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Martyn Moxon

Martyn Douglas Moxon (born 4 May 1960) is a former English cricketer, who played in ten Test matches and eight One Day Internationals for England and for Yorkshire County Cricket Club between 1980 and 1997.[1] In May 2007, Moxon was confirmed as Director of Professional Cricket at Yorkshire, a role which he left in December 2021.

Martyn Moxon
Personal information
Full name
Martyn Douglas Moxon
Born (1960-05-04) 4 May 1960 (age 63)
Stairfoot, Barnsley, Yorkshire, England
NicknameFrog
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
RoleBatsman
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 520)24 July 1986 v New Zealand
Last Test10 August 1989 v Australia
ODI debut (cap 79)23 January 1985 v India
Last ODI19 March 1988 v New Zealand
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1980–1997Yorkshire
1982/83–1983/84Griqualand West
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 10 8 317 256
Runs scored 455 174 21,161 7,813
Batting average 28.43 21.75 42.83 34.41
100s/50s 0/3 0/1 45/116 7/51
Top score 99 70 274* 141*
Balls bowled 48 2,650 1,500
Wickets 0 28 34
Bowling average 52.89 35.85
5 wickets in innings 0 1
10 wickets in match 0 0
Best bowling 3/24 5/31
Catches/stumpings 10/– 5/– 218/– 88/–
Source: CricketArchive, 19 August 2007

International career edit

Moxon earned 10 caps through his Test career that was delayed by injury. He was due to play against the West Indies in 1984, but a broken arm meant that his debut was delayed until the 1986 series against New Zealand. In the intervening time, Moxon was chosen for the 1984/5 tour of India and Sri Lanka, but the premature death of his father forced him to miss early matches, by which time, Tim Robinson had cemented his place as Graeme Fowler's opening partner. Moxon did make his one-day-international debut later in the tour, making 70 on his debut at Nagpur, which remained his highest ODI score.[2]

When his Test debut finally did come, he took his chance well. As Graham Gooch's sixth opening partner of the Test and ODI summer (after Graeme Fowler, Robinson, Wilf Slack, Mark Benson, and Bill Athey, with Wayne Larkins also initially being called into a Test squad before pulling out due to injury[3]), Moxon took on a New Zealand side that boasted Richard Hadlee. Wisden Cricket Monthly described Moxon as batting with "little panache, but a lot of polish" during a maiden innings of 74, which was ended when a Hadlee off cutter squeezed through his gate.[4] In the second innings at Lord's and during the second Test at Trent Bridge, Moxon was unable to build on his promising start, and was left out of the side for The Oval, having scored 111 runs in his first four innings, at an average of 27.75.

The winter touring party for the trip to Australia in 1986/7 was far from settled in advance. Chris Broad was recalled after a two-year absence, Wilf Slack brought back having missed all but one Test during the summer, and Bill Athey was included as an 'auxiliary' batsman. The choice of two left-handers at the top of England's order highlighted the fact that Australia's big threat came from the battery of left arm seamers available to them, led by Bruce Reid. In the event, Slack, out of form, played no International cricket on the tour while Athey and Broad flourished as an opening pair, Broad going on to be named as the International Cricketer of the Season, and England retaining the Ashes. Moxon had to wait until the last Test of 1987 for a recall. Such were England's selection uncertainties that Tim Robinson had been recalled again in the intervening time.

Moxon was described by ESPNcricinfo as "the unluckiest of the eight men to make 99 in a Test but never a century".[5] This observation is made because early in Moxon's innings when he made 99, in the second test against New Zealand in 1987–88 (Moxon's sixth test in total), he swept three runs seemingly off the middle of the bat only for the umpire to signal leg byes, costing Moxon the runs that would have taken him to a century.[6] He appeared also to be building an innings in the next test, but rain washed out the last two days with Moxon stuck on 81 not out.[7]

In June 1988, Moxon was recalled to the test side at Lord's in place of Mike Gatting to bat at number 3. By this time, television commentators such as Tom Graveney had begun to spot a discernible hole in Moxon's technique: when playing forward his left knee would not come forward quite far enough creating a small "gate". Malcolm Marshall exploited this in the Old Trafford test of that series, bowling Moxon "through the gate".[8] England lost both Test matches heavily and lost the series.

