Gary Kirsten is a former South African cricketer,
and the World Cup winning coach of the Indian cricket team. He played 101 Test
matches and 185 One-day internationals for South Africa between 1993 and 2004,
mainly as an opening batsman. His half brother Peter,
also played provincial cricket for Western Province, and then
later for the South Africa cricket team which included
the highlight of the Cricket World Cup in 1992.
As
a batsman, what stood out was his determination, the ability to concentrate for
long periods and a burning desire to score runs. A left-hander with a
relatively unique technique, Kirsten simply worked out his strengths and
weaknesses and based his game around them. In this respect he was one of the
most organised batsmen to play for South Africa since their readmission. Calm
and level-headed, he brought a healthy degree of common sense to the art of
batting, which possibly explains why off the field and in the dressing room the
dafter side of his personality came out. Periodically, Kirsten endured patches
when he persistently got out in similar fashion - chopping the ball on to his
stumps, for instance, or getting himself caught down the leg side.
Each
time this happened, though, Kirsten worked through the problem, made the
adjustments and played himself back into form. He enjoyed particular success on
the subcontinent - where other players have floundered against the turning
ball. Kirsten, though, was drawn on patience and soft hands to see him through.
And if there was any player likely to score a big hundred, then it was Kirsten.
His best of 275, a result of batting for over 14 and a half hours as South
Africa followed on against England at Kingsmead in 1999-00, was the second-longest
in Test history. He then returned to haunt England in 2003 and gutsed out a
crucial 130 in the Headingley Test, which South Africa won by 191 runs. His
good form in that series persuaded him to postpone his retirement until the end
of the New Zealand tour in 2003-04.
Kirsten made his
Test debut against Australia in Melbourne in
1993. He retired from international cricket in 2004 after crafting a
match-winning 76 in his final innings, against New Zealand. Against the same country he
had made history by becoming the first ever Protea to play in 100 Test matches.
Over the years, he
gained a reputation as being a sturdy batsman in both Test cricket and one-day
cricket. He could up the tempo of an innings if he needed to, but more often
than not he simply waited for the bad ball, much like Steve Waugh
and Justin Langer.
He was also a reliable fielder. Kirsten held the South African records for most
runs and centuries in a Test career, before both were surpassed by Jacques
Kallis. He was the first Test batsman to make hundreds against each
of the other 9 Test nations. He made a score of 275 against England as a result of batting for over 14
and a half hours as South Africa followed on at Kingsmead, still stands as the
second-longest innings (in terms of duration) in Test history. The high score
was later surpassed by Graeme Smith when he made 277 against England
in 2003. He still holds the record for highest innings by a South African in a
One Day International; 188 not-out made against the United Arab Emirates
during the 1996 World Cup, which is the sixth highest
innings of all time in One-Day International cricket, and the highest score in World Cup cricket
history.
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