Mark Dekker

Mark Hamilton Dekker (born 5 December 1969) is a Rhodesian born former Zimbabwean international cricketer. He played 14 Test matches and 23 One Day Internationals for Zimbabwe in the 1990s. In December 2018 Dekker was appointed to be the head coach of Kent Women in England before taking a coaching role with the Kent County Cricket Club Academy the following year.

Mark Dekker
Personal information
Full nameMark Hamilton Dekker
Born (1969-12-05) 5 December 1969
Gatooma, Rhodesia
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingLeft-arm medium,
Slow left-arm orthodox
International information
National side
Test debut1 December 1993 v Pakistan
Last Test26 December 1996 v England
ODI debut31 October 1992 v New Zealand
Last ODI3 November 1996 v Pakistan
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1991–1998Matabeleland
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 14 23 43 41
Runs scored 333 379 1,761 756
Batting average 15.85 18.95 25.89 21.00
100s/50s 0/2 0/2 2/10 1/4
Top score 68* 79 162* 113
Balls bowled 60 347 1,750 706
Wickets 0 9 15 18
Bowling average 32.22 57.46 34.83
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0 0
Best bowling 2/16 2/4 2/16
Catches/stumpings 12/– 5/– 41/– 9/–
Source: CricInfo, 3 February 2018

Early life

Dekker was born at Gatooma in Mashonaland in what was then Rhodesia in 1969,[1] his family having previously lived in South Africa. He grew up in Bulawayo and was educated at Christian Brothers College where he first played regular cricket.[2] He played for the Zimbabwe under-15 team and for Zimbabwe schools.[2][3]

Cricket career

After leaving school Dekker played in England for Central Lancashire Cricket League side Crompton Cricket Club in 1988 and 1989 and by 1990 was playing in Zimbabwe for Old Miltonians and Matabeleland before the province was given first-class cricket status.[2] He played for Young Zimbabwe against Pakistan B in a match later given declared first-class and in other matches against other touring teams and "scoring plenty of runs in domestic cricket" as an opening batsman when he was "surprised" to be included for the Zimbabwe national team to play a One Day International (ODI) against New Zealand in October 1992.[2]

A Test call up followed in December 1993 and Dekker went on to play 14 Test matches and 23 ODIs for Zimbabwe, his final international appearances coming at the end of 1996. He was the first batsman in Zimbabwe's history to carry his bat through a completed Test innings, scoring 68 not out against Pakistan at Rawalpindi in 1993.[2]

After retirement Dekker coached cricket at Tonbridge School in Kent, England. In 2017 he was appointed as a Community Cricket Officer at Kent County Cricket Club[4] and in December 2018 became the head coach of Kent Women.[5] After leading the women's side to the Women's County Championship title in 2019, Dekker took up a coaching role with the Kent Academy, working alongside Head of Talent Pathway and former Second XI coach Min Patel.[6][7]

gollark: It's a "phone" because it's, er, circuit-switched inter-random-server Discord messaging?
gollark: The point is, messaging over the internet is... entirely different to messaging over Discord, and has been done in even more ways already.
gollark: Not voice, textual meßages.
gollark: And websockets run over TCP.
gollark: UDP doesn't actually guarantee delivering or ordering or *anything*, so there's less overhead than TCP, which does.

References

  1. Mark Dekker, CricInfo. Retrieved 2018-02-03.
  2. Ward J (1997) Mark Dekker: Biography, Cricinfo Zimbabwe, January 1997. Retrieved 2108-02-03.
  3. Mark Dekker, CricketArchive. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  4. Mark Dekker appointed Community Cricket Officer, Kent County Cricket Club, 2017-04-20. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  5. Former international cricketer to coach Kent Women, Kent County Cricket Club, 2018-12-17. Retrieved 2018-12-18.
  6. Patel appointed Head of Talent Pathway, Kent County Cricket Club, 2019-08-29. Retrieved 2020-01-07.
  7. Hathrill appointed Kent Women Head Coach, Kent County Cricket Club, 2019-11-19. Retrieved 2020-01-07.

Mark Dekker at ESPNcricinfo

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.