Paul Adams

South Africa

Personal Information
Born
January 20, 1977 (48 years)
Birth Place
Cape Town, Cape Province
Height
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Role
Bowler
Batting Style
Right Handed Bat
Bowling Style
Left-arm wrist-spin
ICC Rankings
 
Test
ODI
T20
Batting
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Bowling
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Career Information
Teams
South Africa, Cape Cobras, Texas Chargers
Adams burst into the international scene with his boyish looks at a tender age of 18 and immediately harassed England with an assortment of googlies and chinamans coupled with a strange bowl...
Full profile
Batting Career Summary
M Inn Runs BF HS Avg SR NO 4s 6s 50 100 200
Test 45 55 360 1012 35 9 35.58 15 32 4 0 0 0
ODI 24 9 66 124 33 16.5 53.23 5 5 0 0 0 0
T20 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
IPL 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bowling Career Summary
M Inn B Runs Wkts Avg Econ SR BBI BBM 5w 10w
Test 45 76 8850 4405 134 32.87 2.99 66.04 7/128 10/106 4 1
ODI 24 23 1109 815 29 28.1 4.41 38.24 3/26 3/26 0 0
T20 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0.0 -/- -/- 0 0
IPL 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0.0 -/- -/- 0 0
Career Information
Profile
Adams burst into the international scene with his boyish looks at a tender age of 18 and immediately harassed England with an assortment of googlies and chinamans coupled with a strange bowling action that left the batsmen struggling to pick him up. The normally free flowing batsmen of India, reputed for their nimbleness against any kind of spin were his next victims as Adams clinched his first ever 5-wicket haul at Kanpur.

Born on January 20, 1977 in Cape Town, Adams did not have much knowledge about his bowling himself. It was left to his coach, the great Eddie Barlow to give his career a direction. His bowling action is a difficult puzzle to solve in itself. Adams seemed to be watching the sky while delivering the ball and still managed to beat the batsmen who were prepared to use their feet against him. He held the ball with two fingers of his left hand (thumb, and the index finger).

It was only a matter of time for his novelty to ware off and once it did, Adams struggled partly because the batsmen were used to his assortment of deliveries as well as his action but also his own lack of variety. Injuries took a toll on him and he lost the number one spinning slot to Nicky Boje. Adams played his last Test for South Africa against New Zealand in Hamilton in 2004 at the age of 26. He slowly drifted out of all forms of cricket and announced his retirement in 2008 at the age of 31.

Known to his friends as Gogga meaning insect, Adams is now an expert analyst for various television channels in South Africa.

By Pradeep Krishnamurthy
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