Ad
related to: alex ross cricketer
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Alexander Ian Ross (born 17 April 1992) is an Australian cricketer.The son of a cricket coach, Ross started playing domestic cricket for South Australia in 2012, having moved to the state in 2009 with his father.
Alex Ross (cricketer) S. Steve Smith (cricketer) T. Shaun Tait; W. David Warner (cricketer) Shane Watson This page was last edited on 21 December 2024, at 05:14 ...
Alex Ross of the Brisbane Heat was given out obstructing the field in a Big Bash League match against the Hobart Hurricanes in January 2018 for interfering with an attempted run out. It was the first time in Big Bash League history that a player was given out in this manner. [26]
The Adelaide Strikers are a cricket team based in Adelaide, South Australia, which competes in the Big Bash League (BBL). The team was established in 2011 as part of the creation of the BBL, a revamp of Australia's domestic Twenty20 competition. [ 1 ]
Alex Ross (born 1970) is an American comic book painter, illustrator and plotter. Alex Ross may also refer to: Alex Ross (American football) (born 1992), American football quarterback for the San Diego Fleet; Alex Ross (cricketer) (born 1992), Australian cricketer; Alex Ross (music critic) (born 1968), American music critic
Alex Ross Tait (born 13 June 1972) is a New Zealand cricketer.He played in five One Day Internationals for New Zealand in the late 1990s.. In 1996–97 Tait took 9/48 in the first innings and 16/130 in the match for the Northern Districts against Auckland at Seddon Park, Hamilton.
Alex Ross (rower) (Sir Alexander Ross, 1907–1994), New Zealand-born banker and rower Alexander David Ross (1883–1966), Scots-born physicist and astronomer Alexander Ross (cricketer) (1895–1972), Scottish cricketer and civil servant
Alexander Ross (3 January 1895 – 12 December 1972) was a Scottish first-class cricketer and civil servant.. Ross was born at Arbroath.He represented the Civil Service cricket team as the team's wicket-keeper in its only appearance in first-class cricket against the touring New Zealanders at Chiswick in 1927. [1]