Allan Border Medal
Allan Border Medal | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Most outstanding Australian cricketer of the year |
Country | Australia |
Presented by | Cricket Australia |
First awarded | 2000 |
Television/Radio coverage | |
Network | 9Gem |
The Allan Border Medal is considered to be the most prestigious individual prize in Australian cricket. First awarded in 2000, the medal is named after former Australian captain Allan Border and recognises the most outstanding Australian cricketer of the past season as voted by his peers, the media and umpires. Votes are cast after each game on a 3–2–1 basis, with a weighting applied to give both One Day International and Test players an equal chance of winning the award.
Award categories
The awards night also includes:
- Test Player of the Year
- One Day International Player of the Year
- Twenty20 International Player of the Year
- Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year
- State Player of the Year, and
- Women's International Cricketer of the Year (The Belinda Clark Award).
- New members of the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame are also inducted on Allan Border Medal night.
Media
The award ceremony itself is a major publicity event and takes place at the Crown Casino in Melbourne and is usually held towards the end of January or the start of February each year. The 2014 ceremony, however, was held in Sydney. The first time it has been held outside of Melbourne, the awards ceremony is broadcast live and is screened on digital channel GEM.
Allan Border Medallists
Only three cricketers have won the award more than once. Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke won the award four times, sharing the award in 2009. The other multiple winner is Shane Watson, who won the award twice. Watson also has the highest vote count of 296, with a huge margin of 100 votes in 2011.[1][2]
- 2000: Glenn McGrath
- 2001: Steve Waugh
- 2002: Matthew Hayden
- 2003: Adam Gilchrist
- 2004: Ricky Ponting
- 2005: Michael Clarke
- 2006: Ricky Ponting
- 2007: Ricky Ponting
- 2008: Brett Lee
- 2009*: Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke
- 2010: Shane Watson
- 2011: Shane Watson
- 2012: Michael Clarke
- 2013: Michael Clarke
- 2014: Mitchell Johnson
- 2015: Steve Smith
- 2016: David Warner
Ref:[3]
*No countback is used in the Allan Border Medal
Multiple winners
Wins | Player | Years |
---|---|---|
4 | Ricky Ponting | 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009 |
Michael Clarke | 2005, 2009, 2012, 2013 | |
2 | Shane Watson | 2010, 2011 |
Other awards
On Allan Border Medal night there are also other awards announced such as the Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year, One Day International Player of the Year, Test Player of the Year, Twenty20 International player of the year, State Player of the Year and Women's International Cricketer of the Year.
Shane Watson won a total of 7 awards which is the most by any player. He is the only player who won "Player of the year" award in all formats. Three players won three major awards including AB medal in the same year. Ricky Ponting in 2007, Shane Watson in 2011 and Steve Smith in 2015.
Test Player of the Year
- 2000: Glenn McGrath
- 2001: Colin Miller
- 2002: Matthew Hayden
- 2003: Ricky Ponting
- 2004: Ricky Ponting
- 2005: Damien Martyn
- 2006: Shane Warne
- 2007: Ricky Ponting
- 2008: Brett Lee
- 2009: Michael Clarke
- 2010: Simon Katich
- 2011: Shane Watson
- 2012: Michael Clarke
- 2013: Michael Clarke
- 2014: Michael Clarke
- 2015: Steve Smith
- 2016: David Warner
Ref:[3]
One Day International Player of the Year
- 2000: Shane Warne
- 2001: Glenn McGrath
- 2002: Ricky Ponting
- 2003: Adam Gilchrist
- 2004: Adam Gilchrist
- 2005: Andrew Symonds
- 2006: Michael Hussey1
- 2007: Ricky Ponting
- 2008: Matthew Hayden
- 2009: Nathan Bracken
- 2010: Shane Watson
- 2011: Shane Watson
- 2012: Shane Watson
- 2013: Clint McKay
- 2014: George Bailey
- 2015: Steve Smith
- 2016: Glenn Maxwell
Ref:[3]
1After counting in the 2006 One Day Player of the Year award, Andrew Symonds, Michael Hussey, Brett Lee and Adam Gilchrist all drew on 22 votes. On a count-back, the winner would have been Andrew Symonds but he was ruled ineligible because he was suspended for two One Day Matches for an off-field indiscretion. On a second count-back Michael Hussey was declared the winner.
Twenty20 International Player of the Year
- 2011: David Hussey
- 2012: Shane Watson
- 2013: Shane Watson
- 2014: Aaron Finch
- 2015: Glenn Maxwell
- 2016: Not awarded
Ref:[3]
Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year
- 2000: Brett Lee
- 2001: Nathan Bracken
- 2002: Shane Watson
- 2003: Nathan Hauritz
- 2004: Shaun Tait
- 2005: Mark Cosgrove
- 2006: Dan Cullen
- 2007: Ben Hilfenhaus
- 2008: Luke Pomersbach
- 2009: Phillip Hughes
- 2010: John Hastings
- 2011: Trent Copeland
- 2012: David Warner
- 2013: Joe Burns
- 2014: Jordan Silk
- 2015: Sean Abbott
- 2016: Alex Ross
Ref:[3]
State Player of the Year
- 2000: Darren Lehmann (South Australia)
- 2001: Darren Lehmann (South Australia)
- 2002: Darren Lehmann (South Australia)
- 2003: Martin Love (Queensland)
- 2004: Simon Katich (New South Wales)
- 2005: Andy Bichel (Queensland)
- 2006: Phil Jaques (New South Wales)
- 2007: Chris Rogers (Western Australia)
- 2008: Ashley Noffke (Queensland)
- 2009: Michael Klinger (South Australia)
- 2010: Michael Klinger (South Australia)
- 2011: Usman Khawaja (New South Wales)
- 2012: Rob Quiney (Victoria)
- 2013: Phillip Hughes (New South Wales)
- 2014: Cameron White (Victoria)
- 2015: Jason Behrendorff (Western Australia)
- 2016: Adam Voges (Western Australia)
Ref:[3]
Women's International Cricketer of the Year (Belinda Clark Award)
- 2002: Karen Rolton
- 2003: Karen Rolton
- 2004: Cathryn Fitzpatrick
- 2005: Karen Rolton
- 2006: Karen Rolton
- 2007: Lisa Sthalekar
- 2008: Lisa Sthalekar
- 2009: Shelley Nitschke
- 2010: Shelley Nitschke
- 2011: Shelley Nitschke
- 2012: Shelley Nitschke
- 2013: Jess Cameron
- 2014: Meg Lanning
- 2015: Meg Lanning
- 2016: Ellyse Perry
Ref:[3]
References
- ↑ Watson wins second Allan Border Medal
- ↑ smith wins by second largest margin
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Award winners". cricket.com.au. Cricket Australia. Retrieved 28 January 2015.