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'I can't imagine there's been better': Roy in the field

Quick, strong, fearless and with a stunning set of hands, Andrew Symonds was regarded by many - including Jonty Rhodes - as the greatest all-round fielder the game has seen

"Twisting and turning and diving, and then swivelling without actually getting up on to his feet, and he still hit the stumps and ran the batsman out."

Those are the words of the late commentary doyen Richie Benaud, awestruck at the sight of watching a run out in 2001 orchestrated by a promising young allrounder by the name of Andrew Symonds.

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Symonds, aged 25 at the time, had just underlined his enormous potential with a piece of fielding that had even Benaud – albeit briefly – struggling for the right superlatives.

The Queenslander had dived to his left at short mid-on, collected the ball, spun around while sitting on his backside and then threw down the stumps at the strikers' end to run out West Indies quick Laurie Williams, who had mistimed a drive and been sent back to watch the moment his stumps were broken.

Run-outs are one of the few elements of cricket without proper statistical records.

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If they were, Symonds would likely be one of the leading players in that category. The all-action allrounder, who was tragically killed in a car accident outside Townsville on Saturday night, was a sharpshooter in the field with a deadly aim, a powerful arm and reflexes that belied his imposing physique.

Matching his ability to sense a run out, Symonds' instincts as a catcher were almost precognitive.

Whether stationed close on the off-side or asked to patrol a vast distance on the boundary, rarely did a ball escape his clutches if it was there to be taken.

Image Id: AF566AA2C4074C348B9D397A4359A0F6 Image Caption: Symonds threw everything into his fielding // Getty

If his outfield grab to dismiss Pakistan’s Mohammad Yousuf in Australia's opening match of the 2003 World Cup, when he darted across The Wanderers outfield to dive forward and take the catch with two hands, wasn’t impressive enough, it came after he'd scored a career-defining unbeaten 143 with the bat.

Along with Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke and Mike Hussey, Symonds formed a near impenetrable barrier on the off-side in Australia’s Test and ODI teams stretching from second slip to cover.

In the outfield, Symonds' fearless willingness to throw himself in a Superman-style dive in pursuit of a ball approaching the boundary proved not only a new means of run-saving in the game but a trailblazing technique that has since been adopted all over the world.

But perhaps his biggest strength as a fielder was the sheer enjoyment he found in doing it.

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If a ball was dropped, fumbled or spilled, regardless if it had come off the bat or a gentle throw from a teammate, Symonds would whistle and call a 'knock on', a term used in rugby when a player drops the ball towards the opposition’s try line. Nobody was spared, from rookie to skipper.

If Symonds is not the best all-round fielder world cricket has seen, he's in the discussion, along with modern marvels Ponting, Herschelle Gibbs, Jonty Rhodes and Paul Collingwood.

Rhodes, the South African whippet many consider to be the greatest fielder of all time, is in no doubt that Symonds was a better fielder than he ever was.

Image Id: 306E4861EE52445DB205594606CDF4D3 Image Caption: Symonds was deadly in the in-field and on the boundary // Getty

Symonds, according to the Proteas star, was "10 times" better.

"Where he's better than me is that he's a true all-round fieldsman," Rhodes said in 2006.

"For a big guy, he moves well close to the wicket, getting down to the ground, diving, cutting off balls if he's in the ring.

"He's quick and can cut off boundaries. But the extra dimension is his strength. From the middle of the innings, he can be out on the fence saving twos because he has such a strong arm.

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"Put him anywhere on the field and he's brilliant. He is the complete fieldsman. I can't imagine there's been anyone better in the past."

From a player like Rhodes, there can be no higher praise, and all these years on, it remains a fitting tribute for a truly unique cricketer. 

An edited version of this article first appeared on cricket.com.au in 2018