Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ian_HealyIan Healy - Wikipedia

    Ian Healy. Ian Andrew Healy AO (born 30 April 1964) is an Australian former international cricketer who played for Queensland domestically. A wicketkeeper and right-hand middle-order batsman, he first played international cricket in 1988, after six first-class games.

  2. For ten years, Ian Healy was the pulse of the Australian team. From his shock selection and humbling beginning in Pakistan in 1988-89, he worked and willed himself to become the most successful...

  3. One of the greatest wicket-keepers to have graced the game, Ian Healy was a frantic live-wire behind the stumps. His energy levels were infectious and his glovework exemplary while his batting...

  4. Find out the complete career history of Ian Healy including highest scores, centuries, half centuries, wickets and more.

  5. Ian Healy Records, Test match, ODI, T20, IPL international batting bowling fielding records. Australia | Wicketkeeper Batter. Compare. INTL CAREER: 1988 - 1999. Top Records. 3rd. Most...

  6. May 14, 2018 · When Ian Healy hung up the gloves as Australia's wicketkeeper ahead of the 1999-2000 summer, he left the game with 395 Test dismissals, a further 234 in one-day cricket and a reputation as the greatest gloveman to have played the game.

  7. Apr 26, 2016 · Ian Healy, born April 30, 1964, is one of the greatest wicketkeepers of all time. Abhishek Mukherjee looks back at one of the men behind Australia’s resurgence in the 1990s that gradually...

  8. For ten years, Ian Healy was the pulse of the Australian cricket team. An excellent wicket keeper and useful right-handed lower middle-order batsman, Healy made his first-class debut for the Queensland state team in the 1986/87 season, as understudy to Peter Anderson.

  9. www.wikiwand.com › en › Ian_HealyIan Healy - Wikiwand

    Ian Andrew Healy AO (born 30 April 1964) is an Australian former international cricketer who played for Queensland domestically. A wicketkeeper and right-hand middle-order batsman, he first played international cricket in 1988, after six first-class games.

  10. Ian Healy played for a transitional Aussie team. The pint sized wicket keeper was known for his astute keeping skills and nasal chants of “Bowling Warnie”.