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Wes Ball ist ein US-amerikanischer Filmregisseur. Wes Ball (* Oktober ) ist ein US-amerikanischer Filmregisseur. Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben; 2 Filmografie; 3 Weblinks; 4 Einzelnachweise. Wes Ball speaking at the San Diego Comic Con International, for "The Maze Runner", at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California. Hier findest du alles zu Wes Ball. Entdecke alle Filme von Wes Ball. Von den Anfängen seiner Karriere bis zu geplanten Projekten. Alles zu Wes Ball (*) bei swtadeusz.eu · Hier findest du alle Filme von Wes Ball, Biografie, Bilder und News · swtadeusz.eu Maze Runner - Die Auserwählten in der Brandwüste ("The Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials") (USA) mit. Kaya Scodelario, Dylan O'Brien Regie: Wes Ball.

They have imagination and don't like planning things in advance. They're flexible and good at improvising. Like many famous people and celebrities, Wes Ball keeps his personal life private.
Once more details are available on who he is dating, we will update this section. The year-old American director has done well thus far.
Zodiac Sign : Wes Ball is a Scorpio. People of this zodiac sign like truth, being right, longtime friends, teasing, and dislike dishonesty, revealing secrets, passive people.
The strengths of this sign are being resourceful, brave, passionate, a true friend, while weaknesses can be distrusting, jealous, secretive and violent.
The greatest overall compatibility with Scorpio is Taurus and Cancer. People born under this sign are persistent and straightforward.
They have a strong faith and can be seen as stubborn in their old ways. Back the early 2, B. Astrologers and astronomers could only work with planets visible to the eye.
Fact Check : We strive for accuracy and fairness. Hall bowled the final over in two famous Test matches, the Tied Test against Australia in and the Lord's Test against England in Years of non-stop cricket and resultant injury reduced Hall's effectiveness in the latter part of his Test career.
After his playing days Hall entered Barbadian politics, serving in both the Barbados Senate and House of Assembly and appointed Minister of Tourism in He was also involved in the administration of West Indies cricket as a selector and team manager and served as President of the West Indies Cricket Board from to Hall was later ordained a minister in the Christian Pentecostal Church.
In he was created a Knight Bachelor for services to sport and the community. Hall was born in Saint Michael , Barbados—"just outside the walls of [HM Prison] Glendairy "—to a teenaged mother, his father a sometime light-heavyweight boxer.
At the time the leading schools in Barbados played against grown men in the elite Division 1 of the Barbados Cricket Association and Hall was exposed to a high standard of cricket at an early age.
After completing his schooling, Hall found employment with the cable office in Bridgetown. Hall played for the Cable Office cricket team and it was there that Hall took up fast bowling.
In a match against Wanderers , Hall was asked to fill in when his team's regular opening bowler was absent. He took six wickets that day and decided that bowling would be his path to the West Indies team.
Swanton 's XI in Hall, still very young and inexperienced, did not take a wicket in the match, his first-class cricket debut.
Based partly on this promise, Hall was selected in the West Indian squad to tour England in Despite great enthusiasm, Hall struggled in the unfamiliar surroundings, unable to pitch the ball anywhere near the wicket.
Originally left out of the West Indies team to tour India and Pakistan in —59, Hall was called into the team as a back up for the Trinidadian Jaswick Taylor after the all-rounder Frank Worrell withdrew from the team at a late stage.
Hall made his debut in the first Test against India at Brabourne Stadium at Bombay and met with almost instant success. He dismissed the Indian opener Nari Contractor for a duck and quickly followed than with the wickets of Pankaj Roy and Vijay Manjrekar.
The West Indies were not as successful in the three Test series against Pakistan , losing the first two Tests before winning the final Test—the first time Pakistan had lost a Test match at home.
In the second Test at Dacca , Hall relied on movement through the air rather than sheer pace and had Pakistan reeling on stage, five wickets down for only 22 runs made 22—5 [15] In the third Test at Bagh-e-Jinnah in Lahore , Hall made history by becoming the first West Indian to take a hat-trick in Test cricket.
His victims were Mushtaq Mohammad aged 15 and in his debut Test match, at the time the youngest cricketer to play Test cricket , Nasim-ul-Ghani and Fazal Mahmood.
