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Travis Head

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Travis Head
Travis Head during the first Test in Perth against the West Indies in 2022
Personal information
Full name
Travis Michael Head
Born (1993-12-29) 29 December 1993 (age 30)
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Height179[1] cm (5 ft 10 in)
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingRight-arm off break
RoleTop-order batter
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 454)7 October 2018 v Pakistan
Last Test8 March 2024 v New Zealand
ODI debut (cap 213)13 June 2016 v West Indies
Last ODI29 September 2024 v England
ODI shirt no.62
T20I debut (cap 82)26 January 2016 v India
Last T20I13 September 2024 v England
T20I shirt no.62
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2011/12–presentSouth Australia
2012/13–presentAdelaide Strikers
2016–2017Royal Challengers Bangalore
2016Yorkshire
2018Worcestershire
2021Sussex
2024–presentSunrisers Hyderabad
2024Washington Freedom
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI T20I FC
Matches 49 69 38 162
Runs scored 3,173 2,645 1,093 10,829
Batting average 41.75 44.08 33.12 39.95
100s/50s 7/16 6/16 0/5 22/60
Top score 175 154* 91 223
Balls bowled 652 1,119 36 6,276
Wickets 12 24 1 66
Bowling average 32.41 44.20 56.00 60.13
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0 0 0
Best bowling 4/10 4/28 1/16 4/10
Catches/stumpings 25/– 17/– 8/– 76/–
Medal record
Men's Cricket
Representing  Australia
ICC Cricket World Cup
Winner 2023 India
ICC World Test Championship
Winner 2021–2023
ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup
Runner-up 2012 Australia
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 11 October 2024

Travis Michael Head (born 29 December 1993) is an Australian international cricketer.[2] He is contracted to South Australia and the Adelaide Strikers for domestic matches, as well as the team Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Indian Premier League (IPL). He is an aggressive left-handed batsman who is an opener in limited overs and plays in the middle-order in Tests. He is also a part-time right arm off-spin bowler.[3] He was formerly a co vice-captain of the Australian national team in Tests from January 2019 to November 2020 but then renamed again as co vice-captain alongside Steve Smith at the beginning of the 2023 series against Pakistan.[4][5]

Head was a key member of the Australian team that won the 2023 ICC World Test Championship final and 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup final, having been adjudged Player of the Match in both those finals. He also became the second player ever to score a century when batting second in a World Cup final.[6] He also became the first player to score centuries in two consecutive ICC tournament finals in a same calendar year.[7][8]

Early career (2011–2014)

[edit]
Head (shirt 62) batting for Sussex in 2021.

Hailing from Craigmore in the northern suburbs of Adelaide, Head played at underage levels for the Craigmore Cricket Club and Trinity College,[9] Head represented South Australia at both under-17 and under-19 level, making his debut in the National Under-19 Championships at the age of 17.[10] After making his name playing grade cricket for Tea Tree Gully Cricket Club,[11] Head made his first-class cricket debut for South Australia in the Sheffield Shield at the age of 18 in early 2012.[2] He made a promising start to his career with three matches for South Australia, scoring his maiden half-century in his second match and falling short of scoring his maiden century in his third match with 90 runs against Tasmania.[12] He was rewarded at the end of the season with a rookie contract with South Australia.[13]

Head went on to play 18 under-19 One Day International (ODI) matches for the Australian national team, including at the 2012 Under-19 Cricket World Cup.[14][15] He impressed with both bat and ball during the tournament, scoring 87 off 42 balls against Scotland[16] and taking three wickets against Bangladesh in the quarter-final.[17] He showed leadership qualities when he captained South Australia to victory in the 2012–13 National Under-19 Championships, being named Player of the Championship for the second consecutive year.[2]

