Ben Laughlin (cricketer) explained

Ben Laughlin
Fullname:Ben Laughlin
Birth Date:3 October 1982
Birth Place:Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
Batting:Right-handed
Bowling:Right-arm fast-medium
Role:Bowler
International:true
Country:Australia
Internationalspan:2009–2013
Odidebutdate:3 April
Odidebutyear:2009
Odidebutagainst:South Africa
Odicap:173
Lastodidate:3 May
Lastodiyear:2009
Lastodiagainst:Pakistan
T20idebutdate:29 March
T20idebutyear:2009
T20idebutagainst:South Africa
T20icap:37
Lastt20idate:28 January
Lastt20iyear:2013
Lastt20iagainst:Sri Lanka
Club1:Queensland
Club2:Tasmania
Club3:Hobart Hurricanes
Club4:Nagenahira Nagas
Year4:2012
Club5:Canterbury
Club6:Chennai Super Kings
Year6:2013
Club7:Northern Districts
Club8:Antigua Hawksbills
Year8:2014
Club9:Adelaide Strikers
Club10:Quetta Gladiators
Year10:2018
Club11:Sunrisers Hyderabad
Year11:2017
Club12:Rajasthan Royals
Year12:2018
Club13:Balkh Legends
Year13:2018
Club14:Guyana Amazon Warriors
Year14:2019
Club15:Brisbane Heat
Year15:2019/20–2020/21
Columns:4
Column1:ODI
Column2:T20I
Column3:LA
Column4:T20
Matches1:5
Matches2:3
Matches3:39
Matches4:164
Runs1:1
Runs2:
Runs3:157
Runs4:172
Bat Avg1:
Bat Avg2:
Bat Avg3:13.08
Bat Avg4:6.37
100S/50S1:0/0
100S/50S2:
100S/50S3:0/0
100S/50S4:0/0
Top Score1:1
Top Score2:
Top Score3:34
Top Score4:22
Deliveries1:224
Deliveries2:71
Deliveries3:2,048
Deliveries4:3,390
Wickets1:4
Wickets2:2
Wickets3:69
Wickets4:191
Bowl Avg1:54.75
Bowl Avg2:59.00
Bowl Avg3:25.86
Bowl Avg4:23.96
Fivefor1:0
Fivefor2:0
Fivefor3:2
Fivefor4:1
Tenfor1:0
Tenfor2:0
Tenfor3:0
Tenfor4:0
Best Bowling1:1/28
Best Bowling2:1/32
Best Bowling3:6/23
Best Bowling4:6/28
Catches/Stumpings1:2/–
Catches/Stumpings2:1/–
Catches/Stumpings3:9/–
Catches/Stumpings4:59/–
Source:http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/315623.html ESPNcricinfo
Date:4 October
Year:2021

Ben Laughlin (born 3 October 1982) is a former Australian cricketer. A right-arm fast-medium bowler, he was primarily a Twenty20 specialist, featuring for a number of teams in the top global leagues. He also represented Australia in white-ball cricket 8 times. Laughlin last featured in professional cricket for the Brisbane Heat of the BBL in 2021.

Laughlin began his career playing grade cricket in Queensland, and following his first-class debut for the side in 2008 he was selected to play for Australia in One Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals, though his time in the national side only lasted 8 matches across 4 years. He emerged as a star of Twenty20 cricket, playing for the Hobart Hurricanes in the Big Bash League (BBL) for three years before moving to Adelaide. He last featured in the BBL in 2021 for the Heat, and as of 2024 is the competition’s 9th highest wicket taker of all time. He also played for the Northern Districts Knights in New Zealand and has played in the Indian Premier League.

Cricket career

Before first-class debut

Laughlin's father, Trevor Laughlin, played Test cricket for Australia in 1978.[1] Though his father had played District Cricket in Victoria, Laughlin played his grade cricket for Wynnum Manly District Cricket Club in Queensland.[2] For three seasons in a row, starting from when he was 19 years old, Laughlin had stress fractures which ruined his opportunities to play cricket. He made his way back into the team by bowling off-spin rather than pace, though he played as a specialist batsman at the time.[3] His form as a pace bowler improved towards the end of the 2000s, and in 2006 he was awarded the Peter Burge Medal for the best grade cricketer in Queensland over the 2005–06 season,[2] and in the three seasons leading up to his first-class debut in 2008 he took a total of 126 wickets, including 50 wickets in the 2006–07 season alone.[4]

Queensland (2008–2011)