Hall once again performed well when England toured the West Indies in — Wisden remarked that Hall "with a lovely action, genuine speed and remarkable stamina" was "always the biggest threat to England.
This included bowling M. Smith out for a duck for the second Test in a row. By this stage, Hall had "burned himself out" and he bowled only four overs in the England second innings as the West Indies pushed for a series-equalling win.
Unfortunately for the West Indies and Hall, England held on for a draw and won the series one Test to nil. The —61 Test series against Australia is one of the most famous in the history of Test cricket and Hall played a major role in its outcome.
The West Indies set Australia a target of runs to win the match. Hall broke through early, taking the wickets of Bob Simpson and Neil Harvey , followed, after some stubborn resistance, by Norm O'Neill.
Hall was entrusted by his captain Worrell to bowl the last over of the day with Australia needing four runs and West Indies needing three wickets to win the game.
In one of the most exciting finishes in Test match history, Hall had Benaud caught behind , then dropped a catch and two Australian batsmen were run out trying to make the winning run.
The match finished in a tie , the first in Test cricket. Over the course of the series both teams had striven to play bright, attractive cricket and the Australian public took the West Indian team to their hearts.
Hall and the West Indies were farewelled with a ticker-tape parade through the streets of Melbourne. Hundreds of thousands of Australians keen to express their appreciation for the team brought the city to a standstill and reportedly brought Hall and his teammates to tears.
His popularity in Australia saw Hall invited to play with Queensland for the —62 Sheffield Shield season.
Hall returned for a second season with Queensland in —63, taking 33 wickets for the season as Queensland again finished runner-up in the Sheffield Shield, this time to Victoria.
Queensland were keen to see Hall return for another season in —64 but Hall declined, fearing his body would not stand up to the strain.
After his first season with Queensland, Hall returned to the Caribbean to join the West Indies team in their Test series against India in Hall took up where he left off against the Indians two years before.
The Indians were a better batting side than the one Hall destroyed in the sub-continent in but they were still unable to come to terms with his pace.
Possessing a long hostile run-up to the wicket, with an equally long follow-through, Hall bowled as though he meant to take a wicket with every delivery.
Nobody will ever forget his famous last day in the Test at Lord's when he bowled on and on, hour after hour.
The success of Hall and his fast bowling partner Griffith saw the arrival of the West Indies pace duo in England for the Test series "greeted with the public awe and press build-up formerly accorded to [the Australians] Ted McDonald and Jack Gregory or Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller.
Only the intervention of captain Frank Worrell saw the three join the tour. Hall was "the ideal foil" for Griffith and played an invaluable support role.
Analysis of film footage at this time showed Hall bowling at mph. With Griffiths bowling from the other end batsmen had nowhere to hide.
Perhaps Hall's greatest performance of the English summer was in the second Test at Lord's. On the final day of the Test, Hall bowled unchanged for minutes, broken only by the tea interval.
As in the Tied Test in Brisbane three years earlier, Hall found himself bowling the final over of the match with both sides still capable of winning.
The Times said of Hall that day, "His energy was astonishing, his stamina inexhaustible, his speed awesome, from the first ball to the last". Hall himself claimed that it was his "finest hour".
Hall bowled two successive bouncers to the England opening batsman Brian Bolus , prompting umpire Syd Buller to speak with West Indies captain Worrell saying, "We don't want this sort of bowling to get out of hand otherwise I will have to speak to the bowler.
The Australian tour of the West Indies in —65 was somewhat overshadowed by concerns about the bowling action of Griffith, whom the visitors considered a " chucker ".
West Indies held on to win the series two Tests to one—the first time the West Indies defeated Australia in a Test series. The picture of Wesley Hall in full flow as he ran towards the wicket is still treasured in the memories of all but the opposing batsman—and maybe in theirs as well.
As a result of their huge support in , the West Indies were invited to tour England again only three years later.
Despite the England press and public fearing the impact of Hall and his partner Griffith, it was soon clear that their powers had waned somewhat since Hall's "action was as poetic as ever and his commitment was just as great, but something was missing.
Retrieved December 4, Omega Underground. Discussing Film. Retrieved February 17, Retrieved December 3, Films directed by Wes Ball.
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