Nash the quintessential team
man
By Richard Boock
From The New Zealand Herald, 2 January 1999
HAMILTON -
They consider him officer material these days, although it
was not so long ago that New Zealand Cricket effectively consigned
him to the knacker's yard.
In fact, the realisation that Dion Nash
was almost lost to cricket two seasons ago through injury
was the spur NZC required to rush in a specialist in bio-mechanics,
which - as the name suggests - involves tinkering with a human
being rather than a Holden Kingswood.
Nash, New Zealand's vice-captain in everything
but name, possibly fancies himself more as a Porche anyway.
If his hairstyle is any guide, probably a rag-top.
The 27-year-old allrounder has a strong
creative side, an eye for aesthetics, and a competitive streak
which is equally apparent whether he is playing test cricket
or snakes-and-ladders.
He is, however, an essentially private
man. The pride of Northern Districts plays a little guitar
but tends to save his command performances for the cricket
field.
It is his opportunity to role-play, his
own little theatre, and the thrill he gets from success is
evident for all to see.
The guy who figured hugely with both
bat and ball during the Kiwis' win in the second test at Wellington
is not averse to jumping into his team-mates' arms when things
go right - as Craig McMillan discovered at the Basin Reserve
this week - but is far more restrained off the park.
"Cricket's given me an opportunity to
express myself, and you don't get too many chances like that
in life," Nash said yesterday, after completing a solid workout
in the nets.
"I'm really happy to be back and fit,
and most importantly, in some sort of form."
The first player to take 10 wickets and
score 50 in a test match at Lord's, Nash missed the 1996-97
season with a back complaint and was wondering whether he
would play again before NZC became involved in his rehabilitation.
Frustrated with the injury, he could
see no light at the end of the tunnel and his enthusiasm at
times waned, but he never forgot the feeling he received from
playing cricket for New Zealand.
"It seemed a long way back at one stage
and I wondered whether it would happen, but I never forgot
how good it felt to play for New Zealand," he said. "And the
memory was great, but I was pretty keen to experience the
real thing again.
Although Nash has played in 17 tests
already, he has also missed a fair few, and tends to think
in terms of what he has yet to achieve, rather than what he
has achieved.
A maiden test century, another five-wicket
bag (he has not taken one since Lord's in 1994) - these are
the things that keep him striving for more.
He does not covet the captaincy, but
would never turn down the challenge, and if Stephen Fleming
were to be forced from the field for any reason, coach Steve
Rixon has said Nash would take over the reins.
"It's not something you seek," Nash said
of the captaincy. "Because at international level, just getting
involved is enough. You can give to the team in different
ways, no matter who you are.
"Team dynamics are fascinating stuff
and I'm right into that side of it. It's too glib to just
call it team spirit. If you can achieve a mutual sense of
respect and friendship, the guys will play for each other,"
he said.
"That's what a team's all about."
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