Chris Whelan Explained

Chris Whelan
Country:England
Fullname:Christopher David Whelan
Birth Date:8 May 1986
Birth Place:Liverpool, England
Batting:Right-handed
Bowling:Right arm medium
Club1:Middlesex
Year1:2004–2007
Club2:Worcestershire
Year2:2008–2011
Columns:2
Column1:FC
Matches1:19
Runs1:252
Bat Avg1:14.00
100S/50S1:0/1
Top Score1:58
Deliveries1:1930
Wickets1:41
Bowl Avg1:36.80
Fivefor1:1
Tenfor1:0
Best Bowling1:5–95
Catches/Stumpings1:3/0
Column2:LA
Matches2:20
Runs2:40
Bat Avg2:5.00
100S/50S2:0/0
Top Score2:11
Deliveries2:588
Wickets2:21
Bowl Avg2:28.47
Fivefor2:0
Tenfor2:n/a
Best Bowling2:4–27
Catches/Stumpings2:4/0
Date:26 July
Year:2009
Source:CricketArchive

Christopher David Whelan (born 8 May 1986) is an English first-class cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and a right-arm medium bowler, who has represented Middlesex and Worcestershire. He came through the ranks at Sefton Park CC, taking a 1st XI hat-trick at Lytham aged 16,[1] and scored a record 177 not out for his school, St Margaret's, in an under-15 final.[2]

Whelan played for Middlesex's second team in 2003, but made his List A debut on 2 September 2004, when he appeared against Sussex in a totesport League game at Hove. In a crushing 135-run defeat, Whelan's success was very limited: he returned an analysis of 7–0–40–0 and scored 6 at the bottom of the order (by which time Middlesex's cause had long since been lost).[3]

Early in 2005, Whelan was named by the Liverpool Echo as Merseyside Young Sports Personality of the Year. He was quoted by the newspaper as saying that he had been encouraged by John Emburey.In early May, he made his first-class debut in a County Championship match against Hampshire at Southampton, and took three wickets. His first victim was Zimbabwe international Sean Ervine, whose wicket he claimed in both innings.[4] He also turned out against Cambridge UCCE at the start of June, but made no other first-team appearances that season.

In 2006 Whelan made a solitary List A appearance, this coming against Nottinghamshire. The following summer he managed three List A games and one first-class outing against Oxford UCCE, though he never managed more than two wickets in an innings.[5] After the 2007 season, he left Middlesex and moved to Worcestershire. He told the Liverpool Echo in 2008 that he had become "stale" at Middlesex, and that he had thought the county "a very political place with a lot of favourites around the dressing room."[6]

Whelan enjoyed an immediate run in the Worcestershire first team in first-class and one-day cricket. Although he again could not claim more than two wickets in any innings, on his return to the second team for the local derby with Warwickshire seconds, he produced an outstanding performance. Whelan took 6–79 in the first innings, then followed that up with 6–22 (for match figures of 12–101) to help dismiss Warwickshire for a mere 77 and set up a 53-run Worcestershire victory.[7] Whelan then returned to first-team action, and in June returned his best List A figures of 4–78 against the New Zealanders at Worcester.[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1st ECB PL 2002 057 10 29-06-2002 Lytham v Sefton Park.
  2. Web site: Chris is Young Sports Personality of the Year . Jones, David . 1 March 2005 . 23 June 2008 . Liverpool Echo.
  3. Web site: Sussex v Middlesex in 2004 . 23 June 2008 . CricketArchive.
  4. Web site: Hampshire v Middlesex in 2005 . 23 June 2008 . CricketArchive.
  5. Web site: Player Oracle . 23 June 2008 . CricketArchive.
  6. Web site: Whelan's happy to be among wickets again . Jones, David . 13 June 2008 . 23 June 2008 . Liverpool Echo.
  7. Web site: Warwickshire Second XI v Worcestershire Second XI in 2008 . 23 June 2008 . CricketArchive.
  8. Web site: Worcestershire v New Zealanders in 2008 . 23 June 2008 . CricketArchive.