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Dean Jones RIP - Pakistan has potentially lost a very fine future Head Coach

Abdullah719

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Tribute from [MENTION=9]Saj[/MENTION] to Dean Jones who sadly passed away unexpectedly on 24th September 2020.


<img src="https://i.imgur.com/Ep8XxkZ.jpg" width="700">​


Dean Jones will always be remembered as a no-nonsense cricketer, coach and television pundit. His commentary stints irrespective of when and where they took place, were always interesting to listen to from a technical point of view and he was someone who didn’t hold back if he felt a player needed a kick up the rear when he was on air. Whilst his on and off-air criticism was fierce, he also balanced that with lavish praise for those who deserved it, especially young cricketers who were just making their way in the game.

Behind the tough exterior, the hard-talk and bravado, Dean Jones loved nothing more than to talk about and groom young and upcoming cricketers from around the globe. He absolutely loved it when a young cricketer who he had worked with, performed on the big stage and showed the world what they were capable of. If a young player showed guts and determination, but made a few mistakes along the way, Jones would always back that player and say “give the guy some time, he will come good,” But what Jones hated the most were those players who despite countless opportunities were wasting the talent they had at their disposal, not progressing and making the same mistakes over and over again.

Deano was also someone who hated over-coaching. Whilst he had strong ideas about what coaching should entail, he was a coach who wanted to give players the freedom to express themselves. Obviously, he played in a different era, but Deano’s philosophy on coaching was based around some of the fantastic players that he played alongside. Those greats of Australian cricket were allowed to bloom rather than being tied down with tactics and a text-book philosophy and that was the basis of Jones’ coaching methods.

Deano had strong opinions on anything and everything about cricket, whether it was a player, a coach, a rule and just about everything else. If you asked him for his opinion on a player, you had better get ready for a detailed and no-holds barred assessment, that included every single detail about the player, from strengths, weaknesses to what they needed to work and whether he felt they had the skills to progress. He left nothing to chance, there was homework and there was homework the Deano way.

As a player he was a leader, someone who was unorthodox, a cricketer who didn’t mind upsetting the establishment. He took on challenges head on and was quite often at his best against the toughest opponents and when his team needed him most to perform. He learnt his trade from battle-hardened cricketers such as Allan Border who was his role-model and the batsman that he said he learnt the most from. He came from a generation of cricketers who played hard and never gave an inch to the opposition. There was no such thing as second best, you had to be a winner or go home.

I would quite often receive messages from Deano asking me some tough questions about young players in Pakistan, but he wouldn’t just ask obvious questions about their bowling or batting capabilities, instead he would want to know more about them as people, their background, their mindset, were they willing to learn and what their coaches and team-mates thought of them. During his stint as a Coach at the Pakistan Super League, Jones had impressively built up a good knowledge of Pakistani cricketing talent. In fact, he probably knew more about Pakistani cricketers than many Pakistani coaches did.

The professor as he liked to be called was in his element at the Pakistan Super League. It was his ideal scenario, strutting around with his infamous red book and it was where he could work with Pakistan’s best talent, teach them good habits and to turn them into what he dreamt of – great cricketers for Pakistan. He genuinely had a soft spot for Pakistan cricket, the rawness of Pakistan cricket and he wanted to play an important part in the improvement of the nation’s cricket and players.

Whilst he would never say it, there is no doubt that Deano wanted to be Head Coach of Pakistan one day. He was absolutely gutted when he was overlooked for the role and Misbah-ul-Haq was appointed. He had nothing against Misbah getting the job, but was deeply hurt and annoyed with the process of Misbah’s appointment and vowed not to apply for the role ever again. But you can bet your bottom dollar that if the job had become available once again in the future, Deano would have put his name forward, such was his passion to work with the PCB and with Pakistani cricketers.

The news of Dean Jones’ death has shocked the world of cricket and the cricketing world has lost a good man, a man who wore his heart on his sleeve, a man who wanted to do his best for the great sport and perhaps Pakistan has potentially lost a very fine future Head Coach.
 
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Should've been head coach after Waqar IMO. I think he would've fared a lot better than Mickey did.
 
Full respect to Dean Jones and condolences to his family. But sadly i don't think he could have dealt with the stress involved in Pakistan Cricket.
 
Also. Someone had tweeted at him just 3 weeks back asking if he'd ever coach Pakistan and he replied with "no chance". He definitely wanted to in 2016 and last year but I think he got fed up, especially since Misbah was picked out of the blue.
 
It’s a lovely, tender tribute.

But he was an old 59 year old, who played his last Test 28 years ago.

His window to be an international coach was probably in the years 1998-2008.
 
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Dean Jones, the former Australian batsman who passed away on Thursday, September 24, recalled the top moments from his cricketing career earlier this year. (By: Saj)

Falling for the game

I liked Aussie Rules more but I just happened to be better at cricket. My father was captain and coach of Carlton in club cricket and was something of a legend within that set-up. He won premierships and did very well at that level without playing first-class cricket and I just got roped in from there. At the age of 13 or 14, I started playing club cricket under the mentorship of [former Australian Test cricketer] Keith Stackpole, who was what I would term as my ‘mental mentor’. He was the toughest bloke I ever came across in training and in technical aspects of the game. He got me ready and hardened for professional cricket. If I had gone to any other club, I believe I wouldn’t have had that guidance and mentorship.


