ads

Wednesday 1 April 2015

MALCOLM DINZIL MARSHALL (WEST INDIES)

Introduction:

Malcolm Denzil Marshall (born 18 April 1958-4 November 1999) was a West Indies cricketer.He is a fast bowler, Malcolm Marshall is regarded as one of the fastest pacemen ever to have played Test cricket. His Test bowling average of 20.94 is the best of anyone who has taken 200 or more wickets. He achieved his bowling success despite being, by the standards of other fast bowlers, a short man, he stood at 5 feet 11 inches ''1.80 m'', while most of the great quicks have been well above 6 feet ''1.8 m'' and many great West Indies fast bowlers, such as Joel GarnerCurtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh, were 6 feet 6 inches ''1.98 m'' or above. He generated fear some pace from his bowling action, with a dangerous bouncer. Malcolm Marshall lower middle order batsman with ten Test fifties and seven first class centuries.

Personal Life:

Malcolm Marshall was born in Bridgetown, Barbados. His father, Denzil Marshall, was a policeman, but died in a traffic accident when Marshall was one year old. His mother, Eleanor ''nee Welch'' remarried and Malcolm Marshall had one half brother and one half sister. He grew up in the parish of Saint Michael, Barbados and was educated at St Giles Boys' School from 1963 to 1969 and then at Parkinson Comprehensive from 1969 to 1973.
He was partly taught cricket by his grandfather, who helped to bring him up after his father's death. He played cricket for the Banks Brewery team from 1976. His first representative match was a 40 over affair for West Indies Young Cricketers against their English equivalents at Pointe a PierreTrinidad and Tobago in August 1976. He made nought and his eight overs disappeared for 53 runs.
Malcolm Marshall's initial senior appearance was a Geddes Grant/Harrison Line Trophy ''List A'' match for Barbados on 13 February 1978, again he made a duck and did not take a wicket. Four days later, he made his first class debut against Jamaica, and whilst he failed to score runs, he claimed 6-77 in the Jamaican first innings. On the back of this single first class appearance he was selected to tour India in 1978/79, many first choice West Indies stars being unavailable having committed themselves to playing World Series Cricket. Malcolm Marshall heard of his selection on the radio while working in the store room at Banks Brewery and later claimed he did not know where India was.

Career:

Malcolm Marshall made his Test debut in the Second Test at Bangalore on 15 December 1978. He immediately developed a career long antipathy to Dilip Vengsarkar due to his aggressive appealing. Despite doing little of note in the three Tests he played on that tour, he did take 37 wickets in all first class games, and Hampshire saw enough in him to take him on as their overseas player for 1979, remaining with the county until 1993. He was in West IndiesWorld Cup squad, but did not play a match in the tournament. Hampshire were not doing well at the time, but nevertheless he took 47 first class wickets, as well as picking up 5-13 against Glamorgan in the John Player League.
Malcolm Marshall came to prominence in 1980, when in the third Test at Old Trafford he accounted for Mike GattingBrian Rose and Peter Willey in short order to spark an England collapse, although the match was eventually drawn despite Malcolm Marshall taking 7-24. After 1980/81 he was out of the Test side for two years, but an excellent 1982 season when he took 134 wickets at under 16 a piece, including a career best 8-71 against Worcestershire, saw him recalled and there after he remained a fixture until the end of his international career. In seven successive Test series from 1982/83 to 1985/86 he took 21 or more wickets each time, in the last five of them averaging under 20. His most productive series in this period was the 1983/84 rubber against India, when he claimed 33 wickets as well as averaging 34 with the bat and making his highest Test score of 92 at Kanpur. A few months later he took five in an innings twice at home against Australia. At the peak of his career, he turned down an offer of US$1 million to join a rebel West Indies team on a tour to South Africa, still suffering international sporting isolation due to apartheid.
By 1984 Malcolm Marshall was seen as one of the finest bowlers in the world, and he demoralised England that summer, especially at Headingley, where he ran through the order in the second innings to finish with 7-53, despite having broken his thumb whilst fielding in the first innings. He also came out to bat at number 11 in West Indies' first innings despite his injury, allowing his team to gain a further psychological advantage as Larry Gomes completed an unbeaten century ''Malcolm Marshall batted one handed that day, with one arm in plaster''. In that series, too, he also ended Andy Lloyd's Test career after just half an hour after hitting him on the head. West Indies won the "black wash" series 5-0.
In 1984/85 he had another successful series at home against New Zealand, although there were calls for his bouncers to be ruled as intimidatory beyond what was acceptable, and that Malcolm Marshall should have been admonished by the umpires. A rising delivery broke the nose of Mike Gatting, England's captain, in a one day match in February 1986, Malcolm Marshall later found bone fragments embedded in the leather of the ball. As well as the bouncer, however, Malcolm Marshall succeeded in swinging the ball in both directions. He also used an in-swinging yorker as well as developing an effective leg cutter, and with the exception of the 1986/87 New Zealanders, against whom he could only manage nine wickets at 32.11, no side seemed to have an answer to him.

