Graham Gooch

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Graham Gooch

England
Personal information
Full name Graham Alan Gooch
Nickname Zap, Goochie
Born 23 July 1953 (1953-07-23) (age 54)
Whipps Cross, Leytonstone, England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Role Batsman
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm medium
International information
Test debut (cap 461) 10 July 1975: v Australia
Last Test 3 February 1995: v Australia
ODI debut (cap 34) 26 August 1976: v West Indies
Last ODI 10 January 1995: v Australia
Domestic team information
Years Team
1973 – 1997 Essex
1975 – 2000 MCC
1982/3 – 1983/4 Western Province
Career statistics
Tests ODI FC LA
Matches 118 125 581 614
Runs scored 8900 4290 44846 22211
Batting average 42.58 36.98 49.01 40.16
100s/50s 20/46 8/23 128/217 44/139
Top score 333 142 333 198*
Balls bowled 2655 2066 18785 14314
Wickets 23 36 246 310
Bowling average 46.47 42.11 34.37 31.15
5 wickets in innings 0 0 3 1
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 3/39 3/19 7/14 5/8
Catches/stumpings 103/– 45/– 555/– 261/–

As of 7 December 2007
Source: Cricinfo

Graham Alan Gooch, OBE (born July 23, 1953) is a former cricketer who captained Essex and England. He was one of the most successful international batsmen of his generation.

Gooch was born in Whipps Cross Hospital, Leytonstone, in East London. He was educated at Norlington School for Boys, in London.

Gooch played first-class cricket regularly between 1973 and 1997. His debut in Test cricket came in 1975 against Australia, and was marked with a 'pair'.[1] He scored 6 and 31 in the next game of the series, and was dropped from the side. He was not selected again until 1978. He had a further hiatus in his career when he went on the controversial 1982 rebel tour of South Africa, which resulted in all of the players concerned being banned from Test cricket for three years.

Upon the expiration of the ban, Gooch played for England for many years, but blossomed late in his career after being appointed captain at the end of the "summer of four captains" in 1988. He scored a record 456 runs in the Lord's Test against India in 1990, 333 in the first innings and 123 in the second. As of 2006, this is the only instance in any first-class cricket of a batsman scoring 300 and 100 in two innings of the same match,[2] and his aggregate of 456 for the match remains a world record for a Test match.[3] In the following year against West Indies he scored a match-winning 154 not out, carrying his bat throughout England's second innings against a highly rated pace attack, while only two of his colleagues reached double figures. The veteran sportswriter Frank Keating rated this as the finest Test innings he had ever seen in England (see external link below), This opinion was vindicated by the ICC rankings, which confirmed it as the highest-ranking innings of all time at any venue.

Rated among the best batsmen in the world for most of the early 1990s, his skills started to fade as his Test match career went on past the age of 40. After the fourth Test match of the 1993 Ashes series fellow opening batsman, Michael Atherton, was appointed his successor as captain. In 1995, at the age of 41, Gooch retired from Test match cricket as England's all-time highest run scorer. Over his 118 Test career, Gooch played with a record 113 different team mates. He scored 44,846 runs in all first-class cricket at an average of 49.01, including 128 centuries. Although a number of players have scored more first class runs, if List A matches are also considered — in which he scored a further 22,211 runs, itself a world record[4] — Gooch lays claim to the title of most prolific top flight batsman of all time. Gooch also bowled occasional medium pace, and took over 200 first-class wickets. He could be a prodigious swinger of the ball if conditions suited. In dead matches he could sometimes be seen doing impressions of fellow professionals' bowling styles, most famously against India in 1979.

Gooch had a public falling-out with David Gower, the contemporaneous England batsman, particularly after Gower hired a vintage aircraft and 'buzzed' the ground where England was playing during the unsuccessful tour of Australia in 1990/91. Gooch contributed to the decision to omit Gower from England's tour of India in 1993, which proved so controversial that an extraordinary vote of no confidence in the selectors was passed at the MCC.[5] Gower never played another Test, lending an ironic edge to Gooch's surpassing him as England's leading run scorer in the 1993 Ashes series.

Gooch's ruthless approach to physical training also courted controversy during England's 1992 World Cup campaign, especially with Ian Botham. Hints were dropped that Gooch's unrelenting regime had led to burn-out within the team[citation needed], culminating in their losing the final to Pakistan, whom they had been on course to defeat easily in a rain-affected match earlier in the tournament.

For Essex, Gooch scored 120 in the 1979 Benson and Hedges Cup final against Surrey, a match which saw Essex win a major domestic trophy for the first time in their history. This heralded a highly successful period for the county, with Gooch a key member of a team that won the county championship six times in the years 1979-1992, and also won every other major domestic trophy at least once in the same period. Gooch holds numerous Essex batting records: in particular he scored the most first-class runs in a season (2559, scored in 1984 while banned from playing for England), and made more first-class centuries (94) for the county than any other player. Essex record partnerships for both the first and second wicket were set by Gooch and Paul Prichard.

Upon his retirement, Christopher Martin-Jenkins wrote an article in Wisden Cricketers Almanack arguing that Gooch was the all-time highest run scorer in top level cricket, if one day matches were taken into account.

In the mid-1990s, faced with a receding hairline, Gooch began promoting hair transplants for a London-based clinic, as well as the Australian-based Advanced Hair Studio. Two licensed computer games were made by Audiogenic, Graham Gooch's Test Cricket in 1985 and Graham Gooch World Class Cricket in 1993.

He made a one-off return to first-class cricket in July 2000, just a few days before his 47th birthday, when he captained MCC against New Zealand A at The Parks. It was not a successful comeback: Gooch made only 0 and 5 in the game.

In October 2001, he returned to Essex in the capacity of head coach, taking over from Keith Fletcher. Gooch held this role until stepping down in March 2005, although he remains at the club, continuing as the squad's specialist batting coach whilst also assuming commercial duties for the county.

In 2007 he announced his intention to compete in a beach cricket competition against Courtney Walsh's Team and Allan Border's team.

Graham Gooch's test career performance graph.
Graham Gooch's test career performance graph.


[edit] References

  1. ^ Cricinfo - 1st Test: England v Australia at Birmingham, Jul 10-14, 1975
  2. ^ Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2006, pages 275–276
  3. ^ Tests — Most Runs in Match from Cricinfo
  4. ^ 10,000 or More Runs in ListA Matches, CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 September 2006
  5. ^ When Gower's tour took off. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2006-11-06.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
John Emburey
David Gower
English national cricket captain
1988
19891993
Succeeded by
David Gower
Mike Atherton
Preceded by
Keith Fletcher
Keith Fletcher
Essex cricket captain
19861987
19891994
Succeeded by
Keith Fletcher
Paul Pritchard