Border’s patrol

Even as a kid, I never really liked Dennis Lillee, Rod Marsh or Ian Chappell, despite the fact they were playing for Australia. I didn’t have heroes but I’ve always admired Allan Border. My first tour was to the West Indies [in 1984] and facing that barrage of fast bowlers and seeing Allan Border make all those runs showed me that firstly, he was a ripper bloke; secondly, that bowling was not going to get better than that West Indies group of pace bowlers. And I still believe it never did.

Seeing Border do so well on that tour showed me his toughness and made me believe that he is the Godfather of Australian cricket. He reluctantly took the captaincy, didn’t like doing it, but he realised that actually it was more fun than making hundreds for Australia. He set the foundations and the Mark Taylors, Steve Waughs and Ricky Pontings can thank Allan Border for what he did for Australian cricket. If he didn’t build those foundations, we wouldn’t be in the position that we are in now.


Career highlights

There were so many highlights and special moments but if I had to pick a couple, the 1989 tour of England was amazing and winning the 1987 World Cup will always be special for me. We had to beat India in India and Pakistan in Pakistan to win that tournament and we played very, very well. The 1989 Ashes series was another big moment for me. The moment that I would like to have back again would be the fourth Test match at Old Trafford in 1989 [which Australia won to clinch the series], when I stood on the balcony, rang my father up and said to him, “Dad, thanks very much for helping me get here”.

I was very fortunate to play in an era where I faced all the fast-bowling dinosaurs, all the major super-quick bowlers: the Wasims, Waqars, the West Indian quicks, Allan Donald. It was a pretty good time to be a bowler and batsmen’s performances in that era were reflective of just how good the bowlers were. There was some serious pace-bowling talent in that era and you rarely had matches where you felt you were up against a bowling attack that lacked quality. Patrick Patterson, for five overs at the MCG in the 1988 Test match that started on Christmas Eve, was the scariest thing you could ever imagine as a batsman.

Also, facing Wasim Akram, when he was reverse-swinging it all over the place, was really tough. Even though I had a pretty good record against Pakistan, the reality was that you had to bat differently against Wasim to survive. Waqar Younis was unbelievably quick when he was young and Curtly Ambrose, Malcolm Marshall and Joel Garner were fearsome opponents. Tall bowlers always worried me as I tended to be a front-foot player and, looking back, if I should have changed my game, I would have been more back and across like many of the guys are nowadays. I don’t know why but I kept on getting on the front foot and trying to hit those tall quicks on the rise. Trust me, it wasn’t the right way to play them.


Toughest opponent

Richard Hadlee was just outstanding. He ripped me to pieces and I learnt more about cricket and life off Hadlee than I did most others. I wasn’t at the top of my game against him as there was too much nonsense and bravado from me, and he ended up breaking me up a little bit. I had to come back from that, rejuvenated and remade, and even now, I think if I had not gone through that against Hadlee, I don’t know if I would have become the player I was later in my career.


Selection struggles

I was one of those guys who just hated losing and it was just as bad whenever I got dropped from the Australian side. I was dropped a few times by my country and that finished my Test career at the age of 31. I couldn’t do much more to get back into the team as they were so very good – from the time I was dropped to when I retired in 1998, they rarely lost a Test series. The selectors, despite my disappointment, they did the right thing. There are always lows and even now, when I play a friendly or charity match, and I get out for not many, it really annoys me. I know I need to get over it. I’m too old for that nonsense.


Competitive spirit

I’ve not lost that competitive edge and when I coach these days, for example at the Pakistan Super League or for the Pakhtoons in the T10 League, they can’t believe how annoyed I get when my players are talking to the opposition before the match starts. Why be too friendly? You can always speak to these guys after the game at the hotel. Be ready, be prepared, because the opposition is trying to ruin your career today, and you are busy talking to him. I just don’t get that. Be friends after the game, that’s cool. But for an hour or two before the game, just remember the colours you are wearing and think about the people who are paying you to play well.


Curtly’s wrath

In hindsight, I probably shouldn’t have told Curtly Ambrose to remove his white wristband [in a 1993 World Series final at Sydney]. Wasim Akram had broken my thumb four days earlier and I had to get it pinned. Back then, if you were out with injury, you didn’t get paid for the matches that you missed and I also had Damien Martyn snapping at my heels to get into the team. So I couldn’t afford to miss the match and had an injection before the game, which I should never have done as I couldn’t feel my hand.

I realised I was in a lot of trouble as soon as I had the injection, just before I went out to bat. I thought the only way I was going to get around it was to rile Curtly up, so he’d get a little too worked up and lose his control. I could use his pace to my advantage and cut and hook him and ramp him down to third-man. Well, he didn’t lose control; instead he got five guys out, then 10 in the next Test at Adelaide and nine in the following match at the WACA.

