Jason Young - a short biography
MAJOR TEAMS: CFX Academy
John Ward
09-Mar-2000
FULL NAME: Jason Alan Young
BORN: 22 July 1979
MAJOR TEAMS: CFX Academy. Present club team: Alexandra Sports
Club
KNOWN AS: Jason Young
BATTING STYLE: Right Hand Bat
BOWLING STYLE: Right Arm Medium Fast
OCCUPATION: Cricket Academy student
FIRST-CLASS DEBUT: CFX Academy v Mashonaland, at Country Club
(Harare), 3-5 March 2000
TEST DEBUT: Still awaited
ODI DEBUT: Still awaited
BIOGRAPHY (March 2000)
Jason Young is an all-rounder who is in his second year at the
CFX Academy in Harare. Although generally regarded more as a
bowler who can bat, it was with the bat that he impressed most on
his first-class debut recently in the Logan Cup for the Academy
against the strong Mashonaland team. He was the only batsman to
exceed even 20 in both innings, with scores of 47 and 34. Both
were innings of great determination, the first after a
middle-order collapse and the second with his team fighting to
secure a draw.
Unusually for a white cricketer in Zimbabwe, who enjoyed until
independence in 1980 a cricket culture to the exclusion of the
blacks, Jason does not come from a cricketing family, his father
having been a soccer player. The only cricket he remembers
playing at home was at the age of about ten, when an uncle and
his cousins came round to visit on Sunday afternoons and they
would enjoy a family knock-around then.
He was fortunate, though, to attend Eaglesvale, a keen cricketing
school, and was drawn into the game there from about Grade 4
onwards. He was primarily a bowler at that time, and admits to
having only one shot as a batsman - a hoick across the line! He
later worked hard to improve that and now considers himself an
all-rounder. Certainly in his debut first-class match he played
with a straight bat, although a heave to midwicket did bring
about his dismissal in the first innings.
Jason always wanted to bowl quick, but he later realised his
limitations and is now a capable seamer at just above medium
pace. At junior school, striving for pace, he quickly earned a
place in the school colts team and spent three years in his
junior school first team, not a common achievement. He cannot
remember his best performances at junior school, but when
progressing to Eaglesvale High he remembers taking eight for 17
against Churchill. His batting was coming along, and he recorded
a score of 96, also against Churchill, at a high schools
festival.
His ambition had always been while in the lower forms to play for
the school first team, which he achieved when in Form Three, and
he used to sharpen his game by practising with older pupils such
as Gary Brent and Darlington and Everton Matambanadzo. He also
attended a bowling course run by the former England and Rhodesian
all-rounder Robin Jackman in 1997 which he feels helped him a
great deal. In his last year at school Stephen Mangongo took
over the first team and Jason appreciated him as a coach who knew
how to get the best out of him. He was captain for most of his
high-school career.
He first played representative cricket at Under-15 level, for the
Mashonaland provincial team, having scored a century in a school
match against Prince Edward School, which he feels tipped the
balance in favour of his selection now it was known he had skills
as an all-rounder. He did not make the national side at that
level but was named as a non-travelling reserve. He later
progressed to the national Under-19 team which played in the
South African Schools Week in Grahamstown and the Under-19 World
Cup in South Africa in January 1998. In the schools week he took
four wickets against Boland as his best bowling performance, but
got little chance with the bat. He played in three World Cup
matches, bowling tightly against Australia without any luck, and
scoring 28 not out and taking two wickets against Sri Lanka, but
failing against New Zealand.
While at the Week in Grahamstown, Jason met Gwynne Jones, the
current director of the CFX Academy, who was coaching at St
Andrew's College there, and Gwynne told him about the planned
Academy in Harare. Jason duly applied and was accepted. He
worked hard at his game at the Academy during 1999 and was one of
three players invited back for a second year. "You never stop
learning," is his comment.
Jason began playing club cricket at the age of about 16, for
Harare Sports Club, for whom he played for three years. In those
days, he says, Harare Sports Club were the number one side to
play for, with good players and good coaches, including John
Traicos, and a good side to train with, and this was what
attracted him. After three years, though, he felt the club was
going downhill, especially after the departure of Traicos for
Australia, and for the current season moved on to play for
Alexandra Sports Club, feeling he could further his cricket more
effectively there, and is sure he made the right decision.
At Harare Sports Club also he was considered mainly as a bowler,
and took quite a few hauls of three wickets; in the 50-over
league more than that is rare, especially for one who is
considered as an accurate stock bowler whose job it is to keep it
tight. At Alex he has had more opportunity with the bat and
contributed several twenties and thirties.
He did not have too many games for the Academy in 1999, and
finished the year with a back injury. His most memorable game
was against the Australian Academy, when he bowled well to take
four wickets; this he names as the proudest achievement of his
career to date. In the English season he played club cricket for
Barnard's Green in Worcester, a good experience for him although
the standard was not as high as league cricket in Zimbabwe. He
naturally had to adjust to English wickets, which he found slower
than those in Zimbabwe, but as the season progressed he improved.
He made a good start with five wickets for 11 runs in his first
match, and finished the season with a batting average of 32 and a
bowling average of 28.
Jason recovered from his back injury early in 2000 and took his
place back at the Academy. He has recently attended a coaching
course given by the former Australian pace bowler Carl Rackemann
and feels he has benefited a great deal from this, especially in
the placement of his feet during delivery.
He has been working on his batting with Murray Goodwin at Alex,
and his favourite shots are the drives, especially through the
covers, and the pull. He used to favour wristy strokes, a legacy
from playing squash, but has learned to play straighter recently.
He would prefer to bat around number six, given the choice. As
a bowler his stock ball moves away off the seam, while he has a
useful slower ball and claims to use reverse-swing. He is a
quick fielder who is usually posted at places like midwicket or
cover.
As a bowler he has found most difficulty so far in his career
bowling to Warwickshire's Zimbabwean Trevor Penney, who he finds
works the ball around well and is therefore hard to bowl to. He
also names Stuart Carlisle and Andy Flower as good opponents who
don't give their wickets away easily. As a batsman his most
formidable opponent has been pace bowler Brett Lee of the
Australian Academy team, while he also mentions Eddo Brandes.
In the near future, Jason hopes to play in England this coming
season, and his aim on his return will be to gain a place in the
Zimbabwe Board XI, and then hopefully on to the full national
side. "I want to give a warning to the present players I'll be
coming through, so they had best be on their toes," he smiles.
Jason also plays a lot of squash to keep up his fitness and
develop `his hand-to-eye co-ordination with the ball. He also
enjoys some hockey now and then, when he can play in the cricket
off-season. He represented his school at both sports. Outside
cricket he has an interest in architecture, having passed
technical drawing at O-level, and motor mechanics. He enjoys
socialising in his spare time, visiting night clubs 'now and
then', dancing and, away from the city, hunting and fishing.