Mark Vermeulen - a short biography
Mark Vermeulen, former Zimbabwe Under-19 captain, is generally regarded as one of Zimbabwe's most promising young batsmen and has recently been rewarded with a place in the Zimbabwe A team to tour Sri Lanka in April 2000
John Ward
16-Mar-2000
FULL NAME: Mark Andrew Vermeulen
BORN: 2 March 1979, at Harare
MAJOR TEAMS: Mashonaland (1997/98); CFX Academy (1998/99),
Matabeleland (1999/2000)
KNOWN AS: Mark Vermeulen
BATTING STYLE: Right Hand Bat
BOWLING STYLE: Off Break Bowler OCCUPATION: Professional
cricketer
FIRST-CLASS DEBUT: Mashonaland A v Matabeleland, at Bulawayo
Athletic Club, 23-25 October 1997
TEST DEBUT: Still awaited
ODI DEBUT: Still awaited
BIOGRAPHY (March 2000)
Mark Vermeulen, former Zimbabwe Under-19 captain, is generally
regarded as one of Zimbabwe's most promising young batsmen and
has recently been rewarded with a place in the Zimbabwe A team to
tour Sri Lanka in April 2000.
Unusually for a white Zimbabwean player, Mark has little family
background in cricket, although he does have an uncle on his
mother's side who is involved in administration in Matabeleland.
Coming from an affluent family, though, he has been able to
overcome this problem with enough money to help him along
financially, attending sound cricketing schools and by his own
application and determination.
Mark was a regular but not a particularly dedicated player until,
he says, he was in Form Two at high school, when in the first
game of the season he scored a century for the first time, and
this was the turning point in his life. From then on, he has
never wanted to follow any other career but one in cricket. "It
became like a disease that caught me and never wanted to let go,"
he smiles.
He first played the game at St John's Preparatory School in
Harare, getting into the school colts team at the age of about
ten. He started as a wicket-keeper, taking over in his second
match after the regular keeper had a poor match, and also opening
the batting. In his next two years, in the school first team, he
began to bowl off-spin as well. Strangely he does not remember
playing cricket before then at home like most young Zimbabwean
white players do; he played a bit of tennis, but when he became
keen on cricket he turned the family tennis court into an indoor
cricket centre, complete with a bowling machine.
He did well enough in the school team to be selected for the
Harare Schools team in the primary schools cricket week, scoring
a number of forties but getting no further due to the
limited-over nature of the matches, and taking wickets in every
match. In one game against Springvale School near Marondera, he
took seven wickets for 11 runs, which remains the best bowling
performance of his career. He did well enough to be selected for
the national Under-13 team, the Partridges, mainly as an
off-spinner, although he opened the batting as well.
When he went to Prince Edward High School he began keeping wicket
again, and was appointed captain of the side as well. "Those
first three years were really brilliant, captaining the side. It
was fun and the team spirit was excellent at Prince Edward," he
says. "The black guys there really enjoy their cricket and the
facilities are all there, and I think the headmaster Clive Barnes
is fantastic." He admits that they had a good team, losing only
about three matches in three years, and including players like
David Mutendera.
In Form Two there came that match against Lomagundi School when
he scored 127 not out, opening the batting, which changed his
direction in life. He usually opened at high school, which he
still likes to do in one-day cricket, but prefers number three in
the longer matches. When he went into the first team in Form
Four, they already had a wicket-keeper so Mark started bowling
again. His batting still dominated, though, as he scored a
century in his fourth match, the first century for the school
first team for about five years. His time in the first team also
included a school tour to England, when he averaged 45.
In 1996 Mark was involved in an unhappy incident which could have
had a serious effect on his future career. He returned from the
tour to England to find his reputation had gone ahead of him and
that the word had gone round other schools that they had to get
Mark Vermeulen out quickly if they wanted to win the game. He
felt that some of the masters of opposing teams were unfairly
giving him out as the opposition's leading batsman, and on this
occasion he got a big bottom edge from his bat on to his pad, yet
was given out lbw. Something snapped; he felt he had again been
cheated out and he knocked all the stumps out of the ground as he
stormed off to the pavilion.
This was a most uncharacteristic lapse, as Mark is normally
philosophical and able to handle his dismissals and failures, but
it had serious repercussions. He was suspended from school and
dropped from the Mashonaland Schools team. Fortunately he had a
strong supporter in Mr Bill Flower, father of Test players Andy
and Grant. When nobody else would support Mark, Bill took it
upon himself to speak in Mark's favour to the people involved and
earned him another chance the following year.
Mark feels that Bill has had a greater influence on his career
than any other individual. "I owe a lot of respect to Mr
Flower," he says. "He's come round to my house and given me
private lessons. He's really been a fantastic man for the
psychological as well as technique, and he's been a great help to
my game."
Mark had a run of bad form which resulted in his failing to gain
selection for the national Under-15 team, but regained his place
for the national schools side. He spent two years in that team,
as captain in his final year, and three years in the national
Under-19 team, the final two as captain, which included the
Under-19 World Cup in South Africa. During that time he toured
England in 1997, when his opponents included Ben Hollioake, and
scored 50 in the first unofficial Test at Edgbaston and 134 in
the second at Northampton.
The following season he led the Zimbabwe team to the Under-19
World Cup, when they were placed in the only group of four to
contain three Test-playing nations, West Indies and Australia
also being in the group. They lost to Australia, Mark scoring a
dashing 69, but beat Papua-New Guinea, with Mark scoring 112 off
84 balls. Then came the crucial match against the West Indies,
with the winner to go through to the Super League. After a
flying start chasing 235 to win, Mark scored 63 to help his team
to a five-wicket victory with about five overs to spare, and this
he names as the greatest moment of his career to date. This made
him the leading run-scorer in the preliminary round of the
competition. Unfortunately Zimbabwe lost all their Super League
matches due to the failure of the top-order batsmen, including
Mark.
Mark first started playing club cricket at the age of 14, obliged
to join Old Hararians as he was a Prince Edward pupil. He
continued there until the incident with the umpire, when the club
said they had to back the school and refused to play him any
longer. He moved to Old Georgians for two seasons, playing
mainly for the second team with only an occasional first-team
game as they had a very strong batting side. He made some big
centuries for the second team, but when he turned 18 he decided
to move again to Harare Sports Club where there was a vacancy for
an opening batsman.
He played his first match for the Sports Club third team, but
John Traicos, who had already been giving him some coaching, saw
him playing and was so impressed that he had him promoted to the
first team for the next match. He began batting at six or seven,
though, but the following season they gave him a chance as opener
against Old Georgians, when he scored 107 and became a fixture
there.
After leaving school Mark was not interested in following any
career apart from cricket. He has been over to England to play
club cricket each year, although he will be unable to do so
during the 2000 season as the Zimbabwe A tour of Sri Lanka cuts
across the English season and clubs are unwilling to take on
players who will not be available for a full season.
In 1997 his English experience came with the national Under-19
team, and the following year he played for Alderley Edge in
Cheshire, a wealthy club, and in 1999 for Betley in the North
Staffordshire league. He became the first club professional to
score 1000 runs in a season for them.
In 1999 he had a year at the Zimbabwe Cricket Academy, and for
the next two years has been posted, as part of his three-year
contract, to Matabeleland, where he will play and coach. His
Under-19 captaincy experience stood him in good stead, as he was
immediately appointed captain of a young Matabeleland Logan Cup
team. He has also played for the Zimbabwe B team, but he
acknowledges the debt he owes to his parents for their support
throughout his career, including financial.
Mark intends to make cricket his permanent career, and even when
he eventually finishes playing wants to go into coaching or
administration; he does not visualise himself as a person who can
do an office job or sit behind a desk all day. He realises that
to have an international career behind him would be a great help.
"With sport these days there are no short cuts," Mark says. "You
have to put in a lot of effort and a lot of work if you want to
get to the top level, and that's basically what I've been trying
to do for the last three or four years that I've been out of
school."
Mark's highest career score is 155 off 98 balls against
Griqualand West in a warm-up match for the Under-19 side just
before the World Cup. He feels that this is so far the best
innings of his life. Playing for the Zimbabwe Board XI against
Border in the UCBSA Bowl competition during the 1999/2000 season
he scored 143, batting at number three, in his first Board match
of the season. He had suffered a poor start to the season, apart
from an 84 against Queens, an attack that included Heath Streak,
Henry Olonga and Pommie Mbangwa. Then came a two-month period
when league cricket in Harare almost came to a standstill because
of visiting international teams, and he lost momentum. He was
therefore overlooked for the Board XI, but had a lucky break when
injuries to others and national call-ups led to the selectors
recalling him. He is a player who needs to play regularly to
maintain his best form, and finds that difficult with only one
league match every weekend during the Zimbabwe season.