It was done through sheer desperation. I felt I had to do anything to keep my spot. It’s funny now but it wasn’t back then. I was trying to save my career and people forget that. I was thinking that if Damien Martyn comes into the team and makes 50 or so, then I’m never going to get picked again. Facing four of the fastest bowlers in history with a busted thumb that had been operated on just four days earlier was definitely not funny.


Best innings

In my first Test match, at Port of Spain in 1984, I scored 48 on an awful pitch where Allan Border made 98 not out. I rate that as my best-ever Test innings. I also remember, a couple of Tests after scoring 210 in Madras, making 73 not out in Mumbai in 1986 to save the match on the last day to share the series. We had to bat out the last day on red soil, on a pitch that was turning square. I remember when they took the second new ball, Kapil Dev bowled me a bouncer and I hooked him for six and then hit the next ball for four. Allan Border came down to me and said, “Now I know you can play”.

In ODIs, I made 145 against England at Brisbane in 1990 and played really well there, but when it comes to a good ball-hitting performance, it has to be the match when we bowled New Zealand out for 160 in Richard Hadlee’s last ODI in front of his home crowd at Auckland, also in 1990. In response, I scored an unbeaten 100 off 90 balls and we won with 11 or so overs to spare on a pitch that was quite difficult. I don’t think I ever hit the ball better than that.


‘I’ve been a lucky boy’

Looking back on my career, I’m pretty happy really. If you’d said to me after my first Test series in West Indies, where I got absolutely ripped apart mentally, physically and technically, that I would play 52 Test matches and 164 ODIs, and that I would play in Ashes series, win a World Cup, win World Series and stuff like that, I’d have thought you were on drugs. Here I am at the age of 58, earning a lovely living from the game and trying to impart my knowledge as a broadcaster and as a coach. I’ve been a lucky boy.

https://wisden.com/stories/interviews/dean-jones-a-cricket-life
 
“Future coach”? He should’ve been there in place of Misbah or they should’ve just continued with Mickey. Don’t know why they sacked Mickey in the first place and with all due respect to Deano, I don’t think he would’ve survived long as Pakistan coach with all the nonsense that goes on within the PCB. No vision, no structure, no planning to go forward. They have a bunch of clueless jokers who have been sitting around for years doing absolutely nothing and they decide to bring someone with barely any coaching experience who had a conflict of interest and decide to appoint him as well as giving him the chief selector role. You can tell from the teams performances that Misbah isn’t cut out for this job. I don’t mind him as chief selector but he’s got to go as a coach. On top of this his lame excuses of pakistan already being on a decline after he’s the one who brought back Akmal and shehzad in his first series vs SL C team. I fail to understand how they thought this would be “best” for Pakistan.
 
The fact that he was rejected for an incapable, and understatedly conniving guy like Misbah really makes my blood boil.
It really is one of the most stupid and unfortunate decisions ever made.
 
A true great of the game. Respect to Deano

And I agree, he should have been coach of the Pakistan team, specially after Mickey.
 
He died out of nowhere. I was shocked to hear the news.

Dean Jones seemed like he liked Pakistan.
 
He died out of nowhere. I was shocked to hear the news.

Dean Jones seemed like he liked Pakistan.

He just loved cricket and was very passionate about the game and helping young players.

I think he would have made a good Pakistan Head Coach one day.
 
To be honest I’m glad Deano spent his last year a free bird rather than get tied down by the PCB and the baggage of Pakistan cricket. He would have been crucified for one reason or another. Better out than in. May he rest in peace.
 
Oh I didn't know about this, just read it here on PP. Will miss his "going, going, goooone".
 
To be honest I’m glad Deano spent his last year a free bird rather than get tied down by the PCB and the baggage of Pakistan cricket. He would have been crucified for one reason or another. Better out than in. May he rest in peace.

He would have bruised a few egos, sorted out a few 'superstars' and put a few PCB employees in their place.

Alas, it wasn't to be.
 
It's sad Dean never became coach. He wanted it for a long time, got his coaching qualifications, went at coached the most successful PSL team to two titles. One of the few who really fought to earn it. Mickey on the other hand sort of fell into Pakistan after failing with others and massively underperformed in PSL. Misbah too, little coaching qualifications, IU didn't exactly look great this year and was just given it. When the man trying to prove his worth for years was ignored.
 
The long-delayed start to Victoria’s Sheffield Shield season on Friday brings into focus a lasting sadness. The late, great Dean Jones had a passionate but tempestuous relationship with his home state, and it will remain forever business that cannot be finished. It is no-one’s fault, but it is for many a regret.

From his earliest days, Jones made his presence felt. His late father, Barney, ran a hard school at Carlton, and he graduated to another in the Victorian team. Ray Bright was the captain. After 20-year-old Jones made 39 on his state debut at the WACA against a strong WA team, Bright announced to the dressing room that he was “the worst batsman I’ve ever seen play for Victoria”.

