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Carl Hooper

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Carl Hooper
Personal information
Full name
Carl Llewelyn Hooper
Born (1966-12-15) 15 December 1966 (age 57)
Georgetown, Guyana
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight arm off break
RoleAll-rounder
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 190)11 December 1987 v India
Last Test3 November 2002 v India
ODI debut (cap 50)18 March 1987 v New Zealand
Last ODI4 March 2003 v Kenya
ODI shirt no.4
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1983–1987Demerara
1984–2003Guyana
1992–1998Kent
2003–2004Lancashire
Career statistics
Competition Tests ODI FC LA
Matches 102 227 339 457
Runs scored 5,762 5,761 23,034 13,357
Batting average 36.46 35.34 47.68 40.11
100s/50s 13/27 7/29 69/104 15/85
Top score 233 113* 236* 145
Balls bowled 13,794 9,573 46,464 19,718
Wickets 114 193 555 396
Bowling average 49.42 36.05 35.30 34.37
5 wickets in innings 4 0 18 1
10 wickets in match 0 0 0 0
Best bowling 5/26 4/34 7/93 5/41
Catches/stumpings 115/– 120/– 375/– 242/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 29 December 2008

Carl Llewelyn Hooper (born 15 December 1966) is a former Guyanese cricketer who captained the West Indies in Tests and ODIs. An all-rounder, he was a right-handed batsman and off-spin bowler, who came to prominence in the late 1980s in a side that included such players as Gordon Greenidge, Desmond Haynes, Malcolm Marshall and Courtney Walsh and represented the West Indies over a 16-year international career.

Playing career

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Rise in ranks

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Hooper first represented the West Indies at youth level and eventually became a regular for Guyana in senior regional tournaments. He later captained Guyana to triumphantly claim three regional List A titles in 1996, 1999 and 2002.[1]

Hooper went on to make his Test debut against India in 1987, scoring his maiden century in only his second test of that tour. During the West Indies' 1991 tour of England, Hooper notched 111 with 14 fours and a six, at Lord's.[2] As well he starred as the overall topscorer with 290 runs, in the 1995 home ODI series against Australia, which the Windies won by a 4-1 margin.[3][4][5] He was later named man of the match, scoring 81 and picking up 5 for 26 in the drawn second test of Sri Lanka's 1997 tour of the Windies, played at the Arnos Vale Stadium in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.[6][7] As well he was named player of the series for the 1997-98 Singer Akai Champions Trophy, where the Windies were defeated by England in the tournament's final.[8]

During 1992 he joined English county cricket side Kent. Hooper went on to win the batting award, as top scorer with 773 runs, of the 1994 AXA Equity & Law League. His highest score for the club, 236 not out, came against Glamorgan at Canterbury. With his best bowling figures for Kent, 7 for 93, coming in 1998 against Surrey at The Oval. He later won the 1998 Walter Lawrence Trophy, which he shared with Ali Brown. Hooper eventually spent six years at the English side and was later described by Jo Harman of Wisden as Kent's greatest overseas player of all time. During 2003 Hooper joined Lancashire. During his first season with that side he became only the second player to have scored a century against all 18 county cricket teams. During that season he also scored over 1,100 runs for Lancashire in the County Cricket Championship.[9][10][11][12]

Playing style

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As a very stylish, elegant and graceful batsman, Hooper was also a potent off spinner and nimble slip fielder. He was usually placed in the slip cordon, taking numerous catches there, for the most part, in his cricketing career.[13][14]

Ray Illingworth noted that Hooper's "off-spin is underrated"[15] In his autobiography, Steve Waugh writes that "quickness of feet and sweet yet brutally efficient stroke play were Hooper's trademarks."[16] Wasim Akram has rated Hooper as "one of the top batsmen West Indies produced".[17] Shane Warne also thought very highly of Hooper's footwork and, in 2008, named him among the top 100 cricketers of his time, citing in particular his ability to disguise his dances down the track. Warne felt that determining when a batsman was going to give the charge was one of the most important things for a spinner, and that Hooper was the best at making it indeterminable. "During the 1995 series," he wrote, "this really nagged away at me, because I couldn't spot any of the usual clues even though I knew there had to be a sign that would give him away. On a number of occasions, I stopped at the point of delivery to see if he was giving anything away with his footwork. Most batsmen would be looking to get out of their ground at that point, whereas Hooper just stayed set. In the end, after watching him closely time after time, I managed to crack it. When he wanted to hit over the top, he just looked at me instead of tapping his crease as usual and looking down. Of course, my knowing what he was going to do did not always stop him from doing it."[18]

Hooper struggled early in his career, averaging just 26.08 in his first 38 Tests. However, following his breakthrough 178 not out against Pakistan in 1993, he went on to average 45.60 over his next 58 matches.

Later career

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Hooper first announced his retirement three weeks before the 1999 Cricket World Cup but made a surprising comeback in 2001 as West Indies captain. He captained the side in 22 Tests, leading the Windies to a tight victory in the 2001–02 home series against India. He scored 233 not out, his highest innings in Test match cricket, during the first match of that said test series played in Bourda, Guyana. His record as a batsman also improved with the captaincy. As he averaged 45.97 as captain compared to 36.46 in his Test career as a whole.[19][20][21] However, other Test results, especially away from home, were less impressive. He also steered the Windies to win the 2001 Zimbabwe Coca-Cola Cup, defeating India in the tournament's final. During 2002, with Hooper at the helm, West Indies won a home ODI series against New Zealand along with an away ODI series against India. He then captained the Windies at the 2003 Cricket World Cup. Although the Caribbean side failed to progress to the tournament's second round, according to Rob Smyth, "Hooper did very little wrong apart from lose the odd toss and fail to control the weather".[22][23][24] Despite losing the captaincy, Hooper was retained in the side for an upcoming Test and ODI series at home against Australia. He however pulled away to again retire from international cricket as he wanted a youngster in the team instead of him.

