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| South African
Squad
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Shaun
Maclean Pollock
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| Born: |
16
July 1973, Port Elizabeth, Cape Province |
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| Major
Teams: |
KwaZulu-Natal,
Natal, Warwickshire, South Africa. |
| Known
As: |
Shaun
Pollock |
| Pronounced: |
Shaun
Pollock |
| Batting
Style: |
Right Hand Bat |
| Bowling
Style: |
Right
Arm Fast Medium
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| Test
Debut: |
South Africa v England at Centurion, 1st Test, 1995/96 |
| Latest
Test: |
South Africa v Pakistan at Cape Town, 2nd Test, 2002/03 |
| ODI
Debut: |
South Africa v England at Cape Town, 1st ODI, 1995/96 |
| Latest
ODI: |
South Africa v Pakistan at Cape Town, 5th
ODI, 2002/03 |
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Profile:
Considering
the type of stuff floating around in his gene pool, it would have
been surprising if Shaun Pollock had not been an international
cricketer - and a very good one at that. Dad Peter led the South
African attack through the 1960s; uncle Graeme was one of the
finest, if not the finest, left-hander to play the game. Shaun has
bits of both in his makeup, but it is as an immaculate,
Hadlee-esque, line and length seamer that he has established
himself. At the start of his first-class career, though, he was
both slippery and aggressive and his Natal team-mates delighted in
totting up the number of batsmen he pinned match after match. He
was brought into the South African Test side against Michael
Atherton's England tourists in 1995/96 and although his father was
the convener of selectors, there was never a hint of nepotism and
the younger Pollock took quickly to the higher level. In 1996 he
had a spell with Warwickshire cut short because of an ankle injury
and missed the tour to India at the end of that year. But he soon
returned to resume his new-ball partnership with Allan Donald and
this pairing was the springboard of much of South Africa's success
during the latter half of the 1990s. Indeed, it is possible to
argue that the emergence of Pollock inspired Donald to greater
heights as the latter found himself with a partner who both
complemented and challenged him. Perhaps the straightest bowler in
world cricket, Pollock is able to move the ball both ways at a
lively pace. He also possesses stamina and courage in abundance as
in proved in Adelaide in 1998 when he toiled on hour after hour in
blazing heat to take seven for 87 in 41 overs on a perfect batting
pitch. If there is a criticism of Pollock, it is that he has
underperformed with the bat, but most Test teams would be
perfectly happy to have him in their side if he never scored a
run. Pollock was thrust into the captaincy in April when Hansie
Cronje was drummed out of the game, and he now faces the biggest
challenge of his career - to lift a shocked and demoralised South
African side. If he can disprove the maxim that fast bowlers
should not be appointed captain, it might well prove to be his
greatest achievement.
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