Tawanda Muyeye: asylum seeker who could become ‘best cricketer in the world’

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First Class Captain
Joined
Dec 27, 2010
Runs
4,288
The 20-year-old, who has just won right to remain in the UK, has been pro for only six weeks, but his flashing hands and easy style are making waves in the sport

Tawanda Muyeye is one of those cricketers you tend to hear stories about. From the thousand runs in a season at Eastbourne college that ended with the title of Wisden Schools Cricketer of the Year, to the dreamy third ball six over long-on in his first short-form game for Kent 2nd XI this week, a clip that has been doing the rounds on social media.

Then there’s the story Rob Ferley, his coach at Eastbourne, tells about training in the indoor school and cranking the bowling machine up steadily until it reached 99mph as Muyeye calmly ran though his drills, hitting the ball to all areas, oblivious to the fact he was facing the robot version of Shoaib Akhtar. This was a schoolboy. Ferley went to fetch another teacher just to confirm what he was seeing.

Ferley, who played for Kent and England Under-19s, describes himself as “another jaded ex-pro”, and knows full well his fellow coaches might roll their eyes. But he is unequivocal in his assessment: “I genuinely think he could be the best player in the world”.

It is a deliberate hyperbole, based on talent, possibilities and the basic arc of what a 20-year-old can hope to achieve. And Muyeye has already come quite a long way.

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On a freezing Monday morning in the empty stands at the St Lawrence Ground he sounds reassuringly even-keeled after a fraught couple of months. Since the start of March, Muyeye has turned 20, signed a contract at Kent, made his first-class debut and – oh yes – had his right to remain in the UK approved by the Home Office after a long and anxious wait.

“I’m an asylum seeker,” he says. “My family are refugees, my mum is a refugee, I am a refugee. This is due to the human rights violations in Zimbabwe. For as long as it goes on I will speak up about it. I think it’s very wrong.

“My mum was political, she supported the opposition party [the Movement for Democratic Change]. We had to leave home and come and seek asylum as she felt very threatened and unsafe.

“Luckily England has been really good to us and she has been able to settle down here. To have the freedom and live in a place where you don’t feel threatened, to raise a family here. I’m just so glad she’s safe and we’re all safe.”

Muyeye has been granted the right to remain indefinitely (“It means I’m basically treated as an English citizen”) and this is home now. “I want to play for England. Obviously there is a huge amount to learn before it’s a possibility. But that’s my ambition. I want to play Test cricket for England.”

Muyeye is well aware he is the greenest of newbie pros, learning from observing the likes of Zak Crawley (“Times it so well it’s unreal”); Joe Denly (“Something to watch in the nets”) and, of course, Darren Stevens (“Phenomenal. He knows so much about cricket”).

It will be six years before Muyeye can qualify for England. Before then he will face the usual uneasy intersection of obvious talent and the step into professional sport, with its intangibles, its difficulty levels, its grind. Three weeks ago, he made his first-class debut against Sussex, with little cricket of any kind behind him. He lasted eight balls in the first innings, pinned by Ollie Robinson in the middle of a high-class spell.

“I was feeling fresh and really excited. It’s a massive moment that I’ve been thinking about for so long. Ever since I was young in Zim, I’ve wanted to play cricket in England. The game started and Jofra [Archer] was on a roll, Ollie Robinson was on a roll, it was pretty cool, you know, the chance to face two guys who are going to play Test cricket for England.”

Muyeye spent the winter training at Sussex with Robinson, who he rates as “maybe the best bowler in England right now”. “I do think he turned it up a notch when I was out there. It was pretty good, he gave me a bit of a send-off, but it was all in the spirit of the game, and I spoke to him afterwards. Hopefully I’ll get to play him again.”

As the game meandered to a draw three days later there was a first small glimpse of that easy style, the flashing hands, and one vicious pull over midwicket. As Ferley says: “He’s box office. Whenever he bats people will want to watch him.”

Muyeye mentions his cricketing heroes – Viv Richards, Kevin Pietersen – and talks with mild awe of watching Joe Root bat at Yorkshire this season. “It’s like he’s playing in slow motion, he’s got so much time.”