It shaped Jones’ outlook, which in turn shaped Victorian cricket. "Everyone laughed at me," Jones said on The Howie Games podcast in 2016. "That was my initiation into playing cricket for Victoria.”

The notion of empathy and vulnerability as paths to the top were still decades in the future. Newcomers then were put through a kind of unofficial rite-of-passage trial. The crude theory of the time was that if you couldn’t cop it from teammates, you weren’t going to make it anyway.

Some survived and thrived. Though team success was scant, Jones, Merv Hughes, Tony Dodemaide, Simon O’Donnell, Paul Reiffel, Simon Davis and Damien Fleming all played for Australia. Later, there was Darren Berry to occupy that most fateful of cricket stations, the best keeper in the country, but ...

But others fell by the wayside, and were left bewildered and even embittered. Some were District cricket stalwarts, salt of the cricket earth. Among the illuminati, friendships were made and unmade. Probably the two biggest personalities in the room were Jones and Hughes. They were the same age, had international careers that ran roughly parallel, played almost an identical number of Tests and in Adelaide shared a memorable partnership against the West Indies.

They were great mates - and then they were not. There were many elements to the breakdown. One was a Victorian trial match in Frankston in 1995, a week before the new cricket season. Their international days both were done, but neither was yet at peace with the idea.

Jones was captain and meant to play with his usual earnest. Hughes was conscious of avoiding injury and bowled off a short run. Jones called him fat and slow. It escalated to a degree that still causes teammates to shake their heads.

Hughes did not play for Victoria again. "When I was captain of Victoria, I always said to myself no matter what friendships,” Jones said on Cricket Legends in 2016, “no matter what, I always prepare and look after the White V.” By then, he regretted the episode, deeply. But neither ever got around to rapprochement, and on the day Jones died, they had exchanged nothing more than civilities for 25 years. Hughes does not want to rouse sleeping dogs now.

Jones’ relationships in cricket all tended to the mercurial. Reforming national coach Bob Simpson was yet another with whom Jones fell in and fell out. “Frustrating, exciting, reliable, unreliable, unpredictable, selfish, unselfish, a mug lair, a team player," Simpson wrote in his 1996 autobiography The Reasons Why. “How many other ways are there of describing one man. and which is the real Dean Jones? I sometimes wonder if we will ever know, and perhaps that is the real charm of the bloke."

Shane Warne was almost 10 years younger than Jones, so they were not really contemporaries. Their first-class careers crossed by six years, but they played only four Tests together. When Jones died, Warne told of a moment early in his torrid introduction to Test cricket when he at last took his second wicket, in Sri Lanka. "He came in the huddle and said, 'Well done champ, you now average 435 runs per wicket, well done',” Warne wrote. “Thanks for that, Deano." Cricketers’ humour typically is mockingly affectionate, but in Warne’s story there is an echo of Jones’ own brutal reception into the game all those years previously.

When Berry joined the Victorian team in 1990, he and Jones quickly grew close. For four years, they were roommates. There’s not much you don’t know about a man when you spend half your life opposite him in twin beds. Jones mentored and inspired Berry, who admired Jones’ insatiable work ethic. But he also saw Jones’ intolerance of those who could not match his standards. It was not unusual then. There was also the way he would pay out on his own team when beaten.

In the mid-90s, the upheaval came. Berry was dumped for making too few runs, which he now says was the right decision delivered the wrong way. It put a strain between him and Jones. It became even more awkward later when Berry was restored, and made captain, with Jones in his charge for a short time.

Jones and Berry also spent many years on barely speaking terms, but they at least built a bridge. “We were like a rough marriage,” Berry said. When he became coach of South Australia, he thought Jones would be good for Travis Head and Callum Ferguson, and so, heart-in-mouth, made the call. Jones came running.

Later, the pair coached together in Pakistan and Afghanistan. With few other distractions, they spent much time in one another's company, and grew close again. When Phillip Hughes died tragically while playing for SA in Berry’s time, Jones was one of the first on the line to offer a shoulder.

“Over a glass of red one night in Dubai, Deano said he had handled Merv all wrong,” Berry said. “It was his way of apology.” Berry urged him to patch up the relationship, but the moment never came.

Berry was in awe of Jones’ grasp of T20, a format he never got to play. Doubtlessly, he would have been a superstar at it. He thought so!

Dodemaide’s first-class career ran contemporaneously to Jones’, but in a much lower key. He was at the heart of turbulence, but was a more self-contained character and less affected. He saw the best and worst of Jones, and accepted him for who he was. “He was a mixed bag,” he said.

They finished for Victoria in the same season, 1997/98, and Dodemaide embarked on a career in cricket administration that took in both MCCs, Melbourne and Marylebone, and the chief executive’s chair at the WACA before returning to Victoria in the same role. Throughout, Dodemaide knew to expect regular calls from Jones with theories, critiques and commentaries on cricket generally and Victoria in particular. Most recently, it has been the turn of Dodemaide’s successor, Andrew Ingleton, to lend a patient ear.

