Modest `Dizzy` a fast bowler who declines to blow his own trumpet (7 Aug 1997)
`SPEECH!" the Australian team demanded in unison when Jason Gillespie collected his man-of-the-match award at Headingley
07-Aug-1997
Thursday 7 August 1997
Modest `Dizzy` a fast bowler who declines to blow his own trumpet
By Simon Hughes
`SPEECH!" the Australian team demanded in unison when Jason
Gillespie collected his man-of-the-match award at Headingley.
They laughed and slapped each other on the back, knowing that
Gillespie is to public speaking what Merv Hughes is to Weight
Watchers. In the end he did open his mouth long enough to say how
he was going to celebrate. "Might just have a few drinks,"
he said, "in a very short space of time."
That is the essence of `Dizzy` Gillespie. When he does anything,
he does it rather quickly. That not only applies to his bowling - one England batsman described it at Head- ingley as like
facing Allan Donald armed with late out-swing - but to his
progress in general. Little more than a year ago he was a rawboned, pony-tailed seamer who prospered for South Australia but
looked unlikely to progress further. Now he is a lithe, dedicated charger capable of generating the fastest deliveries in
the world.
Gillespie`s talent is exceeded by his determination. Playing
third grade club cricket in Adelaide aged 18, he made a $1,000
bet with a friend that he`d be bowling for Australia in five
years. He did it in three. "I was still at school so a thousand
bucks was quite a lot of money," he said, "but I was sick of
people telling me I couldn`t do it. I`d decided I wanted to
play Test cricket and was prepared to do anything to get
there. I worked really hard and got some lucky breaks. My mate
hasn`t paid me yet and he`s at Uni so I guess I`ll have to
wait a while."
Luck features a lot in Gillespie`s flat-toned explanations of
his advance. He is "lucky" someone spotted his poten- tial,
"lucky" to be around such a wonderful team, "lucky to have been
bowling down the slope at Headingley on such a green deck.
Blind Bob could have done that". (He didn`t think he bowled
that well despite his seven for 37 figures.) Even a searing
delivery in last winter`s Melbourne Test which whistled from a
length over Jimmy Adams`s shoulder and cleared Ian Healy by
two yards before cannoning into the sightscreen elicits little
gratification. "Aw, must have hit a wet spot on the pitch."
(It was as dry as a bone.)
This self-effacing style conceals Gillespie`s dizzying commitment
to the cause. He`s up at 7am every day to warm up in the hotel pool ("I`m not a morning person and I hate swimming but I
force myself to go because I think it helps") and is back there
at night for a stretch off. He is the one to beat in training
runs and sprints and does extra work on his own while the
others are catching up. He practises harder than anyone, fretting about his action, constantly seeking advice, and marks out
his run with a tape measure. In the field if you miss the earrings and the goatee, he is easily identifiable as the man perpetually swinging his arms to keep himself loose.
Who does he model himself on? "Every fast bowler looks at Dennis
Lillee as a focal point, he was just phenomenal. I have lots of
memories of Merv Hughes and Craig McDermott bowling, and I wish
I`d seen more of Rodney Hogg, I really admired him." There
are hints of Lillee in Gillespie`s long, forbidding run-up, of
McDermott in his gigantic gather at the crease, and of Hogg`s
explosion in delivery. It`s a menacing combination given its
finishing touches by Jeff Hammond, another former Australia
paceman and Gillespie`s coach in Adelaide.
Hammond happened to be on hand in South Africa when the Australians arrived last February, and his protege soon hustled
South Africa to 95 for seven in the second Test. Gillespie took
eight for 103 in the game, was timed as fast as Donald and saw
Australia to match (and series) victory in a nerveless ninthwicket stand with Healy. He took 14 wickets in the three Tests
and in the words of South Africa coach Bob Woolmer "progressed rather too quickly for our liking".
Injuries don`t seem to have held him back either. After each one
- a bad side strain in Melbourne caused by over-excitement,
hamstring damage at Edgbaston and blisters the size of golf
balls before Old Trafford - he has come back stronger and fitter. So it is hard to credit that underneath he is a quiet lad
who prefers to recline in the shadows. "I don`t deliberately stay
out of the limelight," he says, "I`m not trying to be clever
or anything, I`m just very shy. I don`t like attention."
Any more bowling like the last Test and he had better get used
to it.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)