Michael Leask

  • Oct 29, 1990 (32 years)
  • Aberdeen
  • Right-hand bat
  • Right-arm offbreak
Player Batting Status
  M Inn NO Runs HS Avg SR 100 200 50 4s 6s
ODI 70 57 11 1268 107 27.57 113.82 1 0 7 100 57
T20I 53 43 7 578 58 16.06 131.96 0 0 1 46 27
Player Bowling Status
  M Inn B Runs Wkts BBI BBM Econ Avg SR 5W 10W
70 62 2260 1891 57 4/24 4/24 5.03 33.18 39.65 0 0
53 40 645 838 37 3/11 3/11 7.8 22.65 17.43 0 0
Biography

Michael Alexander Leask, born in Aberdeen, is an explosive right-handed batsman, known for biffing long sixes, and a part-time off-break bowler. Leask played for Scotland in the Under-13s, -15s, -17s and -19s before joining their senior team. He made his T20I debut for Scotland against Kenya in July 2013 and soon enough, in his third T20I laced a brutal 58 and put on a century partnership with Matt Machan against the Netherlands in November 2013 in a losing cause.

Leask soon got an ODI debut against Canada in January 2014 and certainly hit headlines after his first performance of note against amajor team - a brutal innings of 42 runs in 16 balls against England in May 2014. His performance was appreciated by the England captain (at the time) Alastair Cook. This, however, proved to be a false dawn as he failed to make a mark in the World Cup Qualifiers in 2014 (56 runs at an average of 9.33). However, he did maintain his spot in the 15-man squad for the 2015 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. He didn't have a particularly memorable World Cup as Ireland failed to make it to the knockouts.

Leask's off-spin have seen some memorable moments, as he took three wickets in Scotland's victory over Tasmania in their World Cup acclimatisation tour in 2014. Leask played one first-class game for Northants in a match against New Zealand A in 2014. He moved on to Somerset for the 2016 season with Somerset's director of cricket Matt Maynard describing him as a \"feisty cricketer\" and welcoming him into the county. He went on to make his first-class debut for Scotland in the ICC intercontinental cup in October 2017. In the famous ODI where Scotland beat England by 6 runs in 2018, Leask had a poor outing, conceding 50 in four overs, though he did play a mini-cameo of 10 in four balls.

Written by Rishi Roy