Nasser Hussain new England captain (24 June 1999)
Nasser Hussain has accepted the invitation of the England selectors to become the new England cricket captain, it was announced today
24-Jun-1999
24 June 1999
MEDIA RELEASE
Nasser Hussain has accepted the invitation of the England selectors
to become the new England cricket captain, it was announced today.
Hussain, 31, the captain of Essex, will take charge for the first
Cornhill Test against New Zealand at Edgbaston starting on July 1.
The length of his appointment will not be fixed, but instead will
last until either the selectors or Nasser decide that a change is
required.
Announcing the appointment, Chairman of Selectors David Graveney
said: "We have had some good results in the past year, most notably
our series win against South Africa, and our victory in the Melbourne
Test against Australia was memorable.
"However, we failed to regain The Ashes, we lost heavily in the
finals of the Carlton and United Series in Australia, and our failure
to reach the second stage of the World Cup was a huge disappointment.
"Throughout this time, Alec Stewart has shouldered his responsibilities
as captain, top-order batsman and wicketkeeper manfully and we would
like to thank him for his efforts in charge. However, there is no
doubt his form has suffered.
"Alec has been a key player for England and we hope he can continue to
be so for some time to come, but in view of his recent form and the
recent results of the team the selectors feel the time has come for
a change.
"That decision has not been rushed because we were keen to make sure
we were not simply making a change as a knee-jerk reaction to our World
Cup performance.
"As it is, by taking our time we are satisfied we have made the right
decision, and that decision is to turn to Nasser. We feel he is the
right candidate and the right man to lead us into the future.
"He has plenty of experience of cricket at all levels, has served a
long apprenticeship as a vice-captain to both Michael Atherton and
Stewart and in our conversations with him he has shown a huge passion
for what is a massive job"
Nasser Hussain said: "This is a huge honour, the biggest one in the
game, and I'm delighted and immensely proud to accept the selectors'
invitation to lead the England side.
"It's now time for us to look forward rather than reflect on what has
gone before and to focus all our efforts on achieving a consistently
winning side.
"We certainly have the players to beat the best sides in the world, but
we have to do it on a more consistent basis.
"Now is the time for us all to try and end that inconsistency and to
start winning regularly, and that needs to begin against New Zealand
this summer."
Hussain added: "I would also like to pay my own tribute to Alec. He
has handled an incredibly difficult job with real dignity and integrity
and it was an honour to play under him."
Hussain has been England vice-captain on tours of Zimbabwe and New
Zealand (1996/7), West Indies (1997/8) and Australia (1998/9). He has
already captained England in a one-day international, leading the side
to a six-wicket win over New Zealand in Auckland in February 1997.
Nasser and Chairman of Selectors David Graveney will speak to the media
at a press conference at the ECB's offices at Lord's at 12 noon on Friday
25 June.
Nasser will then join the selection panel to help choose England's squad
for the first Cornhill Test, which will be announced at 11 am on Sunday
27 June.