Laughlin made his first-class debut for Queensland's state team at the end of the 2007–08 Pura Cup season against Victoria and took the wicket of Victorian captain Cameron White.[4] [5] He was then given his first contract with Queensland for the 2008–09 season and started to play List A cricket for them in the 2008–09 Ford Ranger One Day Cup season.[4] Despite it being his first season, he was very impressive and played in all eleven games, taking 23 wickets.[4] He recorded a particularly exceptional bowling performance in a match against New South Wales in October 2008. In only his second List A match,[6] he claimed 6/23, the best List A bowling figures for Queensland in two decades and the third-best of all time,[7] not only for Queensland but for any Australian domestic team.[4] He also played in three matches in the 2008–09 Sheffield Shield season, but he was far less successful in the longer form of the game.[4]

Despite having started the season only hopeful of playing a few matches for Queensland, by March Laughlin was called up to the Australia squads for a series of five One Day Internationals and two Twenty20 Internationals against South Africa. Laughlin and fellow fast bowler Brett Geeves were drafted into the squad to replace Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus, who were being rested as a precaution before the 2009 ICC World Twenty20 and The Ashes.[8] He did alright in the matches, finishing with four wickets in the ODIs,[9] but he didn't star in any of them. After this brief stint in the national team he was not included in Australia's squad for the 2009 ICC World Twenty20 and he wasn't given a Cricket Australia contract.[4] His career went downhill quickly, as he suffered from a painful stomach injury and was only able to play six state games in the 2009–10 summer,[4] then in 2011 he was cut from Queensland's contract list altogether.[10]

Tasmania and the Hobart Hurricanes (2011–2014)

When Laughlin was cut from Queensland's contract list he changed state teams to Tasmania,[9] joining them for the 2011–12 Ryobi One-Day Cup. Echoing the start to his career for Queensland, Laughlin took his second six-wicket haul in his second match for Tasmania, also against New South Wales.[11] He also played for Tasmania's team in the new Big Bash League (BBL), the Hobart Hurricanes. Despite being cut from Tasmania's contract list at the end of the season,[12] his form for the Hurricanes was good enough that he was named in Australia's extended 30-man squad for the 2012 ICC World Twenty20.[13]

Though Laughlin was unable to play much cricket for Tasmania, his performances for the Hurricanes were stellar in BBL02. He took 14 wickets for the tournament, the most of any player, and was brought back into the national team for a two-match Twenty20 series against Sri Lanka.[9] He didn't make the most of his opportunity and his performances were sub-par, as he fell short of the international standard and conceded 20 runs off of the final over of one of the matches.[14]

Despite his failures in international cricket, Laughlin continued to perform strongly in domestic Twenty20 competitions in the 2013–14 season. He started to play for New Zealand team the Northern Districts Knights and was a crucial part of the side as they won the HRV Cup.[15] including his third six-wicket haul and his first in a Twenty20 against Wellington cricket team. His figures of 6/28 equaled the record for the best bowling figures in a Twenty20 in New Zealand.[16] He was again the leading wicket taker for the Hurricanes, but this time only the second best in the tournament for BBL03 with 18 wickets at an incredible strike rate of a wicket every 12.8 balls.[17] After three seasons with the Hurricanes he had taken 35 wickets.[18]

Adelaide Strikers (2014–2019)

In 2014 Laughlin changed BBL teams, signing a two-year contract with the Adelaide Strikers[17] and continued his stellar form, taking another 13 wickets in his first season at his new club.[18] The next year in BBL05 he became the first player in the Big Bash League to reach 50 career wickets in the tournament when he took two wickets in a match against the Melbourne Stars.[18] He continued his strong form in BBL06 with 9 wickets, still exceptional in the competition, at an average of 14.9 and remained the all-time leading wicket taker in the BBL.[19]

Laughlin was also part of a controversial moment in BBL|06 during a match against the Sydney Thunder. Network Ten commentator Mark Howard gave advice to the Strikers' captain Brad Hodge on air, informing him that Laughlin had dismissed Thunder captain Shane Watson twice in his last eight balls to the batsman. Hodge then brought Laughlin on to bowl the next over. Cricket Australia investigated as the act was potentially an integrity breach.[20] In February 2017, he was bought by the Sunrisers Hyderabad team for the 2017 Indian Premier League for 30 lakhs.[21]

During BBL07 Laughlin was part of what was called by Damien Fleming "the greatest outfield catch ever taken", though he was not credited for the catch on the scorecard. Melbourne Renegades batsman Dwayne Bravo hit the ball off of the bowling of Rashid Khan towards the boundary through the air. The ball was heading over the rope for six runs, but Laughlin was sprinting underneath it and caught it within the boundary rope. Laughlin was unable to keep his balance and had the throw the ball backwards to keep it in the boundary, and he threw it 30 metres backwards before running over the rope. The ball was thrown far enough and high enough that teammate Jake Weatherald was able to dive and catch it. As Weatherald was the fielder to finally catch the ball, he was credited with the catch.[22] The Strikers, with Laughlin in the team went on to win the tournament, their first BBL title.[23]

