David Gower
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Full name | David Ivon Gower | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England | 1 April 1957|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Batting | Left-handed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Right arm off break | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Role | Batsman | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
International information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
National side | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Test debut (cap 479) | 1 June 1978 v Pakistan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last Test | 9 August 1992 v Pakistan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ODI debut (cap 46) | 24 May 1978 v Pakistan | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last ODI | 16 February 1991 v New Zealand | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Domestic team information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years | Team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1975–1989 | Leicestershire | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1990–1993 | Hampshire | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career statistics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: CricketArchive, 1 September 2007 |
David Ivon Gower OBE (born 1 April 1957) is an English cricket commentator and former cricketer who was captain of the England cricket team during the 1980s. Described as one of the most stylish left-handed batsmen of his era, Gower played 117 Test matches and 114 One Day Internationals (ODI) scoring 8,231 and 3170 runs, respectively. He was one of the most capped and high scoring players for England during his period.
Gower led England during the 1985 Ashes, and his team was victorious; however, two 5–0 whitewashes against the West Indies (in 1984 and 1985–86) reflected poorly on his captaincy, and Gower was replaced in 1986. He was briefly reinstated for the 1989 Ashes series, before being replaced as captain by Graham Gooch. The strained relationship between the pair contributed to Gower retiring from international cricket in 1993. Nevertheless, he ended with an impressive record in first-class cