katich

Australian cricketer

Simon Katich

Australian cricketer

FieldValue
nameSimon Katich
imageKatich2.jpg
countryAustralia
fullnameSimon Matthew Katich
nicknameKat
birth_date
birth_placeMiddle Swan, Western Australia, Australia
height182 cm
battingLeft-handed
bowlingSlow left-arm wrist spin
roleBatsman
internationaltrue
internationalspan2001–2010
testdebutdate16 August
testdebutyear2001
testdebutagainstEngland
testcap384
lasttestdate3 December
lasttestyear2010
lasttestagainstEngland
odidebutdate21 January
odidebutyear2001
odidebutagainstZimbabwe
odicap143
lastodidate24 September
lastodiyear2006
lastodiagainstWest Indies
T20Idebutdate17 February
T20Idebutyear2005
T20IdebutagainstNew Zealand
T20Icap6
lastT20Idate24 February
lastT20Iyear2006
lastT20IagainstSouth Africa
club1Western Australia
year11995/96–2001/02, 2013/14
club2Durham
year22000
club3Yorkshire
year32002
club4New South Wales
year42002/03–2011/12
club5Hampshire
year52003–2005, 2012
club6Derbyshire
year62007
club7Kings XI Punjab
year72008–2009
club8Lancashire
year82010–2011, 2013
club9Perth Scorchers
year92011/12–2013/14
club10Duronto Rajshahi
year102012/13
columns4
column1Test
matches156
runs14,188
bat avg145.03
100s/50s110/25
top score1157
deliveries11,039
wickets121
bowl avg130.23
fivefor11
tenfor10
best bowling16/65
catches/stumpings139/–
column2ODI
matches245
runs21,324
bat avg235.78
100s/50s21/9
top score2107*
deliveries2
wickets2
bowl avg2
fivefor2
tenfor2
best bowling2
catches/stumpings213/–
column3FC
matches3266
runs320,926
bat avg352.84
100s/50s358/111
top score3306
deliveries36,429
wickets3107
bowl avg335.30
fivefor33
tenfor30
best bowling37/130
catches/stumpings3227/–
column4LA
matches4253
runs47,550
bat avg435.78
100s/50s47/60
top score4136*
deliveries4938
wickets425
bowl avg434.72
fivefor40
tenfor40
best bowling43/21
catches/stumpings4115/–
date12 May
year2019
sourcehttps://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/6/6243/6243.html CricketArchive

| 100s/50s1 = 10/25 | catches/stumpings1 = 39/– | 100s/50s2 = 1/9 | catches/stumpings2 = 13/– | 100s/50s3 = 58/111 | catches/stumpings3 = 227/– | 100s/50s4 = 7/60 | catches/stumpings4 = 115/–

Simon Matthew Katich (born 21 August 1975) is an Australian cricket coach and former cricketer. He captained New South Wales and also, until the end of the 2007 season, Derbyshire County Cricket Club. Katich also played for Lancashire, represented his birth state of Western Australia and played in the Indian Premier League for Kings XI Punjab. Katich was also a member of the Australian team that won the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy.

He played primarily as a left-handed opening batsman and part-time left-arm unorthodox spin bowler. He played 56 Test matches for Australia from 2001 to 2011. On 12 June 2012 Katich retired from first-class cricket in Australia, but returned to play for Western Australia in 2013. In August 2019, Katich was appointed as the head coach for Royal Challengers Bangalore, and was present at the 2020 IPL Player Auction in Kolkata in December 2019.

He is also a commentator for SEN Radio and the Seven Network.

Early career

Katich was an AIS Australian Cricket Academy scholarship holder in 1996. and made his debut for the Western Australia state team in the 1996–97 season. The following season he was a central figure in Western Australia's Sheffield Shield success, scoring an impressive 1,039 first-class runs for the season.

International selection

He was selected to tour Sri Lanka with the national team the following season but suffered greatly from illness, including a debilitating bout of chicken pox.

He recovered to contribute further for his state, highlighted in the 2000–01 domestic season where he helped himself to 1,282 first-class runs. He later switched from Western Australia to New South Wales where he currently lives.