“I’m pretty good with short stuff, I like facing quick bowling, I like getting into a battle with a fast bowler,” he says. “I am looking forward to the white-ball stuff. But I’ve been a pro for six weeks, and the biggest challenge for me is trying to adapt my game to the longer format. I’ve been working with Mike Yardy on what to leave, he is phenomenal on the mindset of batting.”

It is a style first glimpsed in tape ball games with his brother at the family home in Harare. In a fresh twist on the homespun origin story the young Muyeyes would break open roll-on deodorant dispensers and take the plastic ball out so they could play inside. Muyeye was nine and playing in his primary school team when he realised he was pretty good at this game. “I scored maybe eight hundreds.”

He also played rugby union, specialising in diving across the line like his hero Bryan Habana, and was good enough to represent Zimbabwe in both sports at under‑16 level. The move to Eastbourne was a life-changing break. He wrote to schools across England looking for a chance to move in his A-level years. Eventually an email reached Ferley. “It was unusual,” he says. “It went: ‘Dear Sir. I’ve played in these matches where I scored 0, 0, 100, 24, 0, 0, 100.’ I thought, that’s interesting. Nobody puts their zeros in.” Some video footage followed. “I watched three balls and thought, yeah.”

There were bleak times in the past year. The uncertainty of his situation meant not being able to work, play cricket or do much beyond relying on the kindness of friends during lockdown. “That was one of my lowest points in life, it was really tough. I just didn’t know what I was going to do.”

He is hugely grateful to Kent, and Paul Downton in particular, for their help in that time. Ferley and James Tredwell, another strong influence, were a lifeline, and his agent, James, at Insignia gets a heartfelt name check. “It was ridiculous what he did helping me.”

The initial advice was the Home Office would make a decision on 1 March. Four days later, Muyeye was coming back from Nottingham, on the one hand weighing up an offer to play county cricket at Trent Bridge, on the other his future still completely up in the air.

“I was on the train when I got the phone call. I couldn’t even cry, I was just really excited and very, very relieved. My mum cried. She got my favourite cake from Waitrose.” It doesn’t get much more English than that. Now for the cricket.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/may/29/tawanda-muyeye--asylum-seeker-could-become-best-cricketer-in-the-world
 
Because he is in England where they have a proper system going, I can actually believe this claim!
 
Strikes me as shameless hyperbole which piles unnecessary pressure on a young lad who is trying to make his way in a foreign country. Even if the lad is talented, there's absolutely no value in making statements such as this. Let him develop peacefully in county cricket, it was the silly hype and comparisons with Donald Bradman that ruined Graeme Hick before he even debuted for England.
 
Strikes me as shameless hyperbole which piles unnecessary pressure on a young lad who is trying to make his way in a foreign country. Even if the lad is talented, there's absolutely no value in making statements such as this. Let him develop peacefully in county cricket, it was the silly hype and comparisons with Donald Bradman that ruined Graeme Hick before he even debuted for England.

Could say the same for Ramprakash. The hype around those two was insane. And atleast those two had county performances that had people excited. It was premature but that's nothing compared to hyping up a school cricketer with one FC match under his belt. Not to mention, he is 6 years away from qualifying for England!

I get the feeling that the author did hyped him up to spice up his article. Because it has a very specific tone and narrative that is impossible to ignore. Eventhough it is based on real-life events.
 
I wonder why nobody wants to play for the richest cricket board in the world? Never heard about any foreign player who wants to move to India and play for India? :inti
 
I wonder why nobody wants to play for the richest cricket board in the world? Never heard about any foreign player who wants to move to India and play for India? :inti

Mother chose England and not India is this case.
anyway richest cricket board is struggling with finances now.
 
