Jonathan Neil "Jonty" Rhodes
is a former South African Test
and One Day International cricketer
who played for the South African cricket team between 1992
and 2003.Rhodes was born in Pietermaritzburg,
Natal
Province, South Africa. As a right-handed batsman he was noted for his quick running,
however he was especially noted for his fielding, particularly catching, ground
fielding and throwing from his most common position of backward point.
The Jonty Rhodes
legend may have begun with the diving run-out of Inzamam-ul-Haq during the 1992
World Cup but it would never have grown as it did without genuine substance.
Rhodes worked harder than anyone else in a team of hard workers, frequently
delaying the team bus at the end of practice for one more round of reflex
catches hit from ten metres or less. Nobody has ever fielded better in the key
one-day position of backward point, where he leapt like a salmon, threw off
balance, and stopped singles by reputation alone. He laboured just as hard over
his batting which needed, and underwent, a complete technical overhaul in 1997
- whereupon he averaged 50 for the rest of his Test career, until he gave it up
to concentrate on one-day cricket in 2000. The problem was a tendency to bring
the bat down from gully and through to midwicket, a legacy of the extraordinary
hockey skills that brought him selection for the Olympic Games in 1996 - an
offer he had to refuse. Few batsmen have turned the quick single into a finer
art form, and his willingness to experiment and adapt enabled him to lead the
way with the reverse-sweep under Bob Woolmer's tutelage. But Rhodes was just as
likely to delay the bus by relentlessly signing autographs for gaggles of
persistent children; the arrival of his own, a daughter, was instrumental in
his semi-retirement. Indeed, Rhodes may have become the first cricketer to
claim paternity leave. Rightly, there is give and take in Rhodes's life. He has
more endorsements than any team-sport player in South Africa's history, is at
the forefront of the sporting dotcom revolution, and is constantly exploring
the boundaries and horizons of commerce. His final retirement was hastened by
an inopportune finger-fracture early in the 2003 World Cup, although there was
still time for a successful farewell season in county cricket for
Gloucestershire.
During his career he
also played club cricket for the University of Natal in Pietermaritzburg and first-class cricket for Gloucestershire County Cricket Club,
KwaZulu-Natal
and Natal. Rhodes retired from Test cricket in 2000 and from one day cricket in
2003 after an injury during the 2003 Cricket World Cup.Rhodes also
represented South Africa at hockey, and was chosen as part of the 1992 Olympic Games squad to go to Barcelona;
however, the squad did not qualify to go to the tournament. He was also called
up for trials to play in the 1996 Olympics but was ruled out by a
hamstring injury.
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