Katich made his Test debut in the fourth Test of the 2001 Ashes tour of England. He failed to capitalize making only 15 and was not out 0. In only his second match he bowled for the first time in Test cricket, and in the second innings took 6/65 against Zimbabwe at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

Following Steve Waugh's retirement in 2004, Katich established himself in the Australian team. His best Test batting performance came against India at Sydney in January 2004, when his 125 and unbeaten 77 saved Australia the Test, series, and a decade long unbeaten record at home. Despite this, he was dropped in favour of Andrew Symonds for Australia's next Test, in Sri Lanka, when Symonds was dropped after the first two Tests, Katich was picked for the third Test and made a patient 86. He regained his place and enjoyed a good Test series in India in October 2004, where he made good scores of 81 and 99. His good form continued with 118 against New Zealand in March 2005.

However, he had a poor Ashes tour of England later that year batting at number 6, and after scoring only two runs in the following two Tests (against the ICC World XI and the West Indies), he was dropped from the Test side. Katich was fined for showing dissent during the fourth Test to umpire Aleem Dar along with captain Ricky Ponting.

Since the commencement of the 2005–06 season, Katich attempted to cement his place in the Australian one day cricket side, having lost his Test place. Australia persisted with him throughout the VB Series and in South Africa, as Katich scored runs fairly consistently. However, he struggled in the DLF Cup in September 2006; the next month he lost his place at the top of the order to Shane Watson, who impressed Ponting with some attacking displays against the West Indies and an Indian state team. Katich was not picked in the 15 man squad to play in the World Cup in the West Indies. Katich played a total of 45 One day Internationals.

Selected for the 2008 Australian team's tour of India he found himself opening the batting with the injury to Phil Jaques.

He retained his spot for the home series against New Zealand. In the first Test, at the Gabba, Brisbane, he made 10 in the first innings (in which Australia was all out for 214 on a tough batting deck). However, in the second innings, Katich carried his bat through the innings; the first cricketer to do so at Test level since Mark Taylor in the late 1990s. He made 131 not out, 48.88% of Australia's total of 268, in an innings in which the next highest score was 31 (by Mitchell Johnson batting at no. 10). Katich's batting allowed Australia to post a victory target of 327, which it ultimately defended.

Katich fielding at short leg in a Test match against India in October 2010.

Katich was selected for the 2009 tour to England and he played in all five Ashes Tests, scoring 341 runs in 8 innings at an average of 42.62. Katich opened the batting with Phillip Hughes for the first two Tests at Cardiff and Lord's but Hughes was dropped for the Third Test at Edgbaston due to poor form, so Katich was then partnered by Shane Watson for the final three Tests. This proved successful as Watson and Katich scored more runs at the top of the order than the previous Hughes-Katich combination. Katich scored his eighth Test century in the First Test with 122. This was backed up later in the series with a half century. Katich scored these runs at a strike rate of 53.87. He also took six catches in the field and effected two direct hit run outs in the Fifth Test.

2007–08 domestic season

The 2007–08 domestic season could only be described as a triumph for Katich. He scored 1,506 runs to break Michael Bevan's all-time Pura Cup/Sheffield Shield record for runs in a season as NSW romped home undefeated to claim their 45th title. Aside from being given the honour of captaining NSW in the Pura Cup final against Victoria, Katich also contributed scores of 86 and 92 to lead the match on run aggregate as he had done for the season overall. He was also crowned the Pura Cup player of the year for his 1506 runs at an average of 94.12. The highlight of Katich's season was undoubtedly his 306 against QLD at the SCG, an innings in which the last 200 runs came at better than a run a ball. It was the first time since Sir Donald Bradman that a player had scored 300 at the SCG, and an innings which the Sydney Morning Herald called "superb".This puts a Katich among the pigeons Sydney Morning Herald 29 October 2007 Peter Roebuck later claimed Katich should be the Australian cricket captain after Ricky Ponting came under fire during the January 2008 SCG Test.The skipper for a storm Sydney Morning Herald 12 January 2008 During the coverage of the final, Damien Fleming described Katich as a left-handed V. V. S. Laxman for his dominant bottom hand and willingness to hit through the on-side. Katich's season culminated with his recall to the national side for May tour of the West Indies. He cemented his place in the Test team with scores of 113 and 157 in the second and third Tests respectively.

For his performances in 2010, he was named in the World Test XI by the ICC.

He was also awarded the Men's Test Player of the Year at the Allan Border Medal ceremony by the CA in 2010.

Despite his heroics, Katich, a former team mainstay, blamed Michael Clarke for effectively ending his career once he became captain in revenge for a post-match incident several years earlier which saw Katich grab Clarke by the throat following a row about the singing of Australia's team song in the dressing room.

