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Vale Rod Marsh

Burgey

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Most CWers would be aware Rod Marsh had a heart attack last week. This morning it's confirmed the great man has passed away at 74.

If you grew up watching and loving cricket in the 70s and 80s, Marsh was a massive part of the Chappell era and was quintessentially a 70s Aus cricketer.

355 test dismissals (a then record and the same number as Dennis Lillee took wickets) , 96 consecutive test matches and a brilliantly acrobatic 'keeper, particularly when standing back. He also had a knack for scoring some pretty crucial runs, especially in the Centenary test when he made a vital second innings ton in the context of a game Aus won by only 45 runs.

After retiring, he became a selector and, more importantly, the head of the Cricket Academy where he brought along and developed so many of the great players of the 90s and 2000s. Ian Healy talks fondly of the time Marsh called him after a day's play in a test and absolutely sprayed him because he hadn't put in place all the things they'd been working on in the pre-season. He said that call made Healy realize he belonged, that such a great 'keeper would think him worthy of his time and energy.

If there was a down side to his playing days, it was probably the post-Chappell era when he was made vice captain to Kim Hughes and the resentment he, Lillee and past players like Ian Chappell in particular held towards Hughes in no small way contributed to the latter's demise as skipper and a player. Nonetheless, Marsh always said he considered Hughes a friend, only they had very very different ideas about how a cricket team should be run.

Marsh then went across to England for a time and was involved in the selection of the side which ball tampered, cheated and won the 2005 Ashes.

He was always forthright, invariably competitive and was one of the greatest players never to have captained Australia.

There's something particularly poignant when one of your childhood heroes passes. Not least because it's a hat tip to your own advancing years.

Vale Bacchus. One of the genuine greats.
 

social

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Sad news

Great player who also did a lot for the game post retirement

RIP
 

flibbertyjibber

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Sad news. Great player and one half of one of the greatest sledges of all time with Botham which was turned on him spectacularly.
 

Fuller Pilch

Hall of Fame Member
Great story from the 80s was John Wright putting prawn shells in Marsh's keeping gloves and putting them back in his coffin. Apparently the smell was terrible.

Anyway condolences to his family, friends, fans, and Aussie cricket.
 

The Sean

Cricketer Of The Year
Burgey's post sums it up - one of the defining cricketers of the Chappell era. I only caught the very end of his career and was just a young kid when he, Lillee and Greg Chappell retired together but it was clear what he meant to Australian cricket.

His clear, televised disgust at Chappell's underarm ball instruction to his brother was also a measure of the man.

And to put a personal spin on the sad news, he has always been my Mum's favourite cricketer. I'll give her a call today.

RIP
 

Anil

Hall of Fame Member
was one of the greatest keepers of all time and a great servant of australian cricket...tough loss for the cricketing world!
 

tony p

State Regular
RIP.

As someone born in 1967, grew up with him as a player, how time flies.

Remember him calling back Randall in the Centenary Test at the MCG for a catch that didn't carry.
And clearly saying " NO MATE" when that underarm ball was about to be bowled.

A fine keeper & a very important person after his career in many facets of the game.
 

Line and Length

Cricketer Of The Year
In a tribute in the local paper, a journalist tells how he was taken to task by Rod because he had failed to use a capital "T" for Test match cricket. It was the only form of the game that he thought warranted a capital.
 
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quincywagstaff

International Debutant
Marsh actually got sacked as a Channel 9 commentator in 1990 because he said publicly Test cricket was a superior format to one-day cricket.

As harsh as that it was, it was probably beneficial for his career in the long-run as it enabled him to begin his highly successful coaching career.
 
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