Head remained a regular selection for the 2012–13 season, usually batting in the middle order.[18][2] He came close to scoring his maiden century with 95 against Western Australia. Though he was not dismissed, he ran out of batting partners and was stranded at the crease five runs short of the milestone.[19] He subsequently played a single Twenty20 game for the Adelaide Strikers in the Big Bash League, replacing the injured Kieron Pollard in the team.[20] Shortly after South Australia's Shield win against Victoria in January 2013, he was hit by a car outside a hotel in Adelaide, receiving injuries to his head and back, but he made a full recovery and was able to return for South Australia's next match.[21][22] Head was one of six young Australian players to be part of the inaugural Ageas Bowl International Cricket Academy during the 2013 season, training at the ground's facilities.[23]

In the early part of Head's career, he struggled to reach his maiden first-class century, instead finishing with scores in the nineties on multiple occasions.[2] After his score of 90 in his debut season and his unbeaten 95 against Western Australia in 2012, he made it to the nineties three times in the 2013–14 Sheffield Shield season, against Western Australia twice more[24][25] and once against Tasmania[26] with scores of 92, 98 and 98 respectively. Despite this he was able to score a List A century for the National Performance Squad against South Africa A in July 2014.[27]

South Australian captaincy and international career (2015–present)

[edit]

Limited-overs debut (2015–2016)

[edit]

In February 2015, Head was named to replace Johan Botha as the captain of South Australia, though Botha stayed with the team for the rest of the season to assist with the transition. At the age of 21 he was the youngest captain of the South Australian side in their 122-year first-class history.[28] As captain his fortunes continued to improve in the 2015–16 season as he shone in all three formats of the game. At the beginning of the season he became the third Australian in history to score a double century in a List A match with 202 runs from 120 balls. In doing so he helped South Australia to chase down the large target of 351 with three overs to spare.[29] He also finally scored his maiden first-class century, after 17 scores of 50 or more, in a Sheffield Shield match against Western Australia to lead South Australia to a thrilling one-wicket win.[30] On New Year's Eve he scored his maiden Twenty20 century against the Sydney Sixers, the first century ever scored for the Strikers. With three overs left in the match, the Strikers needed 51 runs to win and Head needed 55 runs to score his century. Head then scored 56 runs in the final three overs to score his century and win the match with three balls to spare, hitting Sean Abbott for three consecutive sixes in the last over. His final score was 101 runs off 53 balls with 9 sixes and 4 fours.[31]

Head's form was rewarded by national selectors when he was included in Australia's squad for a series of Twenty20 Internationals against India.[32] He made his international debut during the series on Australia Day at his home ground, the Adelaide Oval.[33] After the series he returned to the Sheffield Shield, scoring two more centuries, one against Western Australia to secure another one-wicket win[34] and the other against Tasmania, scoring a career-best 192 to help give South Australia an innings victory in just two days.[35] He led South Australia to their first Sheffield Shield final in 20 years and was named the Sheffield Shield Player of the Year, having scored 699 runs at an average of 38.83 before the final,[36] which South Australia lost.[37]

Head was brought into Australia's One Day International (ODI) squad for the first time for a tri-series in the West Indies.[38] He made his ODI debut on 13 June 2016 against the West Indies.[39] After the tournament he joined the IPL team Royal Challengers Bangalore[40] before going to England to play County cricket for Yorkshire.[41] In his fourth match for Yorkshire he broke the club's record for the highest List A batting partnership, putting on 274 runs for the third wicket with Jack Leaning. Head scored 175 off 139 balls in the innings while Leaning also scored a century.[42] He had to leave Yorkshire early when he was brought to Sri Lanka to train with Australia's Test squad and play in their ODI squad. Though he was originally not included in the squad, the selectors decided that they needed to give younger players more experience in Asian conditions after they had lost the first two matches of the Test series.[43]

Opening stint and Champions Trophy (2016–2017)

[edit]

