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Rod Marsh, Australian cricket great, dies aged 74

Junaids

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The legendary Australian wicketkeeper Rodney Marsh is critically ill in Queensland after suffering a heart attack.

He was one of the key players in the legendary Australian team of the 1970’s. He was a modest wicketkeeper who achieved greatness through hard work, and was also an aggressive batsman from Number 7. His name is indelibly linked with Dennis Lillee and the Chappell brothers.

In many ways he was the prototype for Adam Gilchrist: Marsh was only around 2/3 as good with the bat but was far superior as a keeper.

Sadly this will not be an Abid Ali style story with a happy ending: it’s been made clear from the start that he suffered permanent cardiac muscle damage, and his family has travelled from Perth to be with him. If he comes through he will almost certainly be severely incapacitated in terms of his future health.
 
The legendary Australian wicketkeeper Rodney Marsh is critically ill in Queensland after suffering a heart attack.

He was one of the key players in the legendary Australian team of the 1970’s. He was a modest wicketkeeper who achieved greatness through hard work, and was also an aggressive batsman from Number 7. His name is indelibly linked with Dennis Lillee and the Chappell brothers.

In many ways he was the prototype for Adam Gilchrist: Marsh was only around 2/3 as good with the bat but was far superior as a keeper.

Sadly this will not be an Abid Ali style story with a happy ending: it’s been made clear from the start that he suffered permanent cardiac muscle damage, and his family has travelled from Perth to be with him. If he comes through he will almost certainly be severely incapacitated in terms of his future health.

IA he gets well but going by explanation the signs arent good
 
Lillee and Marsh! One of the most important stars of test cricket's greatest era. Wish him well.
 
Sorry to hear this news.

Hope you are comfortable and can get well soon Rod.

Best to his family.
 
Unfortunately Rod Marsh has now passed away having never regained consciousness.

He was flown back from Bundaberg to his home in Adelaide, but was essentially already in an untreatable state.

This will cast a terrible pall over the Pakistan v Australia Test today. Off the top of my head, did he bow out of Test cricket in the same Sydney Test v Pakistan as Greg Chappell and Dennis Lillee?
 
Unfortunately Rod Marsh has now passed away having never regained consciousness.

He was flown back from Bundaberg to his home in Adelaide, but was essentially already in an untreatable state.

This will cast a terrible pall over the Pakistan v Australia Test today. Off the top of my head, did he bow out of Test cricket in the same Sydney Test v Pakistan as Greg Chappell and Dennis Lillee?



Yes, he did...RIP Marsh, you were always a fighter!
 
I've just checked, and yes, his Final Test was the SCG Test in 1983-84 against Pakistan where he retired along with Greg Chappell and Dennis Lillee.

Marsh scored 15 not out and took 5 catches in the last Pakistan innings.

In retrospect, that was an historic tour.

Wasim Akram had yet to arrive, Sarfraz Nawaz was originally left out for reasons of selectorial revenge, and Imran Khan still had stress fractures of the shin.

Pakistan at full strength could contest with the West Indies the mantle of the world's greatest team. But they basically had no fast bowling to take to Australia.

Pakistan was so strong and so respected that they were given a 5 Test tour of Australia.

Australia won the First Test at Perth by an innings, with Aussie fast bowler (and later Apartheid tourist and extreme-right wing politician) Carl Rackemann running rampant on a bouncy track. But the next two Tests were drawn, leaving it 1-0 after 3 Tests.

Imran Khan and Sarfraz Nawaz were then sent as reinforcements, with Imran playing as a specialist batsman and scoring 83 and 72 not out in the drawn Fourth Test at Melbourne.

So it was 1-0 to Australia after 4 Tests, and they then were carried on a wave of love and nostalgia to victory in Chappell, Lillee and Marsh's final Test.
 
Vale Rod Marsh

Australian cricket is mourning the loss of Rodney Marsh, a brilliant wicketkeeper, hard-hitting batter and outstanding servant of Australian cricket, who has died aged 74.

As one of the most popular and beloved members of the fabled Australian team of the 1970s and early 1980s, Marsh left an indelible impression on spectators with his athletic wicketkeeping and often brutal batting.

Marsh’s partnership with Australian teammate and fellow West Australian Dennis Lillee is part of cricket legend, the dismissal ‘caught Marsh, bowled Lillee’ featuring on scoreboards across the cricketing world 95 times in Test matches.

View Pat Cummins' tribute to Rod Marsh here

Born in the Perth suburb of Armadale, Marsh honed his cricket skills alongside older brother Graham. Both represented WA as juniors before Graham forged a successful career as a professional golfer.

Marsh made his debut for WA in the 1968-69 season and went on to play 257 first-class matches, scoring 11,067 runs at 31.17 and completing 869 dismissals before his retirement in 1984.

