Quantcast

Phillip Hughes tribute from Angus Fraser

County director reflects on one of 'the good guys'

Lord’s Cricket Ground was an extremely sombre place as the light lifted this morning. The greyness of the day was apt as the staff of Marylebone Cricket Club and Middlesex County Cricket Club arrived for work. We were all trying to come to terms with the tragic overnight news that Phillip Hughes had passed away. In respect to Phillip, his family and friends, flags at the ground had been set at half-mast and as the morning progressed floral tributes began to appear at the Grace Gates. Lord’s knows who the good guys in cricket are and Phillip Hughes was certainly one of them.

Phillip was only with Middlesex CCC for a short period of time in 2009 but he made an impression that very few followers and staff of the club will ever forget. He was sensational both on and off the field, and the relationships he formed with many of us have made this tragedy even harder to absorb.

The statistics of his time at Lord’s are there for all to see. In a remarkable 27 day period he scored the small matter of 882 runs for Middlesex CCC. Five hundred and seventy four of these runs were accumulated in three County Championship matches. In five first-class innings he struck three hundreds and two half-centuries, leaving the Club, only to return a short time later with Australia for an Ashes series, with the incredible batting average of 143.5.

But it was his personality away from cricket that I remember more than the savage cuts he sent to the cover boundary. Phillip was the first player I signed for Middlesex, two months after taking up the position of Managing Director of Cricket. He was signed to play for the club whilst Murali Kartik, Middlesex’s designated overseas player, fulfilled his commitments at the Indian Premier League. Despite the decision being criticised at the time, it is a signing I am proud to have made.

Phillip had been recommended to me by Neil D’Costa, his early mentor and manager. D’Costa and I had played Grade Cricket together for Western Suburbs in Sydney in 1994/95 and we had kept in contact. He thought playing county cricket, even if it was only for a month, would help his development. The contract was actually signed before Phillip became the youngest player to score a hundred in each innings of a Test. He completed this remarkable achievement against a strong South African bowling attack in only his second Test.

As I sit here writing this tribute I can still hear D’Costa informing me of what an exceptional young man he was, before telling me that we must look after him. Phillip was only 20 when I picked him up at Heathrow Airport on a cold April morning. As he confidently walked through customs with his green Australian kit bag dragging behind him he was smaller in stature than I imagined but, even then, you could see he had a presence about him.

He was not in any way overawed by the prospect of coming to London on his own to take on the responsibility of playing at the ‘Home of Cricket’ for one of the most prestigious club’s in the country. And by scoring a hundred against Glamorgan in his first innings at Lord’s he highlighted his skill and confidence.

Having spent much of his teenage life mixing with and playing against men in Macksville, a town 300 miles north of Sydney, he was immediately comfortable in my company and we chatted about life at Western Suburbs as we made our way along the M4 to Lord’s. The Middlesex squad were practicing at the time and, after meeting his new team-mates, I dropped him off at his new home, our club flat in West Hampstead.

He quickly fitted into London life and became buddies with a few of our younger players. West Hampstead can be a lively spot and, in an attempt to support D’Costa’s request, I’d regularly ask Phillip how he was and what he’d been up to. With a glint in his eye and a smile on his face he’d always insist he was great, the flat was fine and that he had had a quiet night in. Like most Aussies he was ‘low maintenance’ and in the end we both just ended up laughing when I asked the question.

Even at 20 his attitude to cricket was a lesson to many Middlesex players who had been professionals for several years. He possessed a lovely carefree simple attitude to life but his character was underpinned by a strong work ethic and a fierce desire to score runs and to be the best he could be.

Phillip may have been laid back and easy company off the pitch but on it he was a tremendous competitor. I will never forget him confronting the formidable former South African fast bowler Andre Nel during probably his best innings for Middlesex, the 195 he smashed against Surrey at The Oval.

Nel had taken exception to the hiding he was receiving and bowled a beamer at Hughes. Even now I still have this wonderful vision of the diminutive Hughes following the bear like Nel down the pitch to inform the bowler he was: ‘weak, ******* weak, that is why you quit international cricket to play for Surrey.” Nel did not turn round to take him on.

Judging by the amount of luggage Phillip placed in the back of my car on his return to Sydney I got the feeling he enjoyed his time in London. The clothes shops in Oxford Street definitely took a bit of a hiding and I think he ended up paying more than £1,500 in excess luggage.

I am not a touchy feely sort of person but I hugged him when I dropped him off at Terminal 3. It seemed the natural thing to do. We have spent several enjoyable hours in each other’s company since and even though his international career at times stuttered he never once felt sorry for himself. We always hoped that he would one day return to play for Middlesex CCC again. That, tragically, with many other dreams ended last night.

This post originally appeared on middlesexccc.com