| February
26, 2008
Brydon Coverdale
 |
| Brett
Lee with his Test Player of the Year trophy: 'It's been
a great summer" © Getty Images |
Brett
Lee has completed an outstanding year by winning his first
Allan Border Medal despite missing the entire World Cup
with an ankle injury. Fittingly, in a season when he took
over from Glenn McGrath as the spearhead of Australia's
attack, Lee became the first bowler since McGrath in 2000
to claim the major award.
He
also took home the Test Player of the Year title, while
Matthew Hayden was named the One-Day International Player
of the Year. Lee finished with 125 votes in the Allan Border
Medal count, ahead of Hayden on 107 and last year's champion
Ricky Ponting on 64.
It
was Lee's first time on the stage at the medal ceremony
since 2000, when he was named the Bradman Young Cricketer
of the Year. He said it was a thrill to be taking such an
important role in the side following the disappointment
of missing the World Cup triumph.
"I'm
really enjoying that leadership role," Lee said. "It
sits a bit funny with me being called the strike bowler
or the main bowler because it's a team effort. I actually
thought missing 19 matches I was absolutely no chance. That
was a very hard time missing the World Cup, watching it
on TV was very hard.
Lee
said the medal was a pinnacle after the low of his lengthy
spell out of the team leading up to the 2005 Ashes. "I
spent 19 months on the sideline carrying the drinks,"
he said. "But to appreciate the good times you have
to go through the bad times."
In
a year that was dominated by coloured clothing - Australia
only played six Tests during the voting period - Lee polled
in all but one Test. His 12 votes in the Test count put
him five ahead of Hayden (7), while there was a traffic
jam for third, with five players grabbing three votes.
There
was no question that Lee was the star in the longer form
of the game during a summer when Australia equalled their
own world record of 16 consecutive Test victories. He was
named Man of the Series in both the Sri Lanka and India
contests and finished with 40 wickets during the voting
period, at the average of 20.58.
Against
Sri Lanka he collected 16 wickets at 17.56 in two Tests,
while in the four India games he grabbed 24 victims at 22.58.
Lee's success was not limited to Tests and he picked up
30 ODI wickets at 21.70, however his injury meant it was
not surprising that he finished 11th in the one-day count.
Hayden
ended up with 24 votes, ahead of Ricky Ponting on 19 and
there was a three-way tie for third, with Michael Clarke,
Adam Gilchrist and McGrath all on 14. Hayden's award capped
off a terrific return to the one-day arena after he lost
his spot following the 2005 tour of England.
In
his first series during the voting period, Hayden belted
an Australian record unbeaten 181 in the Chappell-Hadlee
Series in New Zealand, and things improved from there. He
was the leading scorer at the World Cup in the Caribbean,
making 659 runs at 73.22, and a blistering 66-ball century
against South Africa was a highlight.
A
productive ODI tour of India followed and Hayden finished
the 12-month period with 1462 runs at 56.23. He made four
centuries and six fifties and he said he was "fully
stoked" to win the award after he was not part of the
one-day team in mid-2006. His World Cup began with serious
injuries to both feet but he said that was never going to
stop him help Australia defend their title.
"Fifteen
months out from the tournament I looked to be in deep trouble,
not looking to play one-day cricket again," he said.
"I had a deep fire in my belly. A couple of broken
feet at the start of a tournament is perhaps not the way
you want to start. It was just a lot of work getting back
into that side, and from that moment on I don't think broken
feet were going to stop me."
Brydon
Coverdale is a staff writer at Cricinfo
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