In retirement, much of the foaming blood drained away. It is a common happening in sport “Post playing days, he was much more mellow,” said Dodemaide. “He was just as emotive, but not so often. He was one of a kind.” Another former teammate characterises it this way: the crustiness turned out to be only a crust after all. Most in the media found him engaging and invigorating company.

Jones stayed on Victoria’s case to the end of his days. He rang, wrote, proselytised, agitated, lobbied, not just about the state team, but the marginalisation of club cricket, too. He set himself for roles as head coach, limited overs coach, batting coach, coach of either of Victoria’s T20 teams, even a place on the board. None eventuated. He never understood why.

If you ask now, you'll hear it is because there was a belief in the halls of power that he was too much of a maverick. It worked well enough in the sub-continent, where he was held in awe, but would not necessarily win the day here. Not everyone agreed, of course. No-one ever did, with or about Deano.

Earlier this year, Jones returned his Cricket Victoria life membership and asked for his name to be removed from the state’s one-day player trophy. These were typical Deano flourishes. You have to think that though he meant them at the time, they were not meant to be forever. Then, tragically, forever overtook him.

It’s reasonable to speculate that both honours will be restored in the fullness of time. It’s also reasonable to speculate that most remaining sore points would have healed eventually. Most who played with and under Jones are in their 50s. They have long ago left behind their playing careers and their lives are full of other things. Whatever mattered so much then, it mattered less a quarter of a century later, and now it doesn’t matter at all.

Meantime, we can look forward to zinc cream and sunnies all round at the MCG on Boxing Day.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricket/dean-jones-and-victoria-a-bumpy-ride-20201029-p569th.html
 
If Dean is alive he will not be fooled 3rd time with fake advertisement.
 
Wasim Akram speaking to the media:


“I am not taking Jones’s place as Kings’ head coach. I mean he will be missed throughout and we will leave his seat in our dressing room with his name”

“He was a great buddy of mine. I know how he advocated for Pakistan across the world. He talked about Pakistan’s cricket, food, talent and hospitality everywhere in the world,”

“I believe he was a great human being and as a coach he was brilliant. No coach in this world can take his place ever,”
 
Good old days before cancel culture, imagine if social media existed back when Dean Jones called Hashim Amla a terrorist, for which apologized for latter. I think he would've been cancelled in the current era.
 
Imad Wasim on Dean Jones:

"We (KK) are really missing Dean Jones; I only worked with DJ for about 1 and a half month but in my view he was one of the world's best coaches; I am not saying that just because he is not with us, but I do mean it and I did feel the same when he was alive; I have yet to see or know of, so much cricketing knowledge in a person in my 15 year career; And it not just me, but many others in our squad felt that he told them things about cricket that they never knew; He had knowledge and passion for the game and was one of the greats of the game, we will certainly miss his absence but we will try and play the game for Dean Jones and play in the way he wanted us to play it; This will be our tribute to him and it is Wasim Bhai and my planning that we play with the attitude that he would have liked us to play"
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Forever in Our Hearts Deano <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/DeanJones?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#DeanJones</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PSLV?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PSLV</a> <a href="https://t.co/mFsQj9i4ZN">pic.twitter.com/mFsQj9i4ZN</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1327553239970156544?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 14, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Mohammad Amir points to the sky - that was for you Deano <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/KKvMS?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#KKvMS</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PSLV?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PSLV</a> <a href="https://t.co/7Hv1i6iTOD">pic.twitter.com/7Hv1i6iTOD</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1327619445875994624?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 14, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
RIP Deano, but I think PAK job escaped him already with the appointment of Misbah - that was his last chance. He was almost 60 and won’t have been in contention before 2021, at least.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">this win is for <a href="https://twitter.com/ProfDeano?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@ProfDeano</a> &#55358;&#56599;&#55358;&#56599;&#55358;&#56599; <a href="https://t.co/00Its2yKCf">pic.twitter.com/00Its2yKCf</a></p>— Mohammad Amir (@iamamirofficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/iamamirofficial/status/1327626283874971648?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 14, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is for you Deano - the first final for <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/KarachiKings?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#KarachiKings</a>! <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GoneButNeverForgotten?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GoneButNeverForgotten</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/DoItForDeano?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#DoItForDeano</a> <a href="https://t.co/bMZvm0hztJ">pic.twitter.com/bMZvm0hztJ</a></p>— Babar Azam (@babarazam258) <a href="https://twitter.com/babarazam258/status/1327630272267956224?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 14, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
The Indian and Australian cricketers will wear black armbands and observe a minute’s silence ahead of the first ODI on Friday in honour of Dean Jones, who died during the IPL in September.

The former Australia batsman, who had represented his country in 52 Tests and 164 ODIs, was in Mumbai as part of IPL official broadcaster’s commentary panel when he died on September 24 following a cardiac arrest.

To honour his life, Cricket Australia has decided to pay two significant tributes during the India series.

“The first celebration will come at Friday’s opening one-day international against India at the SCG when there will be a minute’s silence before play and both nations will don black armbands. There will also be a highlights package of his grand career on the big screen,” said a report in ‘Sydney Morning Herald’.

