Michael Clarke dedicates Allan Border Medal to hard work

By Cricket Country Staff Last Published on - February 28, 2012 11:29 AM IST

Michael Clarke not only won the Allan Border Medal but was also named Australia’s Test Player of the Year © Getty Images

Powered By 

Melbourne: Feb 28, 2012

 

Australian captain Michael Clarke, who won the Allan Border Medal for the third time in his career, dedicated success to his preparations over the year and responsibilty as the captain of the national side.

 

“I think my training this year, my preparation has been as good as any year, if not better,” said Clarke.

“The added responsibility of captaining a team has probably made me stand up and lead from the front.”

It was double celebrations for Clarke as, apart from the Allan Border Medal, he was also named Australia’s Test Player of the Year.

It was also double joy for Clarke’s deputy, Shane Watson who won the ODI and Twenty20 Player of the Year awards.

Succeeding Ricky Ponting as skipper of Australia’s Test and ODI sides after last year’s World Cup, Clarke had a sensational year, scoring 2038 Test and one-day runs in the voting period in at an average of 65.74, including six centuries and seven half-centuries.

Clarke, who won the medal in 2005 and jointly with Ponting in 2009, polled 231 votes in his favour to finish 57 clear of Michael Hussey (174), Shane Watson (166) and Ponting (141).

 

Among other awards, explosive opener David Warner, who hit two centuries in his debut Test summer, was named the Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year, while Victoria’s Rob Quiney won the Domestic Player of the Year trophy.

Meanwhile, Australia’s woman cricketer Shelley Nitschke won her fourth consecutive Belinda Clark award despite retiring from the international scene in July last year. .

Spin legend Shane Warne, who retired in 2007 with 708 Test wickets from 145 matches, was also inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame during the awards function last night. (PTI)