Kiwis need a revitalising dash of Nash
By Derek Pringle
From the Independent, Wednesday, July 21, 1999
The New Zealand all-rounder is in the form of his life and
returns to Lord's tomorrow hoping to revive his side's Test
fortunes against England.
One of the greatest insults of modern times is to be considered
dull and boring. Even in cricket, where being boring, especially
among batsmen, was occasionally something to be admired -
Geoff Boycott based an entire career on it - the term is not
one you would want to be stuck with. Unfortunately for New
Zealand it has clung fast almost since their induction into
Test cricket 70 years ago. For Dion Nash, the New Zealand
vice-captain, the charge appears to be somewhat wide of the
mark. An all-rounder, Nash is currently enjoying some of the
best form of his life, with career bests in both batting (135)
and bowling (7 for 39) in the recent match with Hampshire.
These were followed by a dashing 66 against Kent at the weekend
and he comes to Lord's for tomorrow's second Test in a dangerous
- almost Bothamesque - mood.
"We need to put this series on the map," Nash said after
practice yesterday. "In order to get the public's interest
up we need to win the next Test and that's what we've been
working on.
"We were disappointed the way things turned out at Edgbaston.
Collapsing in the second innings there swung things so drastically
England's way, it was hard to come back. Still we can take
some positives and apart from bowling well, we did manage
to score 226 on a difficult pitch."
Off the field Nash, especially in his younger days, was none
too conformist, either. On a particularly riotous tour of
South Africa in 1994-95, he and two team-mates, Stephen Fleming
and Matthew Harte, were caught smoking cannabis at a barbecue.
Instead of being sent home they were suspended mid-tour for
three matches.
If it was a moment he would rather forget, it has not been
without its benefits. By being men enough to own up to the
charge, he and Fleming, the current captain, now find themselves
at the helm, their careers maturing rather than going up in
a puff of smoke.
The incident, which surprised many of his acquaintances,
was sandwiched between Nash's first tour of England in 1994
and his 18-month absence from the game due to a back injury
in 1996. On that tour of England, Nash, now 28, almost bowled
his team to victory at Lord's.
As England clung on for dear life on the last day, Nash finished
the drawn match with figures of 11 for 165, the third best
in history after Bob Massie and Sonny Ramadhin. Once again
Lord's had bestowed its benevolence on a visitor rather than
one of its own.
"I don't remember being particularly fired up for it," Nash
said yesterday, in response to the perennial question of why
Father Time and his hallowed surrounds tend to inspire opponents
rather than hosts. "Mind you, looking back on it, I probably
was keyed up for it but just didn't realise it at the time.
"The home of cricket is a fantastic place to play and when
I was growing up in Auckland, I always dreamed of playing
there. Most players who tour will only get one or two chances
to play a Test there. England get more opportunity, which
may be why it's different for them."
According to Angus Fraser, a colleague during the Kiwi's
stint in county cricket, Nash feels that his feat at Lord's
was as much a burden as an achievement, in that it suddenly
raised public expectation of him.
Certainly it got Middlesex interested in him - no mean feat
for a county used to employing big names - and they signed
him for two seasons as their overseas player, one of which
had to be aborted when he injured his back.
"The attraction to me was a combination of Lord's and London.
Middlesex are one of the best counties around and I was encouraged
by my first season, which I really enjoyed."
The feeling was reciprocated and Fraser remembers a "top
lad" with a serious side who also wanted to sample life. "He
was far more mature than Middlesex players of the same age,"
recalls Fraser. "But then so was Jacques Kallis, our overseas
pro in 1997. They just seem more worldly than our lot."
Apparently Nash, along with fast bowler Richard Johnson,
used to clear the Middlesex changing-room when they went out
to bat, their duels against fast bowlers and bouncers the
cause of endless hilarity. Fraser, in the Cricketers' Who's
Who, listed the confrontations under his "Relaxations", though
many would claim that was a bit rich, coming from the man
who perished to the up-periscope-prod more often than most.
A graduate in History and Sociology from the University of
Otago, the injury - a burst disc was finally diagnosed - kept
him out for 18 months.
"Suddenly my cricket career looked over and the reality of
a nine-to- five job became almost too much to bear."
It was that realisation which forced him to give the game
another go and it was while preparing to bowl again using
the Pilates method of stabilising the lower trunk - also employed
by Michael Atherton and Jason Gillespie - that he was able
to devote more time to his batting.
If he has lost a yard of pace with the ball, his batting
has improved to the point where New Zealand's lower order,
with Chris Cairns and Adam Parore at No 6, and Nash at No
8, look more dangerous than their top five. On song, the trio
are anything but boring and England will do well to be on
their guard against them over the next few days.
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