HOME | WORLD CUP 99 | AUSTRALIA | INTERVIEWS |
March 22, 1999 |
The Rediff Interview /Dean Jones'At times I couldn't stop myself from urinating in my trousers'India first woke up to your ability thanks to the tied Test in Madras. Could you take us through your memories of that epochal knock of yours, the agonies and the ecstasies?
The only disappointing thing about that Test was that I left my Man of the Match award behind in the rooms -- I'd dearly love to have that one here with me, at home. Talking about prized trophies, did you know that the bat with which I scored all those runs in the Tied Test is eagerly sought after by collectors around the world? I believe the highest bid so far is US $110,000. Your fight against dehydration in course of that knock remains an enduring image -- from what we hear, Allan Border minced no words when he was 'motivating' you to go on?
My tactics for the last part of my knock was to block three balls and then just muster up some energy and slog the next. Luckily, it worked out. Border did motivate me, in his own way -- when I was on 174, I was racked with pain, dehydration, felt like I had pins and needles in my hands, added with the fact that at times I could not stop myself from urinating in my trousers. I mentioned to AB that I had had enough, and sure enough his reply was quick: “Lets get a tough Australian out here then, if you can’t handle it anymore. Let’s get a Queenslander!. Greg Ritchie can handle this!” So I told what he could do with his tough bloody Queenslander, and batted on! The 1987 World Cup saw you fit into the pivotal number three slot in the Australian team. What was the team's collective mood like, going into the tournament? At that point in time, Australia was rated around seventh or eighth among the contenders -- how did you, and the side, feel about that?
Everyone was rippling fit, where Bob Simpson worked heavily was on our fielding skills. We formed team plans that we believed were very successful. We had a theory that the team that makes the most singles will win 85% of the time.
The early games of the 1987 campaign saw the Aussie side just about scraping through -- against India, against New Zealand, then the defeat at the hands of India in New Delhi... before finally making it to the semis for the first time since 1975. Could you take us through those games, your personal highs and lows? Looking back at the World Cup in 1987, apart from our great efforts in the finals, the game that turned everything for us from an Australian point of view was the very first game against India in Madras. It was such an important game to us psychologically, to beat India on their own turf, and it did not go without controversy.
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