Coaching career

In October 2015, Katich was appointed as an assistant coach of Indian Premier League side Kolkata Knight Riders. In 2019 he was appointed as head coach for Royal Challengers Bangalore. He was replaced during the 2021 IPL and in December 2021, Katich was named as assistant coach of Sunrisers Hyderabad for IPL 2022 season. On 18 February 2022, he resigned from the assistant coach role of Sunrisers Hyderabad due to differences with the franchise's auction strategy. In September 2022, he was named as the head coach for MI Cape Town in the upcoming SA20 League.{{Cite web|title=MI Cape Town Name Simon Katich as Head Coach; Hashim Amla Appointed Batting Coach

Personal life

Katich is of Croatian descent. His father's parents were born in Croatia and emigrated to Australia in the 1920s, eventually settling in Perth. His father, Vince, was a police detective who helped play a part in the capture of serial killers David and Catherine Birnie.

Katich attended Trinity College in Perth, Western Australia, where there is a cricket pavilion named after him. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Western Australia.He married Georgie Willis in May 2006. They became parents in 2011 when their son was born.

He has no sense of smell, having lost it following a bout of glandular fever early in his career. This has not affected his ability at cooking, as he reached the semi-finals of Celebrity MasterChef Australia in 2009.

Katich formerly held the role of football operations manager of the Greater Western Sydney Giants AFL club.

Katich is Catholic and is quoted as saying, "My faith gives me a focus in how I lead my life and go about my cricket."

Career highlights

Tests

Test debut: vs England, Leeds, 2001

  • Katich's best Test batting score of 157 was made against West Indies, 2008
  • His best Test bowling figures of 6 wickets for 65 runs came against Zimbabwe, Sydney, 2003–04
  • Katich became the first Australian batsman since Mark Taylor in 1998 to carry his bat through a completed Test innings, notching 131 not out at the Gabba in 2008–09 vs New Zealand.
  • Made ten Test match centuries, the first against India at Sydney in 2004. His highest Test match score of 157 runs was made against the West Indies in 2008 at the Kensington Oval.

One-day internationals

ODI Debut: vs Zimbabwe, Melbourne, 2000–01

  • Katich's best ODI batting score of 107* was made against Sri Lanka, the Gabba, on 14 February 2006.

Twenty20

He captained New South Wales to victory in the inaugural Champions League Twenty20 in 2009.

First-class

He scored 306 for New South Wales against Queensland in Sydney, 2007.

References

References

  1. "Katich leaves Derbyshire". ESPNcricinfo.
  2. (12 June 2012). "Simon Katich retires from first-class game".
  3. (15 October 2013). "Katich returns in loss to Victoria, Tigers topples Bulls".
  4. (18 August 2018). "SEN Radio’s cricket commentary team rolls dice with new line-up".
  5. (2002). "Excellence : the Australian Institute of Sport". Australian Sports Commission.
  6. "Simon Katich". ESPNcricinfo.
  7. "Cricket's injustices fire Australian opener Simon Katich".
  8. (30 August 2005). "Skipper and Katich pay hefty price for outbursts". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  9. [https://archive.today/20130114225329/http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,23388815-23212,00.html Katich breaks run-scoring record] FOX Sports News, 17 March 2008
  10. [http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/baggygreen/engine/current/match/298345.html South Wales v Victoria] baggygreen.com.au, Pura Cup Final Scorecard
  11. [http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/baggygreen/content/story/342209.html Katich crowned Pura Cup Player of the Year] baggygreen.com.au, 13 March 2008
  12. "Dhoni leads ICC Test Team of Year". ESPNcricinfo.
  13. "Australian Cricket Awards | Cricket Australia".
  14. (6 May 2020). "'You weak c***s': Sad truth behind dressing room dust-up that rocked Aussie cricket".
  15. "Simon Katich named KKR assistant coach". ESPNcricinfo.
  16. "IPL 2022: Brian Lara, Dale Steyn join Sunrisers' support staff; Tom Moody returns as coach".
  17. "Katich resigns as assistant coach of Sunrisers Hyderabad". ESPNcricinfo.
  18. "Katich".
  19. (30 November 2007). "Katich and Hodge play straight bat". [[The Australian]].
  20. "TC name Simon Katich Pavilion".
  21. (18 November 2007). "Time to deliver". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  22. "Australian Test cricketer Simon Katich visits UWA campus".
  23. Sygall, David. (11 June 2011). "No regrets: Katich takes it easy as fans voice support". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  24. Aldred, Tanya. (19 March 2025). "Off the scent". The Guardian.
  25. "Coaching Staff". Greater Western Sydney Giants.
  26. "Catholicweekly.com.au".
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