As Head was part of Australia's squad for their tour of South Africa, he was unable to captain the Redbacks in the Matador Cup.[44] He continued to play for Australia consistently in the 2016–17 season, but he was unable to make any big scores. Batting in the middle order, he regularly scored above 30 runs, doing so nine times in fourteen innings before the end of 2016, but he was only able to score three half-centuries with a high score of 57 against New Zealand.[45] For Australia's series against Pakistan in January 2017, Head was moved from the middle order to the top order, opening the batting.[46] This resulted in Head scoring his maiden ODI century against Pakistan on Australia Day at Adelaide Oval. He opened with David Warner and the pair scored 284 runs for the first wicket, with Head scoring 128 himself.[47] This stands as the highest partnership for any wicket for Australia and the second highest opening stand in ODIs.[48] Despite his strong form in One Day Internationals and in domestic cricket, averaging over 60 in the 2016–17 Sheffield Shield season, Head was not included in Australia's Test squad for the 2017 Border-Gavaskar Trophy, though the then Australian coach Darren Lehmann said "We expect him in the not-too-distant future to get his chance in Test cricket."[49] Instead, Head continued to play for South Australia, who played in their second consecutive Sheffield Shield final. He scored a century but the Redbacks ultimately lost the match.[37]

When limited overs opener Aaron Finch returned to form, Head was dropped back to the middle order, though he remained in the Australian side for the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy.[50] Due to weather, neither of Australia's first two matches in the tournament were completed and Head did not get a chance to bat, but in Australia's only completed match, against hosts England, Head top scored for Australia with 71* in a losing effort.[51] Head signed to play for Yorkshire again in the 2017 NatWest t20 Blast, but he pulled out of the tournament when he was named the captain of the Australia A side for the 2017 South Africa A Team Tri-Series.[52] As a result of a pay dispute with Cricket Australia, the Australia A side pulled out of this tournament.[53]

Head started the 2017–18 Sheffield Shield season as one of many players in contention to take Australia's number 6 spot in the upcoming Ashes against England. In the first match of the season the Redbacks played against New South Wales, whose bowling attack made up the entire Australian bowling attack.[54][55] Head did not impress selectors, only scoring totals of 8 and 0,[56] but he bounced back with an impressive, measured half-century against Victoria and a century against Queensland.[57][58] Regardless, he did not earn selection in Australia's Test team.

When Brad Hodge left the Adelaide Strikers, Head replaced him as the team's captain, adding it to his captaincy of South Australia and making him the captain of the state's highest-level team in all three formats of the game.[59]

List A cricket (2021)

[edit]

In October 2021, Head made his second double century (230 off 127 deliveries), against Queensland in Adelaide, becoming the third batsman to score more than one double century in List A cricket.[60]

Test cricket (2018–present)

[edit]
Head fielding during the third test of the 2019 Ashes.

In April 2018, Head was awarded a national contract by Cricket Australia for the 2018–19 season.[61][62] In September 2018, he was named in Australia's Test squad for their series against Pakistan.[63][64] He made his Test debut for Australia against Pakistan on 7 October 2018.[65] He had his baggy green cap presented to him from Nathan Lyon.[66]

In January 2019, Head was announced as Australia's new Test vice-captain, alongside Pat Cummins ahead of the series against Sri Lanka on 24 January. This was due to the unavailability of regular vice-captains, Mitchell Marsh who was omitted from the Test squad and Josh Hazlewood who was unavailable due to an injury.[67] In the two-Test series, across three innings, Head scored 84, 161 (his maiden Test century), and 59 not out to raise his Test match batting average to 51.

In July 2019, Head was named in Australia's squad for the 2019 Ashes series in England.[68][69] In November 2019, Head played against Pakistan in Australia, although he only batted once in the series.[70] In December 2019, he was named in Australia's squad for the Test Series against New Zealand.[71] He made a century (114) and was named player of the match in the second Test.[72] On 16 July 2020, Head was named in a 26-man preliminary squad of players to begin training ahead of a possible tour to England following the COVID-19 pandemic.[73][74]

In November 2020, despite being named in a 17-man squad for the Test series against India, Head was demoted as Australia's Test co vice-captain, with Pat Cummins to solely deputise Tim Paine.[5]

Head batting at the MCG during day 2 of the 2021 Boxing Day Test.