For Australia, Marsh played 96 Test matches scoring 3633 runs at 26.51 and completing 355 dismissals, and 92 one-day internationals making 1225 runs at 20.08 with 124 dismissals - a career disrupted for two years by his involvement in World Series Cricket.

Marsh was something of a pioneer, selected to make his debut in the 1970-71 Ashes series largely for his batting at a time when wicketkeeper was usually a specialist position.

Marsh’s selection would be justified in the first Test against Pakistan in Adelaide in 1972-73 when he became the first Australian wicketkeeper to score a Test century – the first of three.

As his career progressed, Marsh would become renowned for his athletic takes and sure hands – belying an early nickname of “Iron Gloves” - particularly when keeping to the ferocious pace of fellow Seventies icons Lillee and Jeff Thomson. During his career, Marsh held both the Australian and Test wicketkeeping records for dismissals.

After his playing career Marsh had a substantial impact on the development of elite cricketers in Australia and across the globe in roles including inaugural coach and later director of the Australian Cricket Academy and as director of England and Wales Cricket Board National Academy.

Marsh also served as Cricket Australia’s Manager of Elite Coaching Development and as Australia’s Chairman of Selectors.

Marsh received the Order of the British Empire in 1981 for his services to sport and is a member of the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame, Sport Australia Hall of Fame and the ICC Hall of Fame.

He is survived by his wife Ros and children Paul, Dan and Jamie.

Cricket Australia chairman Dr Lachlan Henderson said: “This is a tremendously sad day for Australian cricket and for all those who loved and admired Rod Marsh.

“Rod will be forever remembered for the way he played the game and the pleasure he brought crowds as a member of some great Australian teams. ‘Caught Marsh, bowled Lillee’ has iconic status in our game.

“Rod also made an enormous contribution to the game by identifying, coaching and mentoring many future stars in his various roles as coach and director at cricket academies in Australia and other cricket playing nations.

“Our thoughts are with Rod's wife Ros, his sons Paul, Dan and Jamie and the extended Marsh family, his many friends and teammates with whom he created so many special memories.”

Australia men’s captain Pat Cummins said: “Rod was a colossal figure in Australian cricket who gave close to 50 years of incredible service to Australian cricket, from his debut in the Ashes series of 1970/71, through to his time as National Selector, when many of the current group of Australian men’s players came into close contact with him.

“He was brilliant to deal with because he knew the game inside-out, but also had a way of dealing with you to put you at your ease.

“I, along with countless other people in Australia, grew up hearing the stories of him as a fearless and tough cricketer, but his swashbuckling batting and his brilliance behind the stumps over more than a decade made him one of the all-time greats of our sport, not just in Australia, but globally.

“When I think of Rod I think of a generous and larger-than-life character who always had a life-loving, positive and relaxed outlook, and his passing leaves a massive void in the Australian cricket community.

“My thoughts, and the thoughts of the entire tour party here in Pakistan, are with Rod’s wife Ros and their family at this terrible time.”

Pat Cummins' tribute to Rod Marsh

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Sad sad to hear this Was hoping for the best but unfortunately got the bad news

RIP Condolences to all the family
 
RIP. "Caught Marsh Bowled Lillee" was an iconic phrase. A very good coach by all accounts too.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Saddened to learn of the passing of Rodney Marsh who was Australia's legendary wicket keeper. During my cricketing career I remember him being not just a great cricketer but one who was respected by both his own team and his opponents.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1499672047487787009?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 4, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Rod Marsh: Dennis Lillee leads tributes at former Australia wicketkeeper's funeral

Dennis Lillee said he would "miss my mate" as he led tributes to Rod Marsh at the former Australia wicketkeeper's funeral on Thursday.

Marsh died aged 74 after suffering a heart attack earlier in March.

The dismissal 'caught Marsh, bowled Lillee' occurred 95 times in Test cricket - a record partnership between a wicketkeeper and fast bowler.

"His cricket ability has been very well documented - it's the person Rod Marsh that I loved," Lillee said.

More than 800 people attended Marsh's funeral at the Adelaide Oval.

Marsh effected 355 dismissals - a world record at the time of his retirement - in 96 Test appearances for Australia from 1970 to 1984.

He and Lillee retired simultaneously in 1984 along with former captain Greg Chappell.

"It's taken me days to be able to write my thoughts down on this amazing bloke," Lillee said.

"People often ask me if I missed playing - my answer was no, I don't, but I do miss my team-mates of 14, 15 years.

"Gradually our friendship blossomed. I miss my mate and will keep remembering the good times. He was a one-off."

A recorded message from former Australia wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist - who previously described Marsh as his "idol and hero" - was played to mourners.

Former team-mates John Inverarity and Bruce Laird also spoke.

BBC
 
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