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Dean Jones (cricketer)

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Full name
  
Dean Mervyn Jones

Role
  
Bowling style
  
Right arm off spin

Spouse
  
Jane Jones

National side
  
Batting style
  
Right-handed

Name
  
Dean Jones


Dean Jones (cricketer) Pakistan Super League 2016 Dean Jones joins Islamabad as

Born
  
24 March 1961 (
1961-03-24
)
Coburg, Victoria, Australia

Test debut (cap 324)
  
16 March 1984 v West Indies

Last Test
  
13 September 1992 v Sri Lanka

ODI debut (cap 79)
  
30 January 1984 v Pakistan


Died
  
24 September 2020 (aged 59) Mumbai, India


Similar
  
Geoff Marsh , Allan Border , David Boon

Profiles

Dean jones career highlights cricket


Dean Mervyn Jones AM (born 24 March 1961) was a former Australian cricketer, who played Tests and One Day Internationals for Australia. He worked as a coach and as a sports commentator as well.

Contents

Dean Jones (cricketer) ExAus cricketer Dean Jones to turn golf pro IBNLive

Domestic career

Dean Jones (cricketer) wwwsmhcomauffximage20060808deanjonesnarr

Jones began his first class career in the 1981–82 season with Victoria in the Sheffield Shield. Jones also played for Durham and Derbyshire in the English County Championship. He left Derbyshire in mid-season and also had run-ins with authority and team mates in his home state of Victoria. During his career, he scored 19,188 runs in first class matches, including 55 centuries and 88 half centuries and a highest score of 324 not out, at an average of 51.85.

International career

Dean Jones (cricketer) Dean Jones TopNews

He was selected on the 1984 tour of the West Indies after Graham Yallop had to pull out due to injury. He was not picked in the original XI, but was drafted into the side after Steve Smith fell ill. Jones himself was very ill before the Test, and deemed his score of 48 on his debut as his "best knock". Between 1984 and 1992, Jones played 52 Test matches for Australia, scoring 3,631 runs, including 11 centuries, at an average of 46.55.

Dean Jones (cricketer) Australian cricket in desperate need of another hero Dean

His most notable innings was in only his third Test against India in the Tied Test in Chennai (Madras) in 1986. Suffering from dehydration in the oppressively hot and humid conditions, Jones was frequently vomiting on the pitch. He wanted to go off the field "retired ill" which led his captain Allan Border to say that if he could not handle the conditions, "then let's get a Queenslander" (Greg Ritchie, a Queenslander like Border, was the next man in to bat). This comment spurred Jones to score 210, an innings he considered a defining moment in his career and one of the epic Test innings in Australian cricket folklore. This innings of 210 remains the highest score by an Australian cricketer in India.

Jones was one of Australia's most successful batsmen in One Day International matches. In 164 matches he scored 6,068 runs, including seven centuries and 46 half centuries, at an average of 44.61. His strike rate of 72.56, while pedestrian by modern standards, was a benchmark at the time. Jones played in the 1987 World Cup winning team, and was noted for his electric running between the Wickets, outstanding out-fielding and aggressive batting especially against fast bowlers. With his positive, aggressive and flamboyant style of play he became a crowd favourite.

Jones went on to be a mainstay of the Australian Test team middle order over the next six years and being one of the stars of the successful 1989 Ashes tour of England. He was controversially dropped from the test team at the start of the 1992–93 season, despite having topped the averages in the previous Test series, against Sri Lanka.

Jones stayed in the one-day team a little longer: he was omitted from the one-day team for the 1993 Ashes tour, but managed to force his way back into the team for one last stint during the 1993–94 season, before being dropped .

Jones was a coach and a commentator as well after retirement.

After cricket

He was also a noted fundraiser for people with cancer. On 12 June 2006, in the Queen's Birthday Honours List, he was made a Member (AM) of the Order of Australia for "service to cricket as a player, coach and commentator, and to the community through fundraising activities for organisations assisting people with cancer".

Jones publicly expressed his disappointment at not being considered for selection as coach of the Indian cricket team in 2005; another former Australian batsman Greg Chappell was selected instead.

Pakistan Super league

He was currently the Head Coach of Islamabad United in PSL 2016 and they won the first ever PSL in Feb-2016

Controversy

Jones' commentating contract with Ten Sports was terminated after referring to South African player Hashim Amla as a "terrorist" on 7 August 2006. When Amla, who is a Muslim with a full beard, took a catch, Jones was heard to say "the terrorist gets another wicket". Jones made the comment during a commercial break, but the comment went to air live in South Africa as its broadcast had not been interrupted. He has since apologised to all concerned.

Death

Jones died on 24 September 2020 in Mumbai due to cardiac arrest.

References

Dean Jones (cricketer) Wikipedia