1988 saw his career best Test performance of 7-22 at Old Trafford, and he ended the series with 35 wickets in five Tests, at 12.65. Malcolm Marshall was coming towards the end of his international career, moreover, and though he took 11 wickets in the match against India at Port of Spain the following winter, he played his last Test at The Oval in 1991. His final Test wicket, his 376th was that of Graham GoochMalcolm Marshall's final appearances for West Indies came in One Day International cricket, the 1992 World Cup. However, in his five matches in the tournament, he took just two wickets, both in the penultimate game against South Africa at Christchurch. This was the only time Malcolm Marshall played for West Indies against South Africa in his career, though he played provincial cricket for Natal in both 1992/93 and 1993/94. Whilst playing at Natal, his experience was invaluable, and his guidance was an influential spark in the early career of Shaun Pollock. Today, Shaun Pollock attributes much of his success to his mentor, MarshallHe was in the Hampshire team that won the 1992 Benson & Hedges Cup. He played for Hampshire again in 1993, taking 28 wickets at a shade over 30 runs apiece, but that was to be the end of his time in county cricket, and in 1994 his only game in England was against the South Africans for the Scarborough President's XI during the Festival. He played five matches for Scotland in the 1995 Benson and Hedges Cup without much success, and his last senior games were for Natal in 1995/96. In his very last senior appearance, against Western Province in a limited overs game at Cape Town, the first of his two victims was his former international team mate Desmond Haynes. He took over 1,000 wickets for Hampshire, and received more than £60,000 ''tax free'' in his benefit year in 1987.

Death:

Malcolm Marshall became coach both of Hampshire and the West Indies, 'In 1996', although the latter's steadily declining standards during this period brought a considerable amount of criticism his way. In 1999, during the World Cup it was revealed that Malcolm Marshall had colon cancer. He immediately left his coaching job to begin treatment, but this was ultimately unsuccessful. He married his long term partner, Connie Roberta Earle, in Romsey on 25 September 1999, and returned to his home town, where he died on 4 November aged forty one.
"The worldwide outpouring of grief," wrote journalist friend Pat Symes, "was testimony to the genuine love and admiration he engendered." At the funeral service at the Garfield Sobers Gymnasium in Wildey, Barbados, former West Indies fast bowler Rev. Wes Hall siffilated the last rites in the belief that Malcolm Marshall, having found God again in the last few weeks of his life, was off to Heaven. His coffin was carried at the service by five West Indies captains. He was buried at St Bartholomew's Church, BarbadosThe Malcolm Marshall Memorial Trophy was inaugurated in his memory, to be awarded to the leading wicket taker in each England v West Indies Test series. Another trophy with the same name was set up to be the prize in an annual game between Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago.
Malcolm Marshall Memorial cricket games are also played in Hands worth Park, Birmingham. On the Sunday of the UK's August bank holiday, invitation XIs play against an individual's "select eleven".
The entrance road to Hampshire's ground the Rose Bowl is called Marshall Drive in memory of Malcolm Marshall and another West Indies Hampshire great Roy Marshall.

for more click here


No comments:

Post a Comment