The skipper was the hot favourite to take the award following a year in which he played 24 international games across limited overs and Test cricket and scored 1754 runs at 67.46 with seven centuries. He captained a hard-fought series loss in India, a drawn series in Bangladesh and a triumphant 4-0 Ashes victory over England at home in which he was also named man of the series. Smith, 28, is also the reigning ICC Test Cricketer of the Year after earning that accolade last month.Just an astonishing year of cricket for #ABmedal-winner Steve Smith, well-documented here by @ARamseyCricket: https://t.co/ti9nADoPU8 pic.twitter.com/KXz5TFgeal
— cricket.com.au (@CricketAus) February 12, 2018
He joins Ricky Ponting (2004, 2006-07, 2009), Michael Clarke (2005, 2009, 2012-13), Shane Watson (2010-11) and David Warner (2016-17) as multiple winners of the annual award. Allrounder Ellyse Perry won the Belinda Clark Award for a second time, confirming her as Australia's best female cricketer over the past 12 months.Congratulations! Steve Smith is your Allan Border medallist. #ABMedal pic.twitter.com/Za5wEBbA9l
— Wide World of Sports (@wwos) February 12, 2018
Perry, who previously won the award in 2016, capped off a 12-month period that also saw her named the ICC's Cricketer of the Year. The crowning moment of Perry's year was her memorable double-century in the historic day-night Ashes Test against England in Sydney. Her unbeaten 213 was part of a year that saw her score 756 runs across all forms of the game to go with 20 wickets at an average of 32.Congratulations to @EllysePerry on winning the Belinda Clark Award for Australia's Women's Cricketer of the Year for the second time! ? pic.twitter.com/ls7jinZVWX
— ICC (@ICC) February 12, 2018
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