Passionate Irani ready to fight for England cause (17 August 1999)
So Ronnie Irani, the tall Essex all-rounder, is to bring new fire into the England dressing room at the age of 28
17-Aug-1999
17 August 1999
Passionate Irani ready to fight for England cause
Charles Randall
So Ronnie Irani, the tall Essex all-rounder, is to bring new fire
into the England dressing room at the age of 28. It sounds
optimistic, but perhaps the national side have found their man.
The Essex club and Nasser Hussain, England's captain, know all about
him. When the public address at Chelmsford announces Irani as the
next batsman or bowler, the home crowd give him a special cheer.
This buzz is not in anticipation of Bothamesque fireworks but for a
man who is passionate on the field but courteous to the public.
Essex, crowd and players alike, have learnt to appreciate him as a
fighter to the very last.
A good example of his intensity occurred during Essex's NatWest
Trophy semi-final against Glamorgan at Chelmsford two years ago.
Darren Thomas won an lbw decision against Irani, who, with his eyes
on the ball not realising he had been given out, started on a single
and ran past Thomas at the very instant the bowler, unaware of his
presence, punched the air in triumph.
By freakish timing Thomas's fist clattered into the batsman's jaw. A
frenzied Irani was convinced there had been deliberate fisticuffs.
The incident was amusing, like a Norman Wisdom scrape, but at the
time Irani looked ready to go to war, just as England will be hoping
when he wins his third cap, at the Oval on Thursday.
Mark Ilott, his Essex colleague and an England bowler, said:
"Ronnie's a winner. Some people are lacking that extra edge. Ronnie's
got that. We have thought for a long time he's a far better player
than others who have been picked for England."
Ilott added: " To him, the higher the competition the more fired up
he'll get. He won't be out of his depth at all against New Zealand."
Five years ago, in his first summer with Essex after moving from
Lancashire in search of greater opportunity, Irani drove more than
200 miles from Southend to Manchester to congratulate John Crawley
when he was selected for England. It was a spontaneous journey to
share the joy of his former Lancashire team-mate.
Irani, who is also a good footballer and basketball player, made his
Test debut against India in 1996. He played twice in that series but,
surprisingly, they are his only caps to date apart from 10 one-day
internationals.
A stress fracture of the back in 1994 knocked his career sideways,
and lumbar problems occurred intermittently until he was cured by
injections from a specialist in Munich two years ago. It was during
his visits to Germany that Irani discovered smart suits. An Essex
team-mate said: "Ronnie found that Hugo Boss suits were quite cheap
in Munich, so he used to buy a few. He has gone from having the worst
taste in clothes to being quite well dressed. "
So England have called on a fighter, who is dapper with it. It could
be a smart move.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)