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« Why India is not Pakistan | | The sweep spot »

September 26, 2008

Posted by Mike Holmans on 09/26/2008

By the bye





Graeme Hick bids adieu to Worcestershire © PA Photos

Another Indian season gets underway, so Samir and Fox start to quiver with anticipation while I get wistful as another English season comes to its close. As they look forward to new arrivals, I reflect on departures.

Graeme Hick has gone. One day this summer, he was dismissed cheaply and walked calmly back to the pavilion. For it not to hurt when he was out meant that it did not matter, and if it no longer mattered, it was time to step away. It was entirely his own choice to end one of the greatest county careers of all time.

Few, though, have the luxury of real choice.

Mushtaq Ahmed, the legspinning lynchpin of Sussex’s recent championship-winning sides, faced surgery and rehab to have a chance of playing again and decided retirement was less trouble. Sussex already know how badly they will miss the irreplaceable Pakistani and will do well to get an overseas player even half as influential next season.

I’m not betting against Darren Gough taking up Yorkshire’s invitation to play in next year’s Twenty20, so Derbyshire’s much lesser-known Kevin Dean is as yet the only other one committed to retirement. His legendary feat was hitting the winning runs when Derbyshire beat Australia in a thrilling three-day game in 1997, though he was actually a bowler. At the beginning of the decade he was one of the most effective bowlers in the Championship, though he was never in the frame for England: the specialist medium-pacer’s main prey is the merely adequate, a species never seen in the international highlands but still common on the world’s domestic plains. Having been injured for more of the last couple of seasons than not, he has faded out of contention and has given up the unequal struggle.

However, I suspect a few others who have been released by their counties will be unable to persuade anyone else to hire them for next season.

Surrey’s Ali Brown still holds an amazing world record, having scored 268 for them in a 50-over game. He was by far the best one-day batsman in county cricket for several years, but the selectors gave him inexplicably few chances for England. Apparently they thought him flaky and unreliable, but this only deepens the mystery about his non-selection as those were the chief characteristics of the batsmen they actually picked. Now 38, he has only played one innings of note in two years and seems a spent force. If Surrey no longer want him, it’s hard to see who else would.

Northants have released Lance Klusener and Jason Brown. ‘Zulu’ was Man of the 1999 World Cup, a time when ODI crowds round the world thrilled to his spectacular firework displays; nowadays he lights a desultory couple of roman candles and hands out some sparklers before ambling off to collect his pay. With the end of the Kolpak era in sight and an ICL connection, he seems an unattractive prospect. Brown was once thought to have a future as an England spinner, but it never came to pass and after 13 good and decent years the pitches have dried up. Nine championship wickets at a cost of 80 this season will not be much of a recommendation to a county which is bound to be less spin-friendly than the one which plays at Wantage Road.

Some younger men will also be going, having failed to make the grade and leaving no lasting mark, but all of the above have provided many memories for those who saw them play. They have my thanks and best wishes for their futures.

 
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Comments

Posted by: Jan B at October 2, 2008 5:54 PM

I think you paint an unfair picture of Klusener. He's a different player to what he was in 99, but still been effective in FC cricket at least for Northants. 3359 runs @ 61.07 is not to be sniffed at.

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Samir Chopra
Samir Chopra lives in Brooklyn and teaches Computer Science and Philosophy at the City University of New York; his academic interests include the philosophical foundations of artificial intelligence and the politics of technology. In his third undergraduate year, he captained Mathematics in the departmental cricket competition (and lost to Chemistry in the first round). Samir played C-grade cricket in Sydney and makes guest appearances for his old club when possible (and desirable). Samir runs the blog Eye on Cricket and the cricket page at The Faster Times.
Paul Ford
Paul Ford is a co-founder of the New Zealand cricket supporters' cult, the Beige Brigade. He was once described by a current New Zealand cricketer as "looking spastic" even mucking about with an Excalibur and a tennis ball in the backyard. Paul bowls right-armed Nathan Astlesque "nudes", his batting would make Ewen Chatfield look elegant, and he is a committed fielder. He sometimes grows a beard to hide his double chin and inhabits a periphery of cricket that Cricinfo is proud to be glimpsing through this blog.
Stephen Gelb
Stephen Gelb grew up in Cape Town, a short walk from the beautiful Newlands ground. Always a better student of the game than player, his passion for cricket survived eight years as a student in Canada, where he learned to love baseball too. He lives in Johannesburg doing economic research at The EDGE Institute and teaching at Wits University.
Mike Holmans
Mike Holmans, a database consultant by profession, has spent thirty summers (and a few winters) going to the cricket. Brought up in one and working in the other, his dearest wish is for a season to end with Yorkshire winning the county championship by beating runners-up Middlesex by one wicket with five minutes to go. If it’s also a summer when England win the Ashes, so much the better.
Michael Jeh
Born in Colombo, educated at Oxford and now living in Brisbane - Michael Jeh (Fox) is a cricket lover with a global perspective on the game. An Oxford Blue who played first-class cricket, he is a Playing Member of the MCC and still plays grade cricket. His views on cricket might best be described as those of a "modern traditionalist". Michael now works closely with elite athletes in his job as a manager at Griffith University in Queensland.
Saad Shafqat
Saad Shafqat takes special pride that his cricket-watching life began during the three-month interval between Javed Miandad's debut Test in Lahore and Imran Khan's 12-wicket haul at Sydney. Although a practicing neurologist based in Karachi, cricket has never been far from his activities. He has co-authored Javed Miandad’s autobiography Cutting Edge and has been a contributor to Cricinfo since 2005. His regular column Reverse Swing appears fortnightly in Dawn, Pakistan’s leading English daily.
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