Head was included in the squad for the 2021–22 Ashes.[75] In the first test at The Gabba, he made his third century (152), and was named player of the match.[76][77] Head was ruled out of the fourth test in Sydney after testing positive for COVID-19.[78] He returned for the fifth test in Hobart, where he made another century (101).[79] He was named player of the match, and was also awarded the Compton–Miller Medal for player of the series.[80]

In February 2022, Head was included in the 18-man squad to tour Pakistan in March.[81] Head was included in the squad for the 2022 tour of Sri Lanka.[82] In the first Test in Galle, he picked up career best figures of 4/10 – his first wickets in Tests – in the second innings, paving the way for a 10-wicket victory for Australia.[83]

Head was included in Australian squad for the series against the West Indies in 2022-23.[84] In the first Test in Perth, he scored 99, putting on 196 runs for the fourth wicket with Steve Smith in the first innings.[85] He took two wickets in the second innings, as Australia won by 164 runs.[86] In the second Test in Adelaide, Head scored a career-best 175 in the first innings, putting on 297 runs for the fourth wicket with Marnus Labuschagne.[87] He won the player of the match award.[88] He was included in the Australian squad for the home series against South Africa in 2022–23.[89] In the first Test, Head top scored for Australia with 92 in the first innings, and he was named player of the match.[90] He also completed 2000 runs in Tests.[91] In the same week, Head moved to number four in the ICC rankings for Test batting.[92]

Head was included in the 18-man squad for the 2023 Border-Gavaskar series.[93] He was named in the squads for the 2023 ICC World Test Championship final and the 2023 Ashes.[94] In the 2023 WTC final at The Oval, Head scored his first overseas Test century and sixth overall (163), putting on 285 runs with Steven Smith for the fifth wicket in the first innings.[95][96] Australia won by 209 runs, and he was the player of the match.[97] In June 2023, Head moved to number three in the ICC Test batting rankings.[98] Following the conclusion of the third Ashes Test, Head moved to number two in the rankings.[99] Head ended the Ashes series with 362 runs, with three half-centuries.[100]

In January 2024, in the first Test against the West Indies in Adelaide, Head scored his seventh Test century (119), and won the player of the match award.[101] He also completed 3000 runs in Tests.[102]

Limited-overs return (2022–present)

[edit]

In January 2022, Head was included in the 16-man squad to face Sri Lanka in a five-match T20I series; he last played white ball cricket for Australia in 2018.[103] In February, Cricket Australia announced that Head would miss the start of the series to play in the Sheffield Shield, and would join the squad in Melbourne.[104] He did not feature in any of the matches.

In February 2022, Head was included in the white-ball squad for the Pakistan tour.[105] In the first ODI, his first since November 2018, he made his second century (101 off 72 deliveries) opening the batting, took two wickets and was named player of the match.[106] He made 89 in the second ODI,[107] but was dismissed for a golden duck in the final match.[108] He made his T20I return in the one-off match.[109]

Head was selected in the ODI and Australia A squads for the tour of Sri Lanka in June–July 2022.[110] In the second unofficial ODI against Sri Lanka A, Head top-scored with 110 in a losing cause.[111] He was picked for the ODIs after injuries to several Australian players; he played in the second, third (where he top scored with 70 not out), and fourth matches, but was ruled out of the final match with a hamstring strain.[112]

After missing the home series against Zimbabwe and New Zealand due to paternity leave, Head was included in the ODI squad to face England in November 2022, replacing the now-retired Aaron Finch as opener.[84] In the final ODI in Melbourne, Head scored his third century (152) and was awarded the player of the match award.[113] Head and David Warner put on 269 runs, becoming the second pair to make two 250-run partnerships in ODIs, and joint fastest to score 1000 partnership runs.[114]

