From Wollongong to Hall of Fame: Aussie pace great Brett Lee honoured
Renowned for his express pace, former fast bowler Brett Lee is the latest inductee into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame.
Brett Lee credits fellow fast-bowling legend Dennis Lillee with setting him on the path to greatness in a career that has led to his induction into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame.
Lee, renowned for his express pace, first set his sights on crashing through the 160 kilometres per hour barrier and wearing the baggy green when he was nine years old.
But it was as a teenager that the NSW South Coast product had his first encounter with Lillee at a fast-bowling camp.
"You're the quickest here, but if you don't change your [bowling] action, in two years I reckon you'll have a broken back," Wollongong-born Lee, now 49, recalls Lillee saying.
At the time, Lee ignored the advice.
"When you're 16, you think you're invincible, and two years later, I broke my back," he said.
Cricket Australia, then known as the Australian Cricket Board, was desperate to nurture Lee's talent and flew the young speedster to Perth to work with Lillee.
"Throughout my whole career, he's been incredible in modifying my action, changing my action and allowing me to play. I wouldn't say pain-free, but to get to the speeds I did," Lee said.
Lee went on to become one of the quickest and most feared bowlers in cricket history, claiming 310 wickets in 76 Tests during one of Australia's most formidable fast-bowling eras.
He was also one of the nation's greatest limited-overs bowlers, taking 380 wickets in 221 ODIs and 28 wickets in 25 T20Is over an international career that spanned 1999-2012.
One of three brothers, Lee recalls he couldn't bat or bowl leg-spin as a kid, and always dreamed of bowling fast.
He treated the 160kmh mark like runners did the four-minute mile, idolising the likes of Lillee and Jeff Thomson.
Brett Lee (right) took part in four Ashes series for Australia, including the 5-0 whitewash of the English in 2007. (Getty Images: Cameron Spencer)
Lee's fastest delivery in international cricket was clocked at 161.1kmh, among the fastest balls ever bowled.
"I wanted to bowl quick and to have that thrill of being able to run in and see the stumps fly; it became this obsession," Lee said.
"That's what I wanted to do. I think back to the age of nine or 10 and I wanted to break that 160kmh barrier.
"Jeff Thomson was a guy I looked up to through the 70s and 80s and 160.45kmh was his record.
"I thought, 'I want to have a crack at that one day', and I was lucky to achieve it."
Lee was a key figure in an era of Australian dominance, contributing to one-day World Cup titles in 1999, 2003 and 2007, as well as multiple Ashes campaigns.
Fittingly, he was unveiled as a Hall of Fame inductee on Sunday at the foot of Lillee's statue outside the MCG, after a Boxing Day Test that was dominated by bowlers.
AAP
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