Get to know Stuart Broad Net Worth, Age, Biography

Stuart Christopher Broad was an English former cricketer he was born on June 24 1986 in England. He was the player of the England cricket team and played test matches. He was also the Captain of T20 International and One Day International series. Stuart broad net worth is estimated at 69 million which makes him a wealthy personality in England. He became surely one of England’s greatest Test bowlers ever thanks to his long-term batting. His extremely productive partnership with fellow fast bowler James Anderson makes him familiar.

Right-arm seam bowler and left-handed batsman Broad started his professional career with Leicestershire before moving to his hometown county of Nottinghamshire in 2008, the same team his father played for. He was chosen as the Cricket Writers’ Club Young Cricketer of the Year in August 2006. In the first innings of the Australian team’s fourth Test match of the 2015 Ashes series, Broad recorded career-best figures of 8/15 as they were bowled for just 60 runs. Wisden’s Men’s Test spell of the decade was awarded to this effort. 

Stuart broad Net Worth

According to our research, the Nottinghamshire player’s annual contract with the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) pays him approximately £700,000 ($824,992) annually. It also contained performance-based bonuses. His net worth is to be estimated at $69 million.

Biography

Vivek Broad Details
Full Name Stuart Christopher John Broad
Father Name Chris Broad
Mother Name Stepmother Michelle
Born on June 24, 1986
Present Age  38 years
Net worth $69 million.
Occupation Former England Cricketer
Role Bowler
Birthplace Nottinghamshire, England
Nick Name Broady, Malfoy
Height 6 ft, 6 inch.
Fiancee Mollie King

After a doctor named John saved Broad’s life after he was born 12 weeks early, he was given the middle name John. He thought he was a better goalie when he was sixteen, and he tried out for an England underage team while playing for Leicestershire and the Midlands.

Tom Croft, the back-row player for England rugby, and Broad attended the same coeducational independent school in Oakham, Rutland, where Broad received his schooling. After earning three B grades at the A-level, Broad was offered a contract with Leicestershire County Cricket Club or a spot at Durham University.

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Personal Information

Broad’s sister Gemma was a team analyst for the England squad, while his father Chris Broad played Test cricket for England from 1984 to 1989. In July 2010, his stepmother Michelle “Miche” Broad took her own life. Her condition was motor neuron illness. Broad is a fan of the Leicester Tigers and Nottingham Forest F.C. Broad took home the Manager of the Week award in Round 37 of the official fantasy football league during the 2017–18 Premier League season. Mollie King, a presenter on BBC Radio 1, and musician The Saturdays are Broad’s partners. The two became engaged in January 2021. The couple, who are London residents, declared their first child’s impending arrival in June 2022.  King gave birth to their first child, a daughter, in November 2022.

Domestic Career

He follows the footsteps of his father, the former England opener and current ICC match referee Chris Broad, Broad began his cricket career as an opening batsman. Not until he experienced a growth spurt at the age of 17 did he begin to think about becoming a fast bowler. Since he was eight years old, Broad has been involved with Leicestershire, having played for Melton Mowbray club Egerton Park, which also produced England seamer Tim Munton, and representing them at the Under-9 level. From the age of nineteen to nineteen, Broad was a player for Egerton Park. 

During his last two seasons, he led the attack by opening the batting position alongside Matthew Boyce, another player from Leicestershire. The Leicestershire Young Cricketers Batsman Award was given to him in 1996.

From 2004 to 2006

Just before turning eighteen, Broad made his debut for Leicestershire 2nd XI in 2004. He made an impression, too, and was offered a full contract for the ensuing campaign. Early in the 2005 season, against Durham University Center of Cricketing Excellence, Broad made his first-class debut, further impressing Director of Cricket James Whitaker. He scored a respectable 1/40 off of 15 overs. The first wicket he took in a first-class match was Nick Lamb’s. After this performance, Broad played in his first County Championship match at Oakham, against Somerset.

In the 2006 campaign, Broad hit his first championship fifty against Derbyshire and got his first five wickets against Surrey, the favorites in the championship. His most noteworthy achievements came in the Twenty20 Cup, where he bowled more than 15 overs and had the second-best economy of the season (4.50). Before being called up for England, Broad participated in twelve of Leicestershire’s thirteen County Championship games. With 44 wickets at an average of 31.38, he topped his county in both bowling average and wicket total. It was revealed on August 23, 2007, that Broad, having declined a contract extension and wanting to return to his county, would be joining Nottinghamshire at the end of the season. Broad participated in the Yorkshire Bank 40 event final in the 2013 season. 

He finished the match against Glamorgan by taking three wickets in his final over after being out for a duck. Broad was a member of the Nottinghamshire team that defeated Surrey at Lords in the 2017 Royal London One Day Cup final.

Progress for International Career

In the first “Test” at Shenley in 2005, Broad claimed five wickets in seventeen attempts while playing for the England Under-19 team against the Sri Lankan Under-19 team. After being selected for the winter 2005–06 ECB National Academy team, he was called up to England. He joins the ‘A’ squad to tour the West Indies, taking James Anderson’s place who had been called up to the Test side that was touring India. He was once more called up to the England A team in April 2006, when they played the Sri Lankan team that was on tour.

For the 2006 season, stuart broad was also a member of the ECB’s 25-man development squad. “The squad enables the England Head Coach (Duncan Fletcher), working with his support,” stated David Graveney, head of selections. The National Academy staff, to better prepare foreign players for the demands of the international game and to keep a closer eye on their growth.”

West Indies, India, Pakistan, T20 World Cup, and Sri Lanka, 2006–07

In August 2006, Broad was named Young Cricketer of the Year by the Cricket Writers’ Club after being selected for the England one-day team for the one-day internationals against Pakistan on August 23. Broad played his debut Twenty20 International match for England against Pakistan on August 28. With two wickets in two balls from Younis Khan and Shoaib Malik, Broad bowled four overs for 35 runs and came close to completing a hat-trick. 

When a lofted shot from Shahid Afridi sailed just past Kevin Pietersen. He made his ODI debut on August 30 and took a wicket in his opening over. He also shared a last-wicket partnership of 29 with Darren Gough. With the wickets of Abdul Razzaq and Kamran Akmal in the third One-Day International on September 5, 2006. Broad once again found himself on a hat-trick, but he was unable to complete the third. After bowling ten overs, he finished with a three-for-57 record and one maiden.

Broad was not included in the team for the Commonwealth Bank Series in 2006–07 or the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy. But in the latter, after Jon Lewis and Chris Tremlett were injured, he was called up for the championship match. Halfway through the 2007 World Cup, he was also called up to replace someone in the England squad. His winning run in England’s final match against the West Indies marked the end of the competition.

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