His final test match came the following summer, for an England again being heavily beaten. Australia batted first at Trent Bridge, rival opening batters Geoff Marsh and Mark Taylor batting through the whole of the first day without being dismissed. Finally getting into bat just before lunch on the third day, Moxon suffered somewhat by the comparison and was dismissed by Terry Alderman (who was having a prolific summer against English batters) for 0 in the first over. In the second innings Moxon was demoted down the order. Although he at least got on the score sheet, making 18,[9] England were heavily beaten again and Moxon never played for England again, although he captained an England 'A' tour of Australia in 1992–3.[10]

Moxon played in a struggling era for English cricket, the team not winning any of the Test matches in which he played,[11] and only 2 of his 8 ODIs.[12] As of May 2022, only one England player (Bruce French, who played alongside Moxon in most of Moxon's tests) played more Tests for England without finishing on the winning side.

County cricket edit

Moxon's county career spanned seventeen seasons with Yorkshire, where he scored over 21,000 first-class runs. He began his career with two centuries in his first two home County Championship matches, and it was not long before his elegant driving saw him earmarked for England honours. He established a reliable opening partnership with Ashley Metcalfe, and later captained the county with dignity.[13]

Very much in the mould of Geoffrey Boycott, with whom he opened for Yorkshire at the start of his county career, Moxon was one of the Cricketers of the Year named by Wisden in 1993. The previous year had been a momentous one for the county and Moxon as captain since the club had fielded its first black or Asian player, and only its second overseas player (after Craig White), Sachin Tendulkar.

His career also coincided with a struggling period for Yorkshire, although he did help them to win the Benson and Hedges Cup in 1987, being named man of the match in their semi-final victory over Surrey.[14]

Retirement from playing edit

Upon retirement, he went on to become Director of Coaching at Yorkshire, before moving on to coach Durham in 2001. Upon his resignation on 1 March 2007,[15] he returned to Yorkshire County Cricket Club as the club's Director of Professional Cricket.[16] In 2014 he oversaw Yorkshire's first County Championship title since 2001.[17]

In November 2021, during the Yorkshire Cricket racism controversy, Moxon took leave from his role as director of cricket at the county citing stress.[18]

On 3 December 2021 it was announced that Moxon, along with 16 other Yorkshire staff, would leave his role[19]

References edit

  1. ^ "Martyn Moxon". cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  2. ^ "Full scorecard of England vs India 4th ODI, 1984-5". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  3. ^ "One-match wonders, and Shah's second chance". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  4. ^ "Full Scorecard of England v New Zealand 1st Test 1986". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  5. ^ "Martyn Moxon profile and biography". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  6. ^ "Another Wasim hat-trick". ESPN Cricinfo. 4 May 2005. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  7. ^ "Martyn Moxon profile and biography". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  8. ^ "Full Scorecard of England v West Indies 3rd Test 1986". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  9. ^ "Full scorecard of England vs Australia 5th Test, 1989". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  10. ^ "England 'A' Squad". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  11. ^ "Statistics/MD Moxon/Test Matches". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  12. ^ "Statistics/MD Moxon/One Day Internationals". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  13. ^ Bateman, Colin (1993). If The Cap Fits. Tony Williams Publications. p. 124. ISBN 1-869833-21-X.
  14. ^ "Yorkshire v Surrey at Leeds, 10-12 June 1987". Retrieved 12 May 2022.
  15. ^ "Moxon leaves Durham for Yorkshire". BBC News. 1 March 2007.
  16. ^ The Club : The Yorkshire County Cricket Club Ltd
  17. ^ Dobell, George (12 September 2014). "Something I will treasure for rest of my life". ESPNcricinfo.
  18. ^ "Azeem Rafiq: Yorkshire cricket racism scandal - how we got here". BBC News. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  19. ^ "Yorkshire racism scandal: Martyn Moxon and Andrew Gale among 16 staff to leave". BBC News. Retrieved 3 December 2021.