Brisbane Heat (2019–2022)

After being delisted in Adelaide after BBL08 Ben rejoined former Queensland teammates for the first few years of the Covid era BBL bubble.[24]

T20 franchise career

In September 2018, he was named in Balkh's squad in the first edition of the Afghanistan Premier League tournament.[25]

Player profile

Laughlin is an exceptional pace bowler, the all-time leading wicket taker in the Big Bash League.[19] His bowling mainly relies on bowling outswingers and changing his pace, sometimes bowling faster deliveries and sometimes bowling slower deliveries.[4] He developed his off-cutter slower ball variation because of his time spent bowling off-spin early in his career.[3] He is known as a "death bowler", as many of his wickets are taken in the final overs of a Twenty20 match, known as the "death" of the innings.[17]

Laughlin is one of few Australian international cricketers in the 21st century who also kept a "normal" occupation during his cricket career, as he continued to work as a carpenter throughout his career, giving up days of work whenever he had to play cricket.[26]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Trevor Laughlin. Cricket Players and Officials . ESPNcricinfo . 13 March 2009.
  2. Web site: And the winner is ... a son of a gun. McClure. Geoff. 25 April 2006. 16 December 2017. The Age.
  3. Web site: Adelaide Strikers star Ben Laughlin; Big Bash League's most prolific wicket-taker. Craddock. Robert. 30 January 2018. 9 February 2018. The Courier-Mail. News Corp Australia.
  4. Web site: Ben Laughlin. Cricket Players and Officials. 16 December 2017. ESPNcricinfo.
  5. Web site: 6 March 2008 . Victoria drop Wade for must-win match . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  6. Web site: subscription . Queensland v Tasmania in 2008/09 . 13 March 2009 . CricketArchive.
  7. Web site: subscription . Most Wickets in an Innings for Queensland . 13 March 2009 . CricketArchive.
  8. Web site: 12 March 2009 . Australia give Siddle and Hilfenhaus a break . 13 March 2009 . ESPNcricinfo.
  9. Web site: Ben Laughlin. 16 December 2017. cricket.com.au.
  10. Web site: 27 June 2011 . Carseldine, Simpson cut by Queensland . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  11. Web site: 4 December 2011 . Laughlin bowls Tasmania to victory . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  12. Web site: 2 April 2012 . Drew, Kruger among eight axed by Tasmania . 16 November 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  13. Web site: Coverdale . Brydon . 18 July 2012 . Lyon and Pattinson overlooked for World T20 . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  14. Web site: Coverdale . Brydon . 29 January 2013 . Bailey eager to find a death bowler . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  15. Web site: 28 October 2014 . Laughlin back with Northern Knights . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  16. Web site: 19 November 2013 . Laughlin's six give Northern easy win . 16 December 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  17. Web site: 'Death' master joins Adelaide. Burnett. Adam. 25 June 2014. 16 December 2017. ESPNcricinfo.
  18. Web site: BBL wickets record holder Ben Laughlin says the Adelaide Strikers are on the verge of something special. Capel. Andrew. 21 December 2015. 16 December 2017. The Advertiser.
  19. Web site: Ben Laughlin. Adelaide Strikers - BBL. 16 December 2017. adelaidestrikers.com.au. 6 July 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220706134544/http://www.adelaidestrikers.com.au/players/ben-laughlin. dead.
  20. Web site: Cricket Australia angered as Channel Ten provide on-air tactics to Adelaide Strikers captain Brad Hodge. Wu. Andrew. 19 January 2017. 16 December 2017. The Sydney Morning Herald.
  21. Web site: List of players sold and unsold at IPL auction 2017 . 20 February 2017 . ESPNcricinfo.
  22. Web site: Adelaide Strikers Jake Weatherald and Ben Laughlin combine for amazing catch. 29 January 2018. 9 February 2018. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  23. Web site: Final, Big Bash League at Adelaide, Feb 4 2018. Match Summary. 9 February 2018. ESPNcricinfo.
  24. Web site: Player Profiles .
  25. Web site: Afghanistan Premier League 2018 – All you need to know from the player draft . CricTracker . 10 September 2018 . 10 September 2018.
  26. Web site: Recalled Australian paceman Ben Laughlin sharpens his tools on and off the field. Stubbs. Brett. 21 January 2013. 16 December 2017. The Mercury.