David Hookes
© Getty Images HOOKES , DAVID WILLIAM, died on January 19, 2004, aged 48, after becoming involved in an argument with a bouncer outside a Melbourne pub, where, as coach of the Victorian state team, he had been celebrating a
15-Apr-2005
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After a spectacular career in Adelaide schoolboy cricket and a low-key start
with South Australia, Hookes burst to fame in his second season of first-class
cricket. In 17 days in February 1977, he scored five centuries in six innings at
the Adelaide Oval, all at blistering speed. The first, 163 against Victoria, contained
four sixes in an over. A week later he smashed 185 in 191 minutes and 105 in
101 minutes against Queensland. The next week produced 135 and 156 against
New South Wales. Less than a month later, he joined the greats in perhaps the
most famous cricket match ever played: the Melbourne Centenary Test. Aged just
21, he strode to the crease looking full of confidence. Then he hit the England
captain Tony Greig for five successive fours; he matched him in the lip department
as well. Greig had taunted him at the pre-match cocktail party: "Not another
Australian left-hander who can't bat"; Hookes said that at least he was an Australian, not "an effing import". After he was out for 56, Greig brought a beer
to the dressing-room, and said: "Mind if I sip with you, son?"
Hookesy had the cricketing world at his mercy, but a greater game was afoot,
and less than two months later it became known that Hookes had joined Greig
and most of the Australian team in the rebel venture sponsored by Kerry Packer
that became known as World Series Cricket. Logically, his career would have
flourished more had he stuck with the official game. But the leading rebel Ian
Chappell was his hero, and safety first was never the Hookes style, in cricket or
in life.
On the strange, shadowed tour of England that followed, he faded into the
general mediocrity of a distracted Australian side, though he made a sweet 85 in
the rain-ruined finale at The Oval. When the Packer circus started, he seemed to
be running into form and had reached 81 at the Sydney Showground when he
was felled by a bouncer from Andy Roberts which broke his jaw. Some felt his
batting never recovered its carefree innocence; despite his name, he gave up
hooking. Certainly he never recaptured his automatic place in the Australian team.
After peace broke out in 1979, he played only two Tests in three years, cast into
the wilderness after a pair at Karachi. But in 1981-82 South Australia made him
captain, and he led them with panache to their first Shield title in six years. The
next year his old batting form came back, and with it his Test place, though his
steady performances in the Ashes series were overshadowed by one blazingly
angry innings against Victoria. Incensed by a belated declaration by Graham Yallop,
Hookes promoted himself and struck a century in 43 minutes off 34 deliveries -
the fastest-ever uncontrived hundred in terms of balls received. He made South
Australia's target, 272 off 30 overs, look momentarily plausible; he also made his
point, and made it again in the return fixture when he scored an even-time
193. His star was rising again; he was appointed vice-captain to Greg Chappell
for Australia's inaugural tour of Sri Lanka, and smacked an unbeaten 143 in the
one Test, at Kandy, the last 100 coming in a session. It was his first, and only,
Test century.
But Hookesy had to be Hookesy. He criticised Chappell's successor, Kim Hughes,
on air at a time when he was not scoring enough runs to ride the storm. From
then on, his Test appearances were intermittent and indifferent, though he played
on until 1991-92, breaking the Shield run-scoring record with the occasional
amazing innings, like his unbeaten 306 off 330 balls against Tasmania in 1986-87.
His batting was always distinctive: "Gowerish but more brutal" according to Alan
Shiell, who helped write his autobiography: "He could be elegant and he was just
as vulnerable outside off stump, but he played shots Gower wouldn't have bothered
with, flogging bowlers over wide mid-wicket or hoicking them over square leg."
The egg-shaped Adelaide Oval, with its inviting square boundaries, was made for
the Hookes style, and it gave him an edge throughout his career.
Since he was articulate as well as forthright, he became a radio star in Adelaide,
and in 1995 moved to the bigger market of Melbourne. Seven years later, Victoria
appointed him their coach; when he died, the team he moulded was on the way
to their first title in 13 years. They were celebrating a win over South Australia
at a pub in St Kilda. Outside, a bouncer, Zdravko Micevic, 21, allegedly threw a
punch at Hookes - he was charged with manslaughter.
At Hookes's funeral, his bat was placed against the stumps, with his cap and
gloves alongside; it was a trademark gesture of his when he was batting at an
interval, a sign that he would be back. In these circumstances, it was almost
unbearably poignant.
ON HOOKESY...
"Hookesy told me before the 1999 World Cup final that bowlers were attacking me from round the wicket and targeting my off stump... His observation was simple: adjust my stance slightly, then think only of playing those bowlers back down the ground. Forget the horizontal bat shots. In the end, he was spot-on - I finished the World Cup with a winner's medal and the satisfaction of scoring a quickfire 50." Adam Gilchrist
"Hookesy told me before the 1999 World Cup final that bowlers were attacking me from round the wicket and targeting my off stump... His observation was simple: adjust my stance slightly, then think only of playing those bowlers back down the ground. Forget the horizontal bat shots. In the end, he was spot-on - I finished the World Cup with a winner's medal and the satisfaction of scoring a quickfire 50." Adam Gilchrist
"We must live life to the full and make the most of each day, otherwise David
will be on your back shouting 'C'mon mate, you're here for a good time, not a
long time.' "
Caprice Gellman, stepdaughter, at his funeral.
"If all the people that came and spoke to him and said 'I was there the day you
ploughed Greigy for five fours in a row at the MCG,' Hookesy's calculations had
it that meant there would have been a crowd of 384,000 people."
Wayne Phillips
"For Hookes... valour was the better part of discretion."
Warwick Franks, Wisden Australia
"He enjoyed being provocative and at times he was impetuous, intemperate, even
outrageous. At the same time he was thoughtful and insightful and able to mentor
young men, enthuse children about a glorious game and provoke intelligent debate
about important issues of sport."
Mike Coward, The Australian
HOOKESY ON...
Australian selection policy: "When they give out the baggy blue cap in New South Wales, they give you a baggy green one in a brown paper bag as well to save making two presentations."
Australian selection policy: "When they give out the baggy blue cap in New South Wales, they give you a baggy green one in a brown paper bag as well to save making two presentations."
The woman who accused Shane Warne of telephone harassment: "Some dopey
hairy-backed Sheila trying to dob him in."
Not being a cricket administrator: "I haven't got a blue blazer and I don't have
dandruff."
His Centenary Test innings: "I made Tony Greig famous."