Wisden
Tour Summary

The Zimbabweans in Australia, 2003-04

Chloe Saltau


Australia roused themselves from a two-month hiatus to play a Test series at home in October, in a nation preoccupied with the rugby World Cup, and against one of the world's lowliest Test nations. It had all the makings of an unremarkable, predictable series. But Zimbabwe's first Test tour of Australia, one-sided as it was, was better than that. It was better because of Matthew Hayden.

Hayden cast a muscular shadow over the series. His Test-record 380 at Perth defined and elevated a contest that would otherwise have been lost among the more common pursuits of early Australian spring. The great shame was that only 8,062 people were at the WACA on October 10 - Hayden's day - to witness the 31-year-old Queenslander calmly yet powerfully etch his own number into cricket history, eating up milestones owned by such revered Australian figures as Mark Taylor and Sir Donald Bradman (334), and the West Indian Brian Lara (375), as he went. Not bad for a man repeatedly ignored as a young batsman.

Rejected by Australian cricket's grooming school, the Academy, rejected by those who selected an Under-19 team to tour England, Hayden reflected later on the countless hours spent on Queensland beaches plotting a path back into the Australian team after his attempts to bed down a position over a six-year period yielded only eight Tests.

The series was made better, too, by Zimbabwe's refusal to crawl away and cower after being on the end of an innings of such greatness. Heath Streak's squad - sadly depleted by the retirements of Andy Flower, Henry Olonga and Guy Whittall, and diminished by a finger injury to Grant Flower - arrived determined to leave the politics of their troubled nation behind.

But their former Test batsman Murray Goodwin ensured a degree of background tension by claiming the Zimbabwe Cricket Union had a quota system under which non-white cricketers were being promoted to the national team for reasons other than merit.

Zimbabwe lost by an innings and 175 runs at Perth and by nine wickets at Sydney, but the extent of the defeats did not accurately reflect their accomplishments. In Perth they pushed the match into a fifth day, an inconvenience with which Australia had grown unfamiliar. Ray Price, in particular, provided a delightful subplot to the series. Price, the nephew of the golfer, Nick Price, rose to international cricket after overcoming meningitis and partial deafness as a child, and revealed himself as a left-arm spinner of great heart and skill with six for 121 in the Second Test. Stuart Carlisle scored his maiden Test hundred in the same match, while Mark Vermeulen, Trevor Gripper and Sean Ervine emerged as cricketers of talent, poise and potential.

The other centuries were scored by Hayden, again (this time at Sydney), Adam Gilchrist (whose 84-ball hundred in Perth was swallowed up by Hayden's mountainous achievement) and Ricky Ponting, with a sublime 169 at the SCG. By then, the scheduling and limited preparation had taken its toll, with several Australians nursing injuries. The public's reaction to the unseasonable Test series was tepid, with an aggregate crowd of 18,363 over four days at the SCG and 24,051 over five days at the WACA a week earlier. Hayden deserved much better.

Match reports for

Rockingham-Mandurah Invitational XI v Zimbabweans at Baldivis, Sep 28-30, 2003
Scorecard

Cricket Australia Chairman's XI v Zimbabweans at Perth (Lilac Hill), Oct 1, 2003
Scorecard

Western Australia v Zimbabweans at Perth, Oct 3-5, 2003
Scorecard

1st Test: Australia v Zimbabwe at Perth, Oct 9-13, 2003
Report | Scorecard

2nd Test: Australia v Zimbabwe at Sydney, Oct 17-20, 2003
Report | Scorecard

Australia A v Zimbabweans at Perth, Jan 1, 2004
Scorecard

Western Australia v Zimbabweans at Perth, Jan 4, 2004
Scorecard

Australia A v Zimbabweans at Adelaide, Jan 7, 2004
Scorecard

2nd Match: Australia v Zimbabwe at Sydney, Jan 11, 2004
Report | Scorecard

3rd Match: India v Zimbabwe at Hobart, Jan 14, 2004
Report | Scorecard

4th Match: Australia v Zimbabwe at Hobart, Jan 16, 2004
Report | Scorecard

6th Match: India v Zimbabwe at Brisbane, Jan 20, 2004
Report | Scorecard

8th Match: India v Zimbabwe at Adelaide, Jan 24, 2004
Report | Scorecard

9th Match: Australia v Zimbabwe at Adelaide, Jan 26, 2004
Report | Scorecard

10th Match: Australia v Zimbabwe at Melbourne, Jan 29, 2004
Report | Scorecard

12th Match: India v Zimbabwe at Perth, Feb 3, 2004
Report | Scorecard

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