Michael Holding

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Michael Holding

West Indies
Personal information
Batting style Right hand bat
Bowling style Right arm fast
Career statistics
Tests ODIs
Matches 60 102
Runs scored 910 282
Batting average 13.78 9.09
100s/50s -/6 -/2
Top score 73 64
Balls bowled 12680 5473
Wickets 249 142
Bowling average 23.68 21.36
5 wickets in innings 13 1
10 wickets in match 2 n/a
Best bowling 8/92 5/26
Catches/stumpings 22/- 30/-

As of 25 January 2006
Source: [1]

Michael Anthony Holding (born February 16, 1954 in Kingston, Jamaica) was a West Indian cricketer. One of the quickest bowlers ever to play Test cricket, he was nicknamed 'Whispering Death' by umpires due to his quiet approach to the bowling crease. Holding was an outstanding athlete as a teenager and used skills acquired from running the 400 metres on the cricket pitch, with one of the longest and most rhythmic run-ups in world cricket. His bowling was smooth and very quick, and he used his height (6' 3 ½") to generate large amounts of bounce and zip off the pitch. He was part of the fearsome West Indian pace battery, along with the likes of Joel Garner, Andy Roberts, Sylvester Clarke, Colin Croft and the late Malcolm Marshall that devastated batting line-ups in the world throughout the seventies and early eighties.

He was a natural athlete, who in his early days was a middle-distance sprinter. He is now a broadcaster and is a member of the Sky Sports cricket commentary team. During his First class cricket career, Holding played for Jamaica, Canterbury, Derbyshire, Lancashire and Tasmania.

Holding was the bowler in what is often described as "the greatest over in Test history", which he bowled in 1981 in Bridgetown to English batsman Geoff Boycott. The first five balls increased in pace, causing Boycott to have to react very rapidly to avoid being hit. The final ball saw Boycott clean bowled, to the great delight of the crowd.[1]

According to an urban myth, during a Test match between the West Indies and England when Holding was to bowl to English player Peter Willey, the commentator at the time, Brian Johnston, described the action as "The bowler's Holding, the batsman's Willey". However Wisden states that there is no record of Johnston or anyone else actually saying this.[2].

In a limited-overs international between England and West Indies on 26 August 1976 at Scarborough, Michael Holding's return from long-leg deflected off the nearer wicket and scuttled along the pitch to break the far one with Graham Barlow and Alan Knott, on his only appearance as England's captain, stranded in mid-pitch. The dumbfounded umpires, Bill Alley and Arthur Fagg, rejected the run out appeal for reasons which remain obscure.

A less amusing incident for which Holding is also remembered was kicking over the stumps in anger at an umpiring decision in New Zealand in 1979/80. The tour had gone poorly almost from the beginning: West Indies had just finished a long tour of Australia, and were perhaps resentful about having a tour to unglamourous New Zealand immediately afterwards (their leading batsman of the time, Viv Richards, refused to tour).[citation needed] West Indies felt that the umpiring had been incompetent and against them throughout. After one decision by the West Indian bête noir, umpire Fred Goodall, Holding turned and kicked the stumps.Template:There is a photograph in the 1981 edition of Wisden, page 67

Despite modest batting talent, he holds the record for the most sixes in a Test career for any player with fewer than 1000 career runs. He hit 36 sixes in his Test career, placing him at 32 in the all-time list. Remarkably almost a quarter of his Test runs came by way of sixes. Currently, Holding is one of the more respected cricket commentators in the world. His distinctive Caribbean accent and observations have proved popular wherever he is heard.[citation needed]

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