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Bradley James Haddin (born 23 October 1977), is an Australian former cricketer, vice-captain and coach who represented Australia in all three forms of international cricket. He played domestically for New South Wales as a right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper.
Brad Haddin. Modern Australian wicketkeepers are renowned for being tough and uncompromising, and Brad Haddin was a fitting inheritor of the job held by the likes of Rod Marsh and Ian...
Although not exactly of the same caliber, Brad Haddin was a fairly good replacement to Adam Gilchrist when Australia were looking for a dashing wicket-keeper batsman post Gilly's...
Sep 9, 2015 · Australia wicketkeeper Brad Haddin has announced his retirement from international and first-class cricket, following Michael Clarke, Shane Watson and Chris Rogers in stepping down in the wake of...
Sep 9, 2015 · Factbox on Brad Haddin after the Australia wicketkeeper announced his retirement from first class cricket on Wednesday: Born Oct. 23, 1977 in Cowra, New South Wales * Played for Canberra in state one-day cricket in the mid 1990s before moving to the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) to further his career.
Aug 29, 2013 · Australia's record-breaking wicketkeeper has overcome personal challenges to play an anchoring role for the team. Adam Gilchrist. 29-Aug-2013. Haddin's in the best form of his keeping career •...
But the veteran returned to international cricket with a bang in 2013, marking his elevation to the vice-captaincy with a record-breaking performance in Australia’s Ashes whitewash. Haddin ...
Sep 9, 2015 · BRAD Haddin has called time on an international career that was the true definition of a rollercoaster ride. The veteran wicketkeeper balanced the highs of playing a massive role in an Ashes whitewash and featuring in a World Cup win with the lows of four Ashes series defeats and a controversial dumping from the Test team this year.
Brad Haddin struck 73 off 39 balls to power defending champions Islamabad United to a seven-wicket win over Peshawar Zalmi on the opening night of PSL 2017
May 19, 2015 · Australian's Brad Haddin has announced his retirement from one-day cricket ahead of this summer's Ashes series. Haddin, 37, has made the decision as he prepares for Test tours...