HE already has a statue erected in his honour in his home town but Narromine's favourite son Glenn McGrath is set to be honoured once again.
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The man known as 'Pigeon' is the latest Australian to receive cricket's highest accolade after it was announced he would be inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame.
The sport's governing body announced on Monday the right-arm speedster, who claimed 563 Test wickets in 124 Tests from 1993-2007, would become the third inductee in 2012-13 after West Indian maestro Brian Lara and Englishwoman Enid Bakewell were honoured in September.
The ceremony for McGrath will take place on Friday during the lunch break of the second day of the third Test between Australia and Sri Lanka on his home ground of the SCG.
The 42-year-old will become the 68th male member of the Hall of Fame in recognition of a career that also included 250 one-day internationals and playing in three straight World Cup-winning sides in 1999, 2003 and 2007.
McGrath took more Test wickets than any other seam bowler - current or retired - while he sits second behind leg-spinning legend Shane Warne (708 wickets) as Australia's leading wicket-taker.
"I am very much looking forward to celebrating the occasion with not only my friends and family, but all those at the SCG which is of course like a second home to me," McGrath said in a statement.
Alan Davidson, Fred Spofforth and Belinda Clark were inducted into the Hall of Fame last year to join fellow Australians including Don Bradman, Richie Benaud, Allan Border and Dennis Lillee.
The SCG will be bathed in pink in support of cancer charity the McGrath Foundation on the third day of the Test.
The pink day has become a tradition of the new year test, honouring the memory of McGrath's first wife Jane, who succumbed to the disease in 2008.