I wonder why nobody wants to play for the richest cricket board in the world? Never heard about any foreign player who wants to move to India and play for India? :inti

India has very complex citizenship rules - like both parents must have Indian citizenship to qualify for citizenship. or get married with Indian national

In UK / Australia - you are eligible for citizenship after completing criteria like certain years of residence
 
Pretty sure if India had easier citizenship rules like Europe - many foreigners wud try for Indian citizenship

Even if u dont play for Team India - it wud be easier for IPL as they wud count as domestic players

Shaun Tait got Indian citizenship after marrying an Indian & if he plays in IPL - will count as domestic player quota - but he is now retired. Even Glen Maxxwell will be eligible once he gets Indian nationality ( after his marriage with Indian girl )
 
India has very complex citizenship rules - like both parents must have Indian citizenship to qualify for citizenship. or get married with Indian national

In UK / Australia - you are eligible for citizenship after completing criteria like certain years of residence

Lol you’re talking as if, if india had easier citizenship rules people would start picking India over UK or Australia.
 
Because he is in England where they have a proper system going, I can actually believe this claim!

However, the fact that the English system can't produce anything of its own and relies on these Pietersen/Morgan/Archer/Muyeye to make them succeed as a cricket team speaks volumes.
 
Lol you’re talking as if, if india had easier citizenship rules people would start picking India over UK or Australia.

Lol you're talking as India doesn't have any refugees OR no one has applied for Indian citizenship in past.
India is no UK/Australia but it isn't Somalia either.
 
Lol you're talking as India doesn't have any refugees OR no one has applied for Indian citizenship in past.
India is no UK/Australia but it isn't Somalia either.
Pakistan holds way more refugees than India , that doesn’t prove anything. I am not saying India is some wasteland but that poster was making it seem like if getting an Indian citizenship was easier, people would pick it over UK/Australia lol.
 
Lol you’re talking as if, if india had easier citizenship rules people would start picking India over UK or Australia.

For cricketing reasons - a few might have if they had the chocie. Especially from West Indies or ones with Indian origin

I mean playing for Team India & IPL wud make u infinitely more richer than playing for West Indies or South Africa
 
Imagine you are Jofra Archer. Exciting young prospect in world cricket. You have a citizenship choice between UK & India. Which country wud u choose ?

Archer wud earn 5-10 X more if he plays for India than England
 
India has very complex citizenship rules - like both parents must have Indian citizenship to qualify for citizenship. or get married with Indian national

In UK / Australia - you are eligible for citizenship after completing criteria like certain years of residence

Except I'm pretty sure India like most countries also grant citizenship through asylum
 
He might be a good player but he has not shown any promise at County level so far and another talent loss for Zimbabwe.
 
Imagine you are Jofra Archer. Exciting young prospect in world cricket. You have a citizenship choice between UK & India. Which country wud u choose ?

Archer wud earn 5-10 X more if he plays for India than England

But he would never make it India because India doesn't a clear cut system like England and lets not forget the racism and discrimination he would face at every level in India, from club cricket through first class cricket I seriously doubt he'd ever be able to make it beyond a second string domestic due to the various forms of systemic discrimination in India
 
But he would never make it India because India doesn't a clear cut system like England and lets not forget the racism and discrimination he would face at every level in India, from club cricket through first class cricket I seriously doubt he'd ever be able to make it beyond a second string domestic due to the various forms of systemic discrimination in India
Yup Darren Sammy was called racial slurs in IPL by Indian cricketers despite being a well known name. Imagine what a young black cricketer would go through.
 
Imagine you are Jofra Archer. Exciting young prospect in world cricket. You have a citizenship choice between UK & India. Which country wud u choose ?

Archer wud earn 5-10 X more if he plays for India than England

No he likely would not pick india even if india offered citizenship on the spot and UK asked to wait 5 years. The simple reason is that making to the very top of cricketing ladder (even if highly rated at youth level) is a privelage very few people get to live. If Archer didn’t make it in india then he would likely be scared for the rest of his life. In England he’d still likely make something of himself. Also India has more competition anyway and at that age he can’t know that he most likely has moreTalent than any Indian fast bowler ever.

Also this is obviously exclusion other things like support system for black cricketers etc
 
That's some hype.

Hope he does well, but a bit premature to say he could be the world's best.
 
Yup Darren Sammy was called racial slurs in IPL by Indian cricketers despite being a well known name. Imagine what a young black cricketer would go through.

In India and I am sure in Pakistan too, we give nicknames to people based on their physical traits. Motu, Patlu, Kalu, Gora, Haddi(Skinny) etc are few examples which are used commonly without any disrespect. I've been called Skinny my whole life before I put on some weight. In fact my brother is nicknamed as Kalu for same reason.

But that is not racism. Racism comes in picture when one thinks he is superior to other.
If anything, we subcontinent people give special treatment to foreigners irrespective of their skin color.

What happened with Sammy, was either lack of education from BCCI to players, OR Ishant got too friendly that he thought he could use same word for Sammy too and Sammy won't mind. Ishant overlooked the racial problem of world and behaved like he would have with any normal friend. It was wrong but no way it was racial slur or abuse as you mentioned.

Btw I read somewhere that in PSL, a slogan is used sometimes when Sammy is on ground which says something like "Sammy you are black but you are our brother".
 
In India and I am sure in Pakistan too, we give nicknames to people based on their physical traits. Motu, Patlu, Kalu, Gora, Haddi(Skinny) etc are few examples which are used commonly without any disrespect. I've been called Skinny my whole life before I put on some weight. In fact my brother is nicknamed as Kalu for same reason.

But that is not racism. Racism comes in picture when one thinks he is superior to other.
If anything, we subcontinent people give special treatment to foreigners irrespective of their skin color.

What happened with Sammy, was either lack of education from BCCI to players, OR Ishant got too friendly that he thought he could use same word for Sammy too and Sammy won't mind. Ishant overlooked the racial problem of world and behaved like he would have with any normal friend. It was wrong but no way it was racial slur or abuse as you mentioned.

Btw I read somewhere that in PSL, a slogan is used sometimes when Sammy is on ground which says something like "Sammy you are black but you are our brother".

Racism is there in Indian society - most desis are obsessed with fair skin

Having said that its also true that West Indian cricketers are hugely popular in India. Chris Gayle , Dwayne Bravo, Andre Russel have massive fan following in India

Gayle regularly features in ads & endorsements by Indian companies
 
LOL why would any sane person choose India the 3rd class country over UK or Australia.It doesn't make any sense.
 
Racism is there in Indian society - most desis are obsessed with fair skin

Having said that its also true that West Indian cricketers are hugely popular in India. Chris Gayle , Dwayne Bravo, Andre Russel have massive fan following in India

Gayle regularly features in ads & endorsements by Indian companies

I didn't say racism doesn't exist in India. Not only racism but a lot of other problems exist since India is too diverse.

My reply was limited to Sammy's incident. The poster simply tried to take a dig at IPL and India.
But I can't help you if you don't understand difference between saying someone kalu/motu/patlu in friendly manner VS real racism.
 
6 years before he qualifies to play for England.

Lets hope he's not another Graeme Hick.
 
The BCCI pay less than the ECB.

Bumrah's annual contract is close to $1 million annually. Add another $1 million in IPL fees + another 3-4 million dollars in endorsements / sponsors

Archer wud be earning like 5-6 million dollars per year
 
I didn't say racism doesn't exist in India. Not only racism but a lot of other problems exist since India is too diverse.

My reply was limited to Sammy's incident. The poster simply tried to take a dig at IPL and India.
But I can't help you if you don't understand difference between saying someone kalu/motu/patlu in friendly manner VS real racism.

Both Indians & Pakistanis ( + Bangladeshis ) are very racist & have an unhealthy obsession with fair skin ( probably legacy of British colonial past )

Nobody can pretend to be saint in this regards
 
Bumrah's annual contract is close to $1 million annually. Add another $1 million in IPL fees + another 3-4 million dollars in endorsements / sponsors

Archer wud be earning like 5-6 million dollars per year

Archer's international and IPL base salaries are pretty much the same as Bumrahs although Archer earns higher match fees and isn't barred from earning more by playing in other leagues.
 
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