Chris Cowdrey

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Chris Cowdrey
England
Personal information
Full name Christopher Stuart Cowdrey
Nickname Cow, Woody
Born 20 October 1957 (1957-10-20) (age 50)
Farnborough, Kent, England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Role All-rounder, commentator
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right arm medium
International information
Test debut (cap 510) 28 November 1984: v India
Last Test 21 July 1988: v West Indies
ODI debut (cap 78) 23 January 1985: v India
Last ODI 17 February 1985: v Australia
Domestic team information
Years Team
1992 Glamorgan
1976 – 1991 Kent
Career statistics
Tests ODI FC LA
Matches 6 3 299 333
Runs scored 101 51 12252 6846
Batting average 14.42 25.50 31.90 27.05
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 21/58 2/42
Top score 38 46* 159 122*
Balls bowled 399 52 14523 7740
Wickets 4 2 200 204
Bowling average 77.25 27.50 39.81 29.30
5 wickets in innings 2 1
10 wickets in match 0 0
Best bowling 2/65 1/3 5/46 5/28
Catches/stumpings 5/– 0/– 295/– 108/–

As of 30 March 2008
Source: Cricinfo

The Honourable Christopher Stuart "Chris" Cowdrey (born 20 October 1957 in Farnborough) is a former English cricketer, and current cricket commentator for the British national radio station, TalkSport. Cowdrey played for Kent, Glamorgan and England as an all rounder. He is the eldest son of the cricketer and life peer, Colin Cowdrey.

After a strong season in county cricket in 1984, Cowdrey was selected for David Gower's 1984-85 tour of India, ostensibly taking Ian Botham's place after Botham had opted out of the tour. Although Cowdrey scarcely did himself justice with either bat or ball he was a very popular member of a successful team that was touring under difficult circumstances. Mrs. Gandhi had very recently been assassinated and just days into the tour Percy Norris, the British Deputy High Commissioner, was also murdered. The presence of an ebullient individual such as Cowdrey was crucial to maintaining team morale. He was responsible for a famous comment about Mike Gatting. During one bowling spell he was asked by Gower if he wanted Gatting 'any wider at slip', Cowdrey replied 'if Gatt gets any wider, he'll split!'

Following the tour Cowdrey was not selected until 1988, the "summer of four captains", when he was summoned from a successful season leading Kent to try his hand at captaining England in the fourth Test of a five match series against the West Indies, after Gatting and John Emburey had been tried and then jettisoned. Alas, Cowdrey was out of his depth as a player although his captaincy was viewed by most as imaginative but England still lost heavily. After the Test match Cowdrey's foot was badly bruised during a county game. Urged to pull out of the 5th match at The Oval by the manager, Micky Stewart, Cowdrey did so but was dismayed to see Allan Lamb, the side's star batsman, being given a fitness test on the morning of the game. Replaced by Graham Gooch as captain for the 5th Test, Cowdrey was not reinstated or even selected for the one-off match against Sri Lanka that followed the West Indies series and vented his anger in an interview in The Sun. This was regarded as a disciplinary matter by the TCCB who fined him £500.

Colin and Chris Cowdrey were only the second father and son combination to have both captained England, emulating Frank and George Mann. Chris also emulated his father by captaining Kent from 1986 until 1990. He retired in 1992 after a single season at Glamorgan, and has since become a successful broadcaster for TalkSport as well as the occasional project with Sky Sports. Chris worked with TalkSport from 1999, commentating on the 1999/2000 England tour to South Africa. He established a successful commentary double act with Mark Nicholas and Geoffrey Boycott whilst working on a number of England tours, including the live rights to famous series victories in Pakistan (2000), Sri Lanka (2001) and West Indies (2004). He has also done some freelance TV work in India on Test matches. He has had two sons, Fabian and Julius.

[edit] External reference

Preceded by
Chris Tavaré
Kent CCC Captain
1985 - 1990
Succeeded by
Mark Benson
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