Head was selected for the ODI series in India in March 2023.[115] In the second ODI in Visakhapatnam, opening the batting with Mitchell Marsh, he scored a rapid unbeaten half-century, and put on an unbeaten partnership of 121 in 11 overs, as Australia cruised to victory by 10 wickets.[116]

Head was picked for the limited overs series against South Africa. In the third T20I, Head scored his first T20I half-century (91), and was awarded the player of the match award.[117] Head fractured his left hand after being struck on his hand attempting a pull shot off Gerald Coetzee during the fourth ODI of the series, and was forced to retire hurt, and also ruled out of the final ODI.[118]

2023 Cricket World Cup

[edit]

Head was named in the Australian squad for the 2023 Cricket World Cup, but did not play in the tournament until Australia's match against New Zealand on 28 October, as he continued to recover from his injury.[119][120] He scored his fourth ODI century (109 off 67 balls) in his first World Cup match, and won the player of the match award.[121][122] His all-round performance in the semi-final helped Australia beat South Africa by 3 wickets in a close encounter and helped Australia book a place in the final.[123] He took 2 important wickets and scored 62 runs off 48 balls in the semi-final.[124][125] He was declared player of the match.[126]

In the final against India, he became the seventh batsman to score a century in a Cricket World Cup Final (137),[127] and was the player of the match, as Australia won by six wickets to lift its sixth World Cup title after chasing down the target of 241.[128][129][130] He also became only the second player to score a century in a World Cup final during a run chase after Sri Lanka's Aravinda de Silva.[131][132] He also eventually became the third Australian after Ricky Ponting and Adam Gilchrist to score a century in a World Cup final and also became the only Australian to do so in a run chase batting second.[133] His innings of 137 also turned out to be the highest individual score in a World Cup final when batting second (while chasing), surpassing the previous record of 107 not out held by Aravinda de Silva. He also became the first and only player to score two centuries in men's ICC tournament finals (in fact Head scored centuries in 2023 WTC final and 2023 Cricket World Cup with both centuries coming in single calendar year).[131][134] He also surpassed Viv Richards record tally of 180 runs to become the most prolific runscorer in across the semi-final and final in a men's World Cup tournament with a tally of 199 runs.[135] Head also put on a record breaking partnership of 192 runs with Marnus Labuschagne for the fourth wicket during the final, which is also the highest ever partnership by a pair in a World Cup final run chase for any wicket. The partnership of 192 between Head and Labuschagne is also the second highest for any wicket in a World Cup final behind Ricky Ponting-Damien Martyn's unbroken stand of 234 runs which also came against India during the 2003 Cricket World Cup final.[136] He also took a stunning diving catch in the World Cup final to dismiss Indian skipper Rohit Sharma, which became a talking point and the catch taken by him also turned out to be the root cause for India's dramatic slowdown in their batting approach in the final, as the dismissal of Rohit broke the early momentum India had in the first half of the batting in the final.[137][138][139] He also became the fourth player after Mohinder Amarnath, Aravinda de Silva and Shane Warne to receive player of the match awards in both semi-final and final during a same World Cup campaign.[140][141]

2024 ICC Men's T20 World Cup

[edit]

In May 2024, he was named in Australia’s squad for the 2024 ICC Men's T20 World Cup tournament.[142] Head was the third highest run scorer of the tournament, scoring 255 runs from seven innings with two half-centuries.[143]

Post-Warner Era (2024-present)

[edit]

In June 2024, Head became the highest ranked T20I batter, according to the ICC player rankings.[144] In the first of a three-match T20I series against Scotland, Head equalled the record for the fastest fifty (held by Marcus Stoinis) for Australia in T20Is (17 balls), making 80 off 25 balls. He put on a rapid 113-run partnership with Mitchell Marsh and earned the player of the match award.[145] In the third match, he became the second fastest Australian to score 1000 T20I runs (35 innings).[146]