External links edit

martyn, moxon, martyn, douglas, moxon, born, 1960, former, english, cricketer, played, test, matches, eight, internationals, england, yorkshire, county, cricket, club, between, 1980, 1997, 2007, moxon, confirmed, director, professional, cricket, yorkshire, rol. Martyn Douglas Moxon born 4 May 1960 is a former English cricketer who played in ten Test matches and eight One Day Internationals for England and for Yorkshire County Cricket Club between 1980 and 1997 1 In May 2007 Moxon was confirmed as Director of Professional Cricket at Yorkshire a role which he left in December 2021 Martyn MoxonPersonal informationFull nameMartyn Douglas MoxonBorn 1960 05 04 4 May 1960 age 63 Stairfoot Barnsley Yorkshire EnglandNicknameFrogHeight6 ft 1 in 1 85 m BattingRight handedBowlingRight arm mediumRoleBatsmanInternational informationNational sideEnglandTest debut cap 520 24 July 1986 v New ZealandLast Test10 August 1989 v AustraliaODI debut cap 79 23 January 1985 v IndiaLast ODI19 March 1988 v New ZealandDomestic team informationYearsTeam1980 1997Yorkshire1982 83 1983 84Griqualand WestCareer statisticsCompetition Test ODI FC LAMatches 10 8 317 256Runs scored 455 174 21 161 7 813Batting average 28 43 21 75 42 83 34 41100s 50s 0 3 0 1 45 116 7 51Top score 99 70 274 141 Balls bowled 48 2 650 1 500Wickets 0 28 34Bowling average 52 89 35 855 wickets in innings 0 110 wickets in match 0 0Best bowling 3 24 5 31Catches stumpings 10 5 218 88 Source CricketArchive 19 August 2007 Contents 1 International career 2 County cricket 3 Retirement from playing 4 References 5 External linksInternational career editThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Martyn Moxon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Moxon earned 10 caps through his Test career that was delayed by injury He was due to play against the West Indies in 1984 but a broken arm meant that his debut was delayed until the 1986 series against New Zealand In the intervening time Moxon was chosen for the 1984 5 tour of India and Sri Lanka but the premature death of his father forced him to miss early matches by which time Tim Robinson had cemented his place as Graeme Fowler s opening partner Moxon did make his one day international debut later in the tour making 70 on his debut at Nagpur which remained his highest ODI score 2 When his Test debut finally did come he took his chance well As Graham Gooch s sixth opening partner of the Test and ODI summer after Graeme Fowler Robinson Wilf Slack Mark Benson and Bill Athey with Wayne Larkins also initially being called into a Test squad before pulling out due to injury 3 Moxon took on a New Zealand side that boasted Richard Hadlee Wisden Cricket Monthly described Moxon as batting with little panache but a lot of polish during a maiden innings of 74 which was ended when a Hadlee off cutter squeezed through his gate 4 In the second innings at Lord s and during the second Test at Trent Bridge Moxon was unable to build on his promising start and was left out of the side for The Oval having scored 111 runs in his first four innings at an average of 27 75 The winter touring party for the trip to Australia in 1986 7 was far from settled in advance Chris Broad was recalled after a two year absence Wilf Slack brought back having missed all but one Test during the summer and Bill Athey was included as an auxiliary batsman The choice of two left handers at the top of England s order highlighted the fact that Australia s big threat came from the battery of left arm seamers available to them led by Bruce Reid In the event Slack out of form played no International cricket on the tour while Athey and Broad flourished as an opening pair Broad going on to be named as the International Cricketer of the Season and England retaining the Ashes Moxon had to wait until the last Test of 1987 for a recall Such were England s selection uncertainties that Tim Robinson had been recalled again in the intervening time Moxon was described by ESPNcricinfo as the unluckiest of the eight men to make 99 in a Test but never a century 5 This observation is made because early in Moxon s innings when he made 99 in the second test against New Zealand in 1987 88 Moxon s sixth test in total he swept three runs seemingly off the middle of the bat only for the umpire to signal leg byes costing Moxon the runs that would have taken him to a century 6 He appeared also to be building an innings in the next test but rain washed out the last two days with Moxon stuck on 81 not out 7 In June 1988 Moxon was recalled to the test side at Lord s in place of Mike Gatting to bat at number 3 By this time television commentators such as Tom Graveney had begun to spot a discernible hole in Moxon s technique when playing forward his left knee would not come forward quite far enough creating a