Mark is basically an attacking batsman who likes to get on with
the game, although at first-class level he is still finding his
way. Despite being over six foot tall, he plays more off the
back than the front foot and prefers bowling short of a length.
The hook, pull and cut are his most profitable strokes, but he
can also drive off either foot. He likes to dominate the
bowling: "I think if you go out there to bat and you're not going
to dominate the bowling you might as well stay in the pavilion.
You have to go out there and show who's the boss."
In the field Mark is a specialist slip fielder, preferring the
first slip position. He began his 1999 season fielding in the
covers, but in about the fifth week his team needed one wicket to
win and two overs left and he was brought in to third slip. The
batsman snicked a ball that Mark could see would fall short of
second slip, so he dived across and caught it just off the
ground. After that he became a regular at first slip for them.
*** Best friends in cricket: Doug Marillier and Neil Ferreira.
"We get along very well, different characters all three so we
make a good combination when we get together. We have a lot of
fun together when we go out, and we were all at the Academy
together last year. We enjoy playing ten-pin bowling and a bit
of golf here and there. I think that's probably why they sent us
to three different provinces this year!"
*** Immediate ambitions: "To do very well in this Logan Cup. I
have to work hard and try to get myself a maiden first-class
century, and then off to Sri Lanka for six weeks starting in the
middle of April. Hopefully they will give me a chance in the
side, because since I made that 143 they haven't actually played
me. It's four-day cricket, so there are opportunities not only
to get hundreds but to get double-hundreds."
*** Views on cricket: "I'm trying to push in Zimbabwe, trying to
make Logan Cup cricket four-day cricket as well; in three-day
cricket you're really struggling to get a result, unless you do
what our two sides have done [in the Matabeleland-Manicaland
match] and get both sides bowled out in one day. If you make
first-class cricket over four days, as it should be and as it is
in most countries round the world, then you give batsmen the
chance to get not only hundreds but double-hundreds. It also
gives the bowlers the opportunity to bowl to a player without
having to rush to bowl teams out.
"I think we need to get more cricket being played in Zimbabwe.
All I'm trying to do is play cricket, and it's been very
frustrating for me this season, with very little cricket. I go
over to England and just playing in a league, and there are 300
leagues in England, there are 26 league games in one season and
12 cup games, 36 to 38 cricket matches. I counted how many
league fixtures there are in Zimbabwe this season and there are
only 17 in six months, which is not really good enough. But I
suppose they are trying to get more cricket all the time, and
this Logan Cup for me now, followed by the Sri Lanka tour - if
the whole season was like that I'd be over the moon."
*** Most difficult opponents played so far: "Glenn McGrath as a
quick bowler is very difficult. He gets very close to the
stumps, making you play the ball all the time, and he seams it
both ways. Not very often does he bowl you a bad ball; it's
always on a good length, no half-volleys, and he'll bowl you the
odd short one at pace. I think he's been the most difficult
bowler to face.
"The quickest bowler for me has been Brett Lee, who came here for
the Australian Academy. We played them at Alexandra Sports Club,
and he showed in the recent World Series that he's actually the
quickest bowler in the world. As a spinner I didn't get to face
Shane Warne when they came, but I did face Anil Kumble two
seasons ago, and I feel that he's the best spinner I've faced."
*** Other sports played: "I play the odd round of golf if I get
the opportunity; I might knock a tennis ball around, but really
it's 100% cricket. I work on fitness and strength at the gym
every morning, usually, practise for a couple of hours a day and
then coach in the afternoon, as I've been doing in Bulawayo this
year.
"I used to throw the javelin at school; I was the national
javelin champion at Under-15 level, and my older brother also
throws the javelin, so it's been in my family. My dad still
holds the record at Falcon College. I played rugby at junior
school for the first team, but once I went to senior school I
only played it to make up time in the winter season. From Form
Two it was just cricket."
*** Interests outside cricket: "I enjoy most ball sports; I like
to hit a golf ball. That feel of hitting a ball sweetly is why I
enjoy cricket so much, hitting it off the middle of the bat, the
timing of the ball. I study cricket, watching the greats such as
Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara on video; I can just sit and watch
them all day long, even if they're blocking the ball - there's so
much class and style, it's fantastic to watch. That's what I
spend a lot of my time doing, studying the great players, trying
to make myself a better cricketer."