Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Swinging the bat from field to boardroom . . . The runs, ups and downs of Hamilton Masakadza

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JUST a month after former captain Hamilton Masakadza decided to hang his boots in September 2019, he was appointed the director of cricket by Zimbabwe Cricket.

Masakadza, who debuted at just 17 years of age, had a long-lasting 19-year internatio­nal career during which he represente­d his country more than 300 times in 68 Tests, 209 ODIs, and 66 T20Is.

Du r i ng his internatio­nal career, he scored 2 000 Test runs, apart from belting 5 658 runs and bagging 39 wicket s in ODIs.

Masakadza retired impressive from

in a with an hand of 71 only 42 balls thrilling victory over Afghanista­n during the Bangladesh T20I tri-series.

After being the captain in all three formats for his country, he was then technicall­y given the role of overseeing the appointmen­t of his successor.

“Lots of ups and downs in the career. Few highlights stand-outs, being the most capped player for Zimbabwe, Grant Flower handing me the cap when we were playing against Pakistan in Bulawayo, first overseas win in Sri Lanka, and the Test match that we won here which was my first win as Test captain.

“Have to give something back to the game, give something back to the youngsters as well. Will try to be around on the domestic circuit and bring some more guys through. All in all, really thankful to the team. All those who supported me. Lots of feelings going through me. Biggest one is lots of thankfulne­ss,” an emotional Masakadza said during the postmatch presentati­on in his farewell match.

When Masakadza struck a century on Test debut in 2001 at 17 years and 254 days, he became the youngest player to score a Test ton, a record which lasted for just over a month before Bangladesh’s Mohammad Ashraful bettered it.

The youngster also became the first black player in Zimbabwe to do so, with his 119-run knock on debut, which remains a red letter day in the country’s history. At the time, Masakadza was still a schoolboy at Churchill High School in Harare.

However, after just a year of internatio­nal cricket, Masakadza had to a take a break to complete a three-year course at the University of Free State.

As per the agreement, he was still available for Zimbabwe if required, but he could not maintain his form playing against club opposition in South Africa.

The national selectors, who had decided to wait till the batsman completed his degree, had to draft him into the squad due to the “rebel” crisis.

As expected, on a sudden return to the one-dayers, and that too against a quality England attack, he struggled to find his feet.

A maiden ODI fifty in the final game though gave him and his backers hope.

That said, his return to the Test match was not the same.

Despite not being as consistent as he would have liked, Masakadza was easily Zimbabwe’s best batsman on their tour of South Africa.

The batsman displayed the ability to bat time and play the moving ball, which many of his teammates lacked.

2009 was the best year for the batsman in ODIs as he scored over 1 000 runs in the calendar year at an average of 43.48 and a strike rate of 88.08, which also included his scores of 156 and 178 not out in the home series against Kenya.

This was the first time a batsman had got to 150 or more twice in the same one-day series. After being sacked as the Zimbabwe captain following a poor World T20, Masakadza was reappointe­d captain in 2018, a job that he kept till he decided to walk away as a player from the game. - Cricket World

 ??  ?? Hamilton Masakadza
Hamilton Masakadza

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