Devon Malcolm
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Devon Malcolm England (Eng) |
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Batting style | Right-handed batsman (RHB) | |
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Bowling type | Right arm fast | |
Tests | ODIs | |
Matches | 40 | 10 |
Runs scored | 236 | 9 |
Batting average | 6.05 | 3.00 |
100s/50s | 0/0 | 0/0 |
Top score | 29 | 4 |
Overs bowled | 1413.2 | 87.4 |
Wickets | 128 | 16 |
Bowling average | 37.09 | 25.25 |
5 wickets in innings | 5 | 0 |
10 wickets in match | 2 | n/a |
Best bowling | 9/57 | 3/40 |
Catches/stumpings | 7/0 | 1/0 |
As of 17 May 2005 |
Devon Eugene Malcolm (born 22 February 1963) was an English cricketer.
Malcolm was one of England's few genuinely fast bowlers of the 1990s. Born in Kingston, Jamaica, he settled in England, making his first-class debut for Derbyshire in 1984 and qualifying to play for England in 1987. He played in 40 Test matches for his adopted country, but his short-sightedness and poor fielding (although he had a powerful throw), his perceived profligacy with the ball and his undoubted ineptitude with the bat (although he was able to strike the ball powerfully and scored some sixes at Test match level, especially against slow bowlers), meant that he took part in just ten One Day Internationals. His under-average ability as a batsman seemed however to add to his popularity, and he was often given a big cheer when he went out to bat, more often than not at no. 11, a position for which he was often in competition with Phil Tufnell in the England line-up. In contrast to most batsmen, his bat usually did not carry the insignia of any cricket equipment company.
Malcolm's chance to play for England came when several members of the then current Test team announced their intention to take part in a rebel tour to South Africa during the 1989 Ashes series, thereby disqualifying themselves from selection for the rest of the series. He was lucky to make his first international appearance in the Fifth Test of against an Australian cricket team already 3-0 up in the series, and his first day in international cricket ended wicketless. But then, so did all his team-mates', for this was the occasion on which Mark Taylor and Geoff Marsh batted together unbeaten throughout the first day. On the second day of the match, Malcolm finally managed his first scalp at this level, and it was a good one - that of Steve Waugh for a duck - although it made little difference to the outcome, and Australia crushed England by an innings. Malcolm scored 14 runs in his two innings at the bottom of the order, including a four and a six, which perhaps raised false hopes as to his batting ability. He also scored his top Test score of 29 off only 18 balls in a later series against Australia, which included three fours and two successive sixes off Shane Warne[1]. Other "high" Malcolm scores included 20 against the West Indies and 15 not out against India in a last wicket stand with Eddie Hemmings including a powerfully struck six.
On 20 August 1994, playing for England against South Africa at The Oval, Malcolm was hit on the helmet by a bouncer while batting against Fanie de Villiers. He was incensed by this, and hit back with his greatest spell of international bowling, ripping through the South African batting order to finish with figures of 9-57, at the time the sixth-best innings analysis in the history of Test cricket. His performance was subsequently ranked 91st in Channel 4's 100 Greatest Sporting Moments in 2002. It was also the best bowling analysis, in Test cricket, by an English fast bowler in the 20th Century.
Malcolm's relationship with the then England team manager Ray Illingworth became strained and culminated in a row during the following series against South Africa in 1995-96 [2]. He was also reported to have had disagreements with England's then bowling coach, Peter Lever [3]. Malcolm bowled poorly with the second new ball in the final test which allowed Dave Richardson and Paul Adams to make 73 for the last wicket.[4]
Malcolm's eight-year England career came to a close in the final Test of the 1997 Ashes series at The Oval. His international career thus ended as it had began - in a losing Ashes side - albeit this time on the winning team in the match itself. It was an undistinguished goodbye; Malcolm took just one wicket in the 14 overs he was allowed (with the third ball of Australia's second innings, trapping Matthew Elliott leg before), and was out without scoring in both innings. Although he took over 100 wickets for his country, his final Test bowling average - over 37, as against under 30 for Derbyshire - told its own story; Malcolm was simply too expensive at this level.
He remained a highly effective bowler in county cricket, however, and in 1998 Malcolm moved to play for Northamptonshire. Two years later moved again, this time to Leicestershire, for whom he played his final first-class match in 2003. In his final season Malcolm claimed over 60 wickets and acheived one 10-wicket haul [5]. He passed 1,000 first-class wickets with Leicestershire [6].
[edit] Malcolm trivia
Malcolm was named as one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1995.
In one match, with Derbyshire requiring less than 15 runs in their second innings to win, Malcolm was promoted up the order to open the innings, scoring three boundaries to ensure a 10-wicket win.
In the 1997 Ashes Series against Australia, he again hit three boundaries in one innings (this time at No. 11, not at No. 1) before jumping vertically to a slower ball from Glen McGrath and allowing himself to be bowled.
Having retired from the first-class game Malcolm continues to ply his trade for Dunstall Cricket Club in the Derbyshire Premier League.
He authored a book entitled "You guys are history" and also made a guest appearance on The Weakest Link - although he did not win, he survived several elimination rounds.