David Warner

David Andrew Warner, an international cricketer representing Australia, was once the vice-captain of the Australian Test squad and the captain of the Australian limited-overs side (born October 27, 1986). Warner, a left-handed opener, is the first cricketer from Australia to be chosen for a national squad without having played in a first-class match in 132 years. He competes in domestic cricket for the Sydney Thunder, Delhi Capitals, and the New South Wales State. Warner was a key player on the Australian team that won the 2015 Cricket World Cup, the T20 World Cup in 2021, where he was named Player of the Tournament, and the 2023 ICC World Test Championship final. Warner was also name Player of the Tournament in 2015.
In January 2017, he became the fourth athlete to win the Allan Border Medal multiple times and in back-to-back seasons. On September 28, 2017, he participated in his 100th ODI, becoming the first Australian batsman and eighth player to achieve a century overall.
He was suspended in March 2018 and charge with bringing the sport into disgrace following an investigation into ball tampering by the Australian squad in the third Test match against South Africa. On March 28, 2018, Warner was permanently barred from all Australian domestic and international cricket.
Warner, who scored 335 runs against Pakistan in November 2019, became the fourth Australian to do so after Garfield Sobers, Mark Taylor, and Virender Sehwag.
David Warner Career:
In 2008, Warner scored his first domestic one-day century at Hurstville Oval for New South Wales against Tasmania. He surpassed all other Blues players in one day scoring with this inning. In the rematch at Hobart, he came close to breaking an Australian domestic record with a 54-ball 97.
In the final Sheffield Shield game on March 5–8, 2009, Warner made his New South Wales first-class debut against Western Australia. Warner only batted once at number six in the order, yet he scored 42 runs on 48 pitches.
As a member of New South Wales, Warner set the Australian one-day domestic scoring record. His 197-ball total, surpassing Jimmy Maher’s record 187, included twenty-four and ten sixes.
Warner debuted for his country against South Africa on January 11 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. No Australian had participated in a first-class match since 1877 until Warner. He batted for 43 balls and scored 89 runs, including the second-fastest fifty in Twenty20 history, with 7 fours and 6 sixes. He scored 89 on his Twenty20 international debut.
Due to Shane Watson’s injury, he played his first Test against New Zealand on December 1, 2011, in Brisbane, Queensland. He scored three runs in the opening frames. His scored the winning runs in the second inning on a pull shot through midfield.
He scored 67 points off 29 balls against the West Indies in a Twenty20 international on February 23, 2010. He beat the previous record of 19 balls for a 50 in just 18 balls.
Warner was the team’s captain because Smith rested for the last ODI against Sri Lanka. Warner was the first Australian batsman to score a century in an ODI in Sri Lanka. He led his team in three ODIs, two T20Is, a 4-1 ODI series, and a 2-0 T20I series.
David Warner Family and Background:
On October 27, 1986, Warner was born in Paddington, a neighbourhood in Sydney’s east. When he was 13, his instructor instructed him to switch from left-handed to right-handed batting because he kept hitting the ball high. Warner smashed the run-scoring record for the Sydney Coastal Cricket Club’s under-16 team against his mother Lorraine Warner’s (née Orange) encouragement. Warner then switched back to left-handed hitting. After making his first-grade debut at the Eastern Suburbs club at 15, he travel to Sri Lanka with the Australian under-19 squad and, at the age of 16, was offer a rookie deal with the state team. Warner was a student at Randwick Boys High School and Matraville Public School.
Warner wed Candice Falzon, an Australian former Ironwoman, in April this year. Three girls were born to them as infants. The Australian Sports Council recognized Warner as the 2016 Australian Sports Dad of the Year. One of the ten nominees for the prize, Warner, was allow to decide which charity would get the $10,000 donation. Warner resides in Maroubra, a Sydney, Australia suburb. Warner supports the Sydney Roosters of the National Rugby League, and I am a fan of their team.
David Warner Net Worth:
Mr. David Warner is thought to be worth $13 million in total. David Warner’s net worth has increased by 170% in the last few years. His primary source of income and source of wealth is cricket. In addition, Mr. David Warner has an extreme brand value and is the most well-liked athlete in the world. Along with the Indian Premier League (IPL), he receives a sizable income from various national and international cricket matches. In addition, Mr. Warner pays a vast sum to endorse numerous businesses.
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