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Peter Roebuck dies

Rentboy69

Cricket Spectator
Its odd, none of the news reporting has mentioned talk of Peter Roebuck's wife or girlfriend. Does anybody know if he had a wife or girlfriend?
 

Jacknife

International Captain
It's hard to get your head around what the police have claimed were the series of events, that one minute he was talking to them and the next he's run and he's taken a swallow dive out of the window. It all just sounds, well I don't need to say really.
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
It's been suggested it was actually article deadline pressure that caused Roebuck to take his own life.

Why else would he be attempting six stories at once?


(sorry) :ph34r:
 

SteveNZ

Cricketer Of The Year
There's varying degrees of class in this thread, a lot of the lower stuff coming quite recently.

Remember folks, google is a prevalent tool these days and I imagine posts get picked up in search engines do they not? And just because we don't personally know someone, doesn't mean we can be so flippant about their death. We wouldn't be so blase if it was someone close to us.

A fairly good guide to posting on here would be to act as if the person or persons being discussed were reading it, at least in my eyes. If it is reasoned, no matter how harsh the criticism, then fair enough.
 

Shri

Mr. Glass
Maybe he thought he was playing Assassin's Creed. The third part is releasing this week. Peter "Ezio" Roebuck imo.
 

Zinzan

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Of all the recent cricket deaths, I'm most sad about this one & probably for selfish reasons. Listening to Roebuck on the ABC was one of my favorite parts of the Australian summer of cricket. Especially on the odd occasion that NZ played there & Roebuck teamed up with Waddle (for serious talk) & of course O'Keefe (for more light-hearted banter)
 

Burgey

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Of all the recent cricket deaths, I'm most sad about this one & probably for selfish reasons. Listening to Roebuck on the ABC was one of my favorite parts of the Australian summer of cricket. Especially on the odd occasion that NZ played there & Roebuck teamed up with Waddle (for serious talk) & of course O'Keefe (for more light-hearted banter)
Yeah rain delays were a pleasure when the ABC blokes all got together to talk about the game.
 

Zinzan

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Touching tribute this .............................


Peter, we hardly knew you, but you told the game like no other

Peter, we hardly knew you, but you told the game like no other
Greg Baum
November 14, 2011
Roebuck 'a huge cricket intellect'

Veteran sports commentator and one-time ABC colleague, Tim Lane pays tribute to Peter Roebuck.


Tragedy far greater than 47 all out has struck cricket, and this should be a Roebuck column. But it isn't one, and can't be one, and never will be one again because the tragedy is Peter Roebuck. He is dead.

Two days ago, on the last morning of that bizarre Test at Newlands, he was at the coffee urn, talking intently with Allan Border about solutions for Australian cricket. Their coffees were cold. When the match ended, he filed his column and, since lunch was laid, he sat down to eat it and to mull over intractable problems in South African cricket with Tony Irish from the SA Cricketers' Association. He seemed his usual self, whatever that was.

The second-last person to see him alive was the ABC's Jim Maxwell, who had grown as close to him as anyone did. The last person was a policeman.


In these glimpses there were clues to Roebuck, cricketer, writer, broadcaster, coach, philanthropist, educator but above all, mystery. Clues must do; it is doubtful if anyone on earth knew him intimately. He chose it to be that way.

It is possible to say where he came from, but not where he belonged. After moving from England he kept houses in Bondi and Pietermaritzburg. He lived in three worlds because it suited him not to be tied down in one.

He was English by birth; in fact he captained England A once. He was an Australian citizen who cherished his work for Fairfax and the ABC. He played the Pom in Australia and the maverick in England. But he perhaps found his life's work in South Africa, where he created a community of 40 underprivileged South African and Zimbabwean boys and spent pretty much every cent he earned putting them through school. He talked endlessly about them. They were on his mind at the end.

Roebuck was eccentric. He was a tall, spare, fit man who lived an austere, almost ascetic life, not indulging in such fripperies as deodorant. His trademark was a tatty straw hat with a wide brim. It was one of few possessions found in his hotel room. On anyone else, that hat would have been an absurd affectation.

He was complex, intense, taut, edgy, opinionated, a little manic, mostly cheerful, sometimes broody. He was a contrarian, not for the sake of it, but because he always had another view. He spoke quickly, in a clipped tone, needing to get the thoughts out so that more could follow; his broadcast voice was his street voice. He did not do small talk, ever.

Cricket was his metier, but it did not confine him. He was widely read and supremely intelligent. He was also self-possessed, yet drew people to him. Women liked him, but often he was awkward in their company.

He was warm in his own way. Speaking to Fairfax's Chloe Saltau one day, he pointed to Shane Brown, the MCC's communications manager, and said: ''He has a nice face. You should marry him.'' She did.

He was social in cricket hours, solitary out of them. When the cricket caravaners headed out at night, mostly he would go to a cafe by himself, sit in a corner and read a book. He had the Pimpernel's ability to absent himself from a party suddenly without anyone seeing him leave.

He was a loyal friend who felt the pain of others as acutely as only the highly intelligent do. But he did not express empathy easily. He was flawed; of course he was. He fought to reconcile himself to his flaws, and it was the central drama of his life. He was tormented as only genius can be. The circumstances of his death attest to it.

He was estranged from his family and rarely mentioned them. He played for and captained a Somerset team that included such strong-willed luminaries as Viv Richards, Joel Garner and Ian Botham. He fell out with Botham, bitterly, and the repercussions lasted years. He excited spite towards him as only those who are different can. Botham delighted in marshalling malign forces in England against him.

He was a dedicated but dour opening bat. He made a century against the all-conquering 1989 Australians, but it took him all day.

Intermittently, he was touted as England captain. He did captain an English XI one day, in a match against the lowly Netherlands - and lost. There was a second match and England won it, he always pointed out.

He understood cricket and cricketers. He would spot the deficiency in a field setting, or a kink in a batsman's technique, and explain it. He wrote columns and books on cricket while still playing it. His writing was distinct: fluent, perceptive, vibrant, sometimes whimsical, almost a genre. He was stinging in his critiques, but affectionate in his appreciations and wise in his perspectives. He wrote much, yet no two pieces ever were alike.

For years, he wrote his stories on the back of scrap paper in a longhand scrawl that was illegible even to him. The shape of the story would become apparent to him as he dictated it down the phone to a copytaker.

At least twice, to meet urgent deadlines, he filed off the top of his head, after a fractious World Cup semi-final between India and Sri Lanka in Kolkota in 1996, and when Ian Healy hit a six to deliver Australia victory in a tight Test at Port Elizabeth in 1997. Both were instant masterpieces. Eventually, but long after everyone else, he acquired a laptop and a mobile phone. He was pleasantly surprised by them.

And suddenly, impossibly, he is no more. In the small hours of Sunday, in the foyer of a hotel in Newlands, while police and forensic experts went about their business, there was a wake. It consisted of Maxwell, Drew Morphett, Geoff Lawson, this reporter and another. We talked about the part of his life we knew, because about Roebuck, everyone knew only a part. We babbled, really, because we didn't understand. We never will. But dimly, we already knew this: covering cricket will never be the same again.
 

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