India will play three ODIs, as many T20Is and a much-anticipated four-Test series beginning with a Day-Night game at Adelaide on December 17.

The country’s cricket board also arranged a tribute on the opening day of the second Test at the Melbourne cricket ground, where Jones received tremendous support from his home crowd during his playing days.

“The biggest honour, however, will be saved for the showcase event that is the Boxing Day Test at the MCG. The tribute will be held at the tea break at 3.24pm on day one, where Jones’ wife Jane and family will be in attendance,” the report said.”A poem written by local writer Chris Driscol in the wake of Jones’ death will be recited, while there will be a tribute banner inside the seating bowl across a bay of seats for the entire Test. Other plans are also being discussed.”Jones’ highest first-class score and his Test cap number was 324 and hence it was decided to pay the tribute at 3:34pm.

Jones scored 3631 runs including 11 centuries in Tests, while amassing 6063 runs in One-dayers in an illustrious international career.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...-dean-jones/story-BYS6vyo9OVESFjeuEsApHL.html
 
Tribute by Indian and Australian teams before start of 1st ODI

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An emotional day for Australian cricket saw a number of touching tributes to former Aussie cricketers Dean Jones and Phil Hughes.

One of the greatest testimonials came from Pakistan legend Wasim Akram, who spoke to Fox Cricket from Karachi, where his good friend Jones had spent a significant portion of his time before his passing in September.

Akram said it was: “Absolutely shocking news for me and the whole country in Pakistan. He was very much loved here … we were all in shock.

“Recently, Karachi Kings – he was our coach – we won the PSL last week (Pakistan Super League). Every player spoke about Dean Jones just before the game, that they want to do it for Deano, they want to do it for the coach.”

Akram praised Jones for breaking down borders in his travel to Pakistan, saying: “He was the first one who came to Pakistan. He was brave, he was passionate. He was a true Australian in the sense he taught us Pakistanis about what Australian culture was all about: hard work, passion, straightforwardness.”

And there was plenty of praise for his cricket mind. Akram said: “He was ahead of his time, in coaching … The techniques, the mindset, the meetings. He was short and sweet but he had a keen eye to pick up the details. I miss him every second of the day.”

“His passion was to coach. His coaching was miles ahead, especially in T20 format. The running between the wickets, the powerplay scores, the sixes and fours you talk about – Deano was talking about it five years ago.

“He was a great cricketing mind and a dear, dear friend.”

Shane Warne was also effusive in his praise of the Australian cricket icon, saying: “He was an innovator, he was ahead of his time. He came up with (the strategy that) if you can drop the ball in the inner circle when the fielders go out, if you can drop it on that line you can get two. He moved around the crease. He was athletic in the field.”

“He was a fantastic cricketer in all forms,” Warne continued. “People talk about his One Day cricket, but he averaged nearly 50 in Test cricket. He was a terrific all-round player in any form. He would have been fantastic in T20 if he had have played.”

https://www.foxsports.com.au/cricke...n/news-story/b2e1df21eb2c65e0ac3f3d1976561e9e
 
English batsman Alex Hales will never forget the lessons he learned from the late Dean Jones and will try and impart some of his wisdom on his young Thunder teammates this summer, including ''playing with a smile on your face while trying to be aggressive''.

The Thunder kickstart their Big Bash campaign on Saturday afternoon against perennial runners-up the Melbourne Stars as Hales tries to win his third Twenty20 tournament of the year after victories in the Pakistan Super League and England's T20 Blast.

The 31-year-old power hitter was coached by Jones at Islamabad United in the Pakistani Premier League before later teaming up with him at the Karachi Kings, and was rocked by the Australian's sudden passing from a heart attack in September. Jones was just 59.

"'Deano' was so adamant about people expressing themselves on the field and having fun,'' Hales told the Herald. "He was really good at making guys relax and enjoy their cricket. He was brilliant at getting the best out of people.

"He was fantastic for the local guys - the energy and passion and assertiveness he had was great for the local Pakistani players. He's such a sore loss for the world of cricket.

"As an overseas player, you want to bring some experience and a smile and that relaxed attitude because you play your best cricket when you relax and enjoy yourself.

"That's something I definitely picked up from 'Deano' - to play with a smile on your face and try to be aggressive. He was always big on, 'If you're in any doubt, try to be aggressive'', and that's what I try to do as well.''

Hales farewelled Jones and his Karachi teammates earlier this year as he came down with COVID symptoms and returned to England, only for the Super League to be suspended the following day.

Jones was in Mumbai as part of his commentary commitments for the Indian Premier League when he died in his hotel room.

Karachi's eventual Super League title triumph was filled with emotion while Hales also got to celebrate a tournament victory with Notts in his homeland. He knows the Thunder give him every chance of yet another title.

Hales could not recall feeling mentally fresher and said the three months of COVID lockdown, where he did not pick up a bat, did wonders for him.

"I reckon it could have added another year on to the career,'' Hales said of the coronavirus-enforced break from the game.