Hooper holds the accolade of being the first cricketer in the world to have scored 5,000 runs, taken 100 wickets, held 100 catches and received 100 caps in both ODIs and Tests, a feat only matched since by Jacques Kallis.[25] Hooper is also the Windies' fifth highest spinning wicket taker, with 114 scalps in Test Matches. Along with that he's the Windies' fourth highest all time wicket taker, with 193 scalps, in One Day Internationals.[26][27]

Post-retirement

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Since the late 1990s while still playing for West Indies, Hooper has lived, with wife Constance in Adelaide South Australia. He invested in various businesses in Australia and overseas.

He went on to complete a level 3 coaching accreditation with Cricket Australia in 2010.

Hooper has been involved with the SACA since 2010 to date, intermittently. As well as coaching overseas in India, Dubai and West Indies. He has also done various commentary gigs on radio and television.

During May 2011 Hooper was appointed as the batting coach of the Sagicor High Performance Centre located at the University of the West Indies' Cave Hill Campus. At the time he disclosed "The amount of talent I am seeing here (at the Sagicor HPC) has surprised me. I was away [from West Indies] for a while and you would see the game on television, but now that you get close and actually see the guys playing it is clear there is still a lot of talent around,". Hooper also opined that "Having an 'academy' is a great thing for West Indies cricket. The good thing about it is that you have your best young players assembled together and they get to work together as a team. The efforts and emphasis, as is being done, have to be placed on 'academies' at the developmental levels, if we are to see an improvement in the game."[28]

During 2014 he was appointed coach of CPL outfit Antigua Hawksbills. Hooper later joined up in January 2015, with the Guyana Amazon Warriors, as the CPL side's new head coach.[29]

References

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  1. ^ "Can Guyana regain regional one-day supremacy? Ask Sherwin Walker and Donald Duff". stabroeknews.com. Stabroek News. 8 October 2007.
  2. ^ "C.L. HOOPER 111 V ENGLAND". lords.org. Lord's Cricket Ground.
  3. ^ "RECORDS / AUSTRALIA IN WEST INDIES ODI SERIES, 1994/95 / MOST RUNS". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  4. ^ "MATCH REPORTS WEST INDIES v AUSTRALIA 1994-95 At Georgetown, March 18". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo. 15 April 1996.
  5. ^ "RESULT 5th ODI, Georgetown, March 18, 1995, Australia tour of West Indies". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  6. ^ "2nd Test, Kingstown, Sri Lanka tour of West Indies". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  7. ^ "MATCH REPORTS WEST INDIES v SRI LANKA". espncricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  8. ^ "MATCH REPORTS England v West Indies". espncricinfo.com. Cricinfo. 15 April 1999.
  9. ^ "Into the New Millennium". Lancashire County Cricket Club. Archived from the original on 25 September 2010.
  10. ^ "1994 AXA Equity & Law League". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  11. ^ "Walter Lawrence Trophy". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo. 26 September 2006.
  12. ^ Harman, Jo (6 June 2018). "County cricket's greatest overseas players: Kent". wisden.com. Wisden.
  13. ^ "Centuries Against Most Counties". CricketArchive. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  14. ^ "Carl Hooper". BBC Sport. 7 January 2003. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  15. ^ Hodgson, Derek (22 June 1995). "Illingworth prefers to keep a low profile". independent.co.uk. The Independent.
  16. ^ Waugh, Steve (2005). Steve Waugh: Out of my comfort zone - the autobiography. Victoria: Penguin Group (Australia). p. 346. ISBN 0-670-04198-X.
  17. ^ "My XI - Wasim Akram: Carl Hooper - 'One of the top batsmen West Indies produced'". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo. 12 June 2012.
  18. ^ Warne, Shane. "Shane Warne's Century: Ranatunga looked like he had swallowed a sheep." The Times, 27 September 2008.
  19. ^ "Hooper doubles up". bbc.co.uk. BBC. 12 April 2002.
  20. ^ "1st Test: West Indies v India at Georgetown, Apr 11-15, 2002". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  21. ^ "All round records, Test matches". Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  22. ^ Ward, John (7 July 2001). "West Indies upset India in Coca-Cola Cup final". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  23. ^ "5th ODI Kingston, June 16, 2002 New Zealand Tour of the West Indies". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  24. ^ Smyth, Rob (2 September 2003). "Renaissance men". cricinfo.com. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  25. ^ ESPNcricinfo - Records - Test Matches - most matches and Most catches - One-day Internationals, retrieved 29 July 2007
  26. ^ "RECORDS - WEST INDIES - ONE-DAY INTERNATIONALS - MOST WICKETS". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  27. ^ "RECORDS - WEST INDIES - Test Matches - MOST WICKETS". cricinfo.com. Cricinfo.
  28. ^ "Carl Hooper to groom young West Indian batsmen". MSN India. 28 May 2011. Archived from the original on 25 June 2011.
  29. ^ "'Hooper is back!". stabroeknews.com. Stabroek News. 17 January 2015.
Preceded by West Indies Test cricket captains
2000/01–2002/03
Succeeded by