International Cricket Captain 2013 Order Id Keygen _TOP_
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Following the disappointing 2007 campaign, Key was named vice-captain for the England under 19 tour of Kenya and Tanzania. During the tournament, he became the first junior to score a double century for England, who won the series 2-1. He also forged an opening partnership with Scott Borthwick, who had been on the fringes of the England team in the run-up to the tournament, and consolidated his position with the bat in 2008, leading the English National Academy and as the England under-19 captain. On England's under-19 tour of Australia in the summer of 2008, Key posted a fiftieth first-class century for England, in the second match of the series. This could not prevent being out for the majority of his side's first innings, but he nonetheless managed to make his presence felt on the fourth day of the second match, hitting the winning runs for England with two balls to spare, scoring 100, last off a 102, from 39 balls. Later in the series, he closed the second innings, having already been dismissed, on 101 not out, from 85 balls.
Following schoolboy promise, Key began his first-class career in the Notts Friends in 2001. He took fifty wickets in his debut season with the club, such that he was rewarded a contract by Notts County in the county's first XIs squad. However, his career was put aside for life due to a severe case of pneumonia and scan results showed the extent of damage to his lungs and heart. Key continued playing mostly for Notts County, but also for Central Lancashire for the rest of his career.
Key captained the New South Wales Kingsmen/Mt Druitt Tigers in the 2005 first grade competition, leading his team to one defeat and two draw. In early-2006, Key was selected by the Pakistan cricket team for a tour in the United Arab Emirates under the direction of head coach Intikhab Alam. He played in three of the four first-class matches, his inclusion in each of the initial three fixtures being occasioned by the absence of either Umar Gul or Shoaib Akhtar through injury. His debut match was a 14-run win for Pakistan against the United Arab Emirates, bowled by Saeed Ajmal, in which he made 19 runs before falling victim to Nasir Jamshed. ed3faa56471