"The last ten years I don't think I've had more than two or three weeks off in the one block. Physically and mentally it's almost made me as fresh as I've ever been.

"Once the games come thick and fast and the training becomes intense and the workloads pick up, I should be ready to take it all on with a full tank.''

Hales finished with 576 runs last summer in the Big Bash with an outstanding strike rate of 147. His stint with the western Sydney franchise featured six 50s. Only Marcus Stoinis racked up more runs.

The Thunder bombed out in the semi-finals against the Stars, who went on to bomb another final against the Sydney Sixers, and have since strengthened their squad with fellow Englishman Sam Billings along with classy all-rounder Ben Cutting.

"We're definitely stronger than what we were last year, and we finished third last year - there's no reason we can't go one better and play in the final,'' said Hales, who completed his isolation in Perth, will spend the next month in Canberra with the Thunder, and now not see his family until at least late March.

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricke...s-to-heed-deano-s-wisdom-20201211-p56mre.html
 
During the second Test match between India and Australia, the Cricket Australia will pay tribute late legendary cricketer Dean Jones. The Boxing Day Test match will be played at Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), which was Jones’s home ground in domestic cricket. On September 24, Jones has died of a heart attack in Mumbai. The late cricketer was in India as part of IPL’s official broadcaster commentary team and was staying in a bio-secure environment in a Mumbai hotel.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, a bay of seats will be covered by a banner paying tribute to Jones throughout the Test match. There will also be a video tribute during Tea on Saturday at 3.24 p.m. recognising Jones’s Test number, 324 and his highest first-class score of 324, scored against South Australia on the MCG in 1994.

He played 52 Tests and 164 ODIs during his international career between 1984 and 1992. Also Read – India vs Australia Test 2020: KL Rahul And Rishabh Pant Are Dangerous Player, Australia Captain Tim Paine Wary of Threat Ahead of Boxing Day Test

In Tests, he scored 3631 runs at 46.55 including 11 centuries and 14 half-centuries while in ODIs, he struck 6068 runs at 44.61 with seven hundreds and 46 fifties.

Earlier, Indian and Australian cricketers wore black armbands and observe a minute’s silence ahead of the first ODI of the three-match series in November.

Ahead of the Pakistan Super League playoff match between Multan Sultans and Karachi Kings, the cricketers, coaches, umpires came together to pay a heartfelt tribute to the late Australia cricketer Dean Jones.

The cricketers and other match officials stood in the shape of ‘D’ alongside a life-size cardboard cut out of Jones with ‘Forever in Our Hearts, Deano ‘ flashing on a giant LED screen.

Meanwhile, Australia beat India by 8-wickets in the first Test match of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy as the hosts will look to continue the winning momentum. Team India will also miss Virat Kohli, who has been granted paternity leave, and Mohammed Shami who has ruled out of the Test series after sustaining an injury in opening Test.
 
The wife of former Australian cricket great Dean Jones hopes the Boxing Day test against India gives fans here and abroad the chance to celebrate the life of the star batsman, whose death earlier this year stunned the cricketing world.

Ahead of a planned commemoration of Jones' life during the tea break at the MCG on Saturday, Jane Jones has confirmed the cause of her husband's death was not a heart attack, as had been initially reported, but a catastrophic stroke.

The Victorian Coroner is now investigating, with the family keen to find out whether any head knocks he took while batting during his illustrious career, or a car crash he was involved in in Melbourne shortly before his death, had been factors.

Jones, 59, was in Mumbai in September where he was fulfilling his duties as a commentator of the Indian Premier League when he collapsed and died. Former Australian fast bowler Brett Lee attempted to revive him for an hour but Jones had died instantly.

"It is actually under a coroner's inquiry at the moment, not that they think there is anything other than what they have found, but just that he was a bit young to have the stroke the way it happened," Jane said.

Jones left behind Jane and their daughters Augusta and Phoebe, a son Koby from another relationship, Jones' three brothers and a sister, and a Dogue de Bordeaux puppy called Gertie he bought Jane to "look after her" not long before he went overseas. Not to mention a sport that he loved and contributed to immensely, whether that be through playing, coaching or commentating.

Jane Jones said it was fitting the tribute came when the Indian team was in town, for Jones' greatest innings was his famous 210 in the tied test at Madras in 1986, and he later spent so much time coaching and commentating on the sub-continent.

"He loved the sub-continent and they loved him. We are really thrilled they are here. I know it's really hard under the circumstances with Covid, and everyone is suffering in some shape or form, and the cricketers are, too ... but cricket makes everyone so happy," she said.

"I hope Saturday is a big celebration. That's the way we are looking at it. The fact that we were only allowed to have 10 people [at his memorial] in the middle of Covid, we were very alone. It will be nice for some of the public to be a part of it. The girls are thrilled to do something."

Jones was given a private farewell lap on the MCG's hallowed turf, his favourite ground, as part of his memorial by his devastated family in October during Melbourne's lockdown. But now comes a time when his hometown fans who enjoyed his thrilling innings over the years can pay their respects.