In the first T20I against England Head made a rapid half-century, including 30 runs in an over bowled by Sam Curran, earning the player of the match award.[147] Head captained Australia for the first time in T20Is, in the second match in Cardiff, in the absence of an unwell Mitchell Marsh.[148][149] In the first ODI, Head took two wickets and scored his sixth ODI century, a career best unbeaten 154, earning him the player of the match award.[150] In the final ODI, Head took career-best figures of 4/28, and then made a brisk 31 to keep Australia ahead of the DLS score and guide his team to victory. [151] His all-round performance earned him the player of the match award and he also won the player of the series award, scoring 248 runs and taking six wickets.[152]

Indian Premier League

[edit]

For the 2016 and 2017 Indian Premier League seasons, Head played for Royal Challengers Bangalore. Head played for Sunrisers Hyderabad in the 2024 season. He started the tournament with a 24-ball 62 against Mumbai Indians. On 15 April 2024, he scored a match-winning 102 from 41 balls against Royal Challengers Bengaluru. [153] Throughout the tournament, he and Abhishek Sharma gave good starts to the team which made sure that they qualified for the final. He finished the tournament as the leading run-scorer of Sunrisers Hyderabad with 567 runs.

Head was retained by the franchise for the 2025 IPL.[154]

Achievements

[edit]

Personal life

[edit]

Head married Jessica Davies in April 2023.[156] Their first child, a daughter, was born in September 2022.[156][157] The couple's second child, a son, was born in November 2024.[158]

Head is a supporter of the Port Adelaide Football Club in the AFL[159][160][161]

List of international centuries

[edit]

As of September 2024, Head has scored seven centuries (100 or more runs in a single innings) in Tests and six in ODIs.[162] His highest Test score of 175 came against West Indies in December 2022.[163] His highest ODI score of 154 not out came against England in September 2024.[164]

Key
Symbol Meaning
* Remained not out
Man of the match
Match Matches played
Pos. Position in the batting order
Inn. The innings of the match
Test The number of the Test match played in that series
S/R Strike rate during the innings
H/A/N Venue was at home (Australia), away or neutral
Date Date the match was held, or the starting date of match for Test matches
Lost The match was lost by Australia
Won The match was won by Australia
Drawn The match was drawn
Test centuries[165]
No. Score Against Pos. Inn. Test Venue H/A/N Date Result Ref
1 161  Sri Lanka 5 1 2/2 Manuka Oval, Canberra Home 1 February 2019 Won [166]
2 114†  New Zealand 6 1 2/3 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 26 December 2019 Won [167]
3 152†  England 5 2 1/5 Brisbane Cricket Ground, Brisbane Home 8 December 2021 Won [168]
4 101†  England 5 1 5/5 Bellerive Oval, Hobart Home 14 January 2022 Won [169]
5 175†  West Indies 5 1 2/2 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 8 December 2022 Won [163]
6 163†  India 5 1 1/1 The Oval, Kennington Neutral 7 June 2023 Won [170]
7 119†  West Indies 5 2 1/2 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 17 January 2024 Won [171]
ODI centuries[172]
No. Score Against Pos. Inn. S/R Venue H/A/N Date Result Ref
1 128  Pakistan 2 1 93.43 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 26 January 2017 Won [173]
2 101†  Pakistan 1 1 140.27 Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Away 29 March 2022 Won [174]
3 152†  England 1 1 116.92 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 22 November 2022 Won [175]
4 109†  New Zealand 2 1 162.68 HPCA Stadium, Dharamshala Neutral 28 October 2023 Won [176]
5 137†  India 2 2 114.16 Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad Away 19 November 2023 Won [177]
6 154* England  2 2 119.37 Trent Bridge, Nottingham Away 19 September 2024 Won [178]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ a b c d e "Travis Head". ESPNcricinfo. Archived from the original on 23 November 2017. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  3. ^ "Travis Head Profile - Cricket Player Australia | Stats, Records, Video". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
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