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Damien Martyn:
The Man for the Moments |
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A feature by Karthik
Narayan
A
martin is a bird that builds its nest the hard
way, mostly where humans live, in buildings.
Damien Richard Martyn is like a bird, he flies
every now and then for his great catches and he
also builds his innings with the bat slowly.
Elasticity was found in inanimate things in the
late 20th Century, but amongst
humans, the elastic Damien Martyn was born on 21st
October 1971 at Darwin. He is so elastic in the
field, stretching every limb to its edge and
maybe even further.
Martyn came into the
scene in 1992-93, when he got a hitchhike from
Dean Jones, now a famous commentator, at his
expense though! The lean patch and age of Dean
Jones helped Martyn get a break into a team
where one has to fight for a place in the side
and further survival!
While one majestic square
drive from the bat of Ian Bradshaw has been
talked about so highly, the very same square
drive was nearly the Waterloo for this simple
yet stylish in his own way - right-handed
batsman. In the 2nd test at Sydney in
1993-94 against the Proteas, he made that very
extravagant drive…the drive drove him back to
the drawing room. He was ousted from the team
immediately. The Aussies don’t like losing, and
they lost that test by a narrow margin of 5
runs! Chasing just 117 runs for an important
test win, the Aussies collapsed just 7 runs
short of victory. Damien would never have been
so crossed with himself. Timid McGrath could not
last that final frontier of 7 runs and gone, the
Aussies had lost at home!
Sporting an average in the high Forties in
tests, this technically savvy super star boasts
of 7 hundreds in 44 tests till date, with 161
against the Sri Lankans on the spinner friendly
pitch at Kandy in 2003-04, which is something
really commendable. He helped Australia get a
stranglehold on the game, and shave the Lions’
beards in their own Den!
Talking about Martyn’s ODI stints, he was never
the quickest scorer to begin with, but slowly he
learnt what it takes to be a ODI player, and he
learnt it quick. He was not in the team for most
of his early twenties, when he was the freshest
face in the Aussie team. Well he is still no
less fresh than what he was, but after missing 4
years of his cricketing career, he clawed on to
an opportunity against India in 1998 with all
the guts to make a Golden Comeback of sorts.
Getting back into a team where every performance
counts and every run counts is the toughest for
any player, however great his records may be.
Damien Martyn knew how hard it was to get a test
place in this Aussie team that does not take
shirkers! Finally after 5 years of exile in Test
Cricket, he was finally chosen to play for the
series in New Zealand. He managed to wedge a
decent 78 at Wellington and then an 89* at
Hamilton. At that time, that was his highest
score in Test matches.
His first hundred in tests came against England
at Birmingham in the Ashes 2001. Soon after his,
his test place was in no danger as he started to
score runs at free will. Splendid strokes
matched one another from his willow, and soon he
was back in business as one of Australia’s best
middle order batsman in contemporary times.
His first world cup was
the 1999 World Cup in England; where he could
not impress anyone with just the two matches
that he played. He scored 18 against the
Pakistani steamrollers before being bowled, and
11 against SA both at Leeds. I doubt if that’s a
record for a person having played all his
matches at the same location in a single world
cup.
But as World Cup 2003 came, he started off with
a duck in his first match against Pakistan
again, but soon found his rhythm with good
scores in that series, amassing runs when
Australia needed them most. Four fifties at
quick scoring rates helped Australia redeem
their position in this game as the World
Champions. He was injured during the course of
this world cup and missed out on the Semi Final
versus Sri Lanka, but managed to mesmerize in
his own way in that all-important Final against
the Indian team. After his captain showed the
way with a classy and all aggressive brilliant
hundred, Martyn came into the party with a super
88* at Johannesburg.
Ever since his comeback in the team in both
tests and ODIs, he has been pure ecstasy to
watch whether with the bat or in the field. Now
his role in Aussie mission to India is going to
be something else! He has to counter attack the
Indian bowlers at home having conquered the
Lankan lions. Now its time to face the Indians,
who seem to be invincible at home.
It’s his cool and calm look that has been the
reason for his success. We at Cricketfundas.com
wish him many more great days in the cricketing
field, and with this Final Frontier about to be
faced in a few days (Australia tour of India
2004)… ALL THE VERY BEST, MATE!
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