This will include a particularly poignant moment during the tea break at 3.24pm, for Jones was Australia's 324th test cricketer, while 324 was also his highest first-class score. There will be a tribute banner of him across a bay of seats throughout the test.

Jane, who will have family and Allan Border – Jones' former Australian captain and his great mate – by her side, said Jones had "lived and breathed" the MCG.

"The girls keep saying: 'Mum, Dad would just be in his element on Saturday, they are all there for him,'" Jane said.

"He just loved the MCG. He talked about it constantly on the sub-continent, saying it's the greatest stadium in the world. That would spark up a huge debate with everybody – he loved that. He loved the jovial side of sport and how it brought people together. He just adored the MCG – a totally fitting place for him to have a bit of a send-off and a bit of a tribute."

The late Dean Jones had a 35-year friendship with cricketing rival and Black Caps legend Sir Richard Hadlee.
The Jones family has been inundated with well wishes, from cricketing greats including Wasim Akram and Sir Ian Botham, to music legend, friend and cricket tragic Elton John.

Jane thanked Cricket Australia, Cricket Victoria, the Melbourne Cricket Club and the general public for their support.

"All the people that he used to play with at Durham in the UK as well, all the big cricket guys around the world have reached out, and a lot of the Australian guys, too," Jane said.

"They have been beautiful."

https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/crick...reat-dean-jones-died-from-catastrophic-stroke
 
A PSL without Dean Jones

He won it with the reds and he got his blues into the final, yet when he was not here in the 6th edition of the PSL, his team barely crawled in to the play offs with elimination from their first play off match.

Dean Jones was missed. PSL always came with a Dean Jones, his presence was always there. Whether in blue kit, red kit or even in a suite. He had his notebook with him squiggling done the littlest of details.

He backed his players, was always there to support them. When he was in Islamabad United, he was convinced by than captain to get Iftikhar, Asif Ali into the team. When he moved to Karachi Kings, he had already witnessed some of the Pakistani players, thus, the likes of Sharjeel Khan, Iftikhar Ahmad, Waqas Maqsood and Babar Azam were in the Karach Kings team.

PSL 6 has ended, but there was no Dean Jones in the ground. Thus, it was no surprise that his team aswell couldn't reach the finals.

He was surely missed. He never coached Pakistan, yet he was somehow as close to us, as Bob Woolmer or Mickey Arthur were.
 
Stop using poor old Dean to make yourself feel better about how badly Islamabad were humiliated in the PSL, time and place for you to shed crocodile tears
 
He's gone now. Life moves on. Karachi King's honoured him by winning the PSL in November 2020.
 
He's gone now. Life moves on. Karachi King's honoured him by winning the PSL in November 2020.

Wouldn’t be surprised if the results were manipulated to ensure Kings won so that it would appear as a fairytale.
 
Wouldn’t be surprised if the results were manipulated to ensure Kings won so that it would appear as a fairytale.

Naa. There were very refrences about him. Seems like pakistani community disliked him.

I always felt he was part of our cricket, for the time he had invested in our leagues and our players
 
I think IU missed him in the dugout.

Botha not quite up to the mark.
 
Matthew Hayden on Dean Jones:

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I still can't believe Dean Jones didn't get selected as Head Coach. When Wasim Khan was asked why Misbah was chosen as Head Coach, chief selector and batting coach, and Wasim Khan said "There were no other options" when Dean Jones had applied and was clearly a better option for Head Coach.
 
Cricket Australia has endorsed the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame Committee’s recommendation to name the premier men’s domestic One-Day Cup, the Dean Jones Trophy.

The decision follows an extensive process where more than 10,000 fans voted on CA digital platforms and clearly separated three players from the rest: Michael Bevan, Dean Jones and Andrew Symonds.

The Australian Cricket Hall of Fame committee, led by Chair Peter King, assessed the credentials of the three players shortlisted before making Jones their recommendation to the CA Board.

It was the view of the Committee that Jones deserved to be recognised for his contribution to the game as a pioneer in the limited-overs format that paved the way for future generations.

The committee also determined that to acknowledge Michael Bevan’s incredible record and contribution to the limited-overs format that the Player of the Final would be named the Michael Bevan Medal.

The Dean Jones Trophy and Michael Bevan Medal will be presented for the first time at the Final on March 1.

Key criteria for the award included:

An elite record in the Men’s One-Day Domestic competition.

A top performer at international level for Australia in Men’s One-Day cricket.

A player who is synonymous with the 50-over format – i.e. has had a major impact on the game, including through performance and inspiring evolution in the way the format is played.
 
Deano Loved PK cricket but he would have been dragged through the mud by the PCB , if he was ever unfortunate to be appointed by these Idiots
 
I still can't believe Dean Jones didn't get selected as Head Coach. When Wasim Khan was asked why Misbah was chosen as Head Coach, chief selector and batting coach, and Wasim Khan said "There were no other options" when Dean Jones had applied and was clearly a better option for Head Coach.
Bad comment from me, I have no say and no clue on who is better
 
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