small gate Malcolm Marshall exploited this in the Old Trafford test of that series bowling Moxon through the gate 8 England lost both Test matches heavily and lost the series His final test match came the following summer for an England again being heavily beaten Australia batted first at Trent Bridge rival opening batters Geoff Marsh and Mark Taylor batting through the whole of the first day without being dismissed Finally getting into bat just before lunch on the third day Moxon suffered somewhat by the comparison and was dismissed by Terry Alderman who was having a prolific summer against English batters for 0 in the first over In the second innings Moxon was demoted down the order Although he at least got on the score sheet making 18 9 England were heavily beaten again and Moxon never played for England again although he captained an England A tour of Australia in 1992 3 10 Moxon played in a struggling era for English cricket the team not winning any of the Test matches in which he played 11 and only 2 of his 8 ODIs 12 As of May 2022 only one England player Bruce French who played alongside Moxon in most of Moxon s tests played more Tests for England without finishing on the winning side County cricket editMoxon s county career spanned seventeen seasons with Yorkshire where he scored over 21 000 first class runs He began his career with two centuries in his first two home County Championship matches and it was not long before his elegant driving saw him earmarked for England honours He established a reliable opening partnership with Ashley Metcalfe and later captained the county with dignity 13 Very much in the mould of Geoffrey Boycott with whom he opened for Yorkshire at the start of his county career Moxon was one of the Cricketers of the Year named by Wisden in 1993 The previous year had been a momentous one for the county and Moxon as captain since the club had fielded its first black or Asian player and only its second overseas player after Craig White Sachin Tendulkar His career also coincided with a struggling period for Yorkshire although he did help them to win the Benson and Hedges Cup in 1987 being named man of the match in their semi final victory over Surrey 14 Retirement from playing editUpon retirement he went on to become Director of Coaching at Yorkshire before moving on to coach Durham in 2001 Upon his resignation on 1 March 2007 15 he returned to Yorkshire County Cricket Club as the club s Director of Professional Cricket 16 In 2014 he oversaw Yorkshire s first County Championship title since 2001 17 In November 2021 during the Yorkshire Cricket racism controversy Moxon took leave from his role as director of cricket at the county citing stress 18 On 3 December 2021 it was announced that Moxon along with 16 other Yorkshire staff would leave his role 19 References edit Martyn Moxon cricketarchive com Retrieved 4 June 2011 Full scorecard of England vs India 4th ODI 1984 5 ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 21 June 2022 One match wonders and Shah s second chance ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 22 June 2022 Full Scorecard of England v New Zealand 1st Test 1986 ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 22 June 2022 Martyn Moxon profile and biography ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 4 May 2018 Another Wasim hat trick ESPN Cricinfo 4 May 2005 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Martyn Moxon profile and biography ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 4 May 2018 Full Scorecard of England v West Indies 3rd Test 1986 ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 22 June 2022 Full scorecard of England vs Australia 5th Test 1989 ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 21 June 2022 England A Squad ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 22 June 2022 Statistics MD Moxon Test Matches ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 21 June 2022 Statistics MD Moxon One Day Internationals ESPNCricinfo Retrieved 21 June 2022 Bateman Colin 1993 If The Cap Fits Tony Williams Publications p 124 ISBN 1 869833 21 X Yorkshire v Surrey at Leeds 10 12 June 1987 Retrieved 12 May 2022 Moxon leaves Durham for Yorkshire BBC News 1 March 2007 The Club The Yorkshire County Cricket Club Ltd Dobell George 12 September 2014 Something I will treasure for rest of my life ESPNcricinfo Azeem Rafiq Yorkshire cricket racism scandal how we got here BBC News Retrieved 17 November 2021 Yorkshire racism scandal Martyn Moxon and Andrew Gale among 16 staff to leave BBC News Retrieved 3 December 2021 External links editMartyn Moxon at ESPNcricinfo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Martyn Moxon amp oldid 1137041083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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