by Allan Donald (Author), PatMurphy (Contributor)
The world's No 1 fast bowler and the driving force behind South Africa at Test level and Warwickshire in the County Championship, provides a telling insight into the physical and mental demands on a top-class sportsman. Arriving as a shy, introverted twenty year old on the unique stage of English professional cricket from the heartlands of South Africa, Donald's learning curve with his county Warwickshire was steep. Competition for the one overseas berth, injuries and loss of form meant a tricky baptism for Donald in the county game, before Bob Woolmer arrived at Edgbaston in 1991 to reconstruct his bowling action. In this book Donald reviews his relationship with key players and backroom staff -- including Woolmer, Dennis Amiss, Dermot Reeve and Brian Lara -- and contrasts the unique team spirit during Warwickshire's trophy winning seasons with the later rifts that developed over the selection of Lara as the county's overseas player. In the Test arena, South Africa's return to the international fold in 1992, with Donald to the fore, began tentatively, leading to a fiercely fought series with Australia home and away in 1994, and culminating in the 1998 tour of England, their first since the ban. Donald's ferocious assault on Mike Atherton at Trent Bridge was one of the most hostile passages of fast bowling ever witnessed, and by the end of the summer South Africa's leading strike bowler had bagged 33 wickets. Donald has some hard-hitting opinions on the policy of 'positive discrimination' and the political pressures being put on the South African cricket administrators in the build-up to the World Cup. With his revelations concerning the rugged physical and mental approach instilled as part of his Afrikaans cricket upbringing and the touring pressures faced by the modern-day Test cricketer, Donald's book provides compelling reading.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 269
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Willow
Published: 07 Jun 1999
ISBN 10: 0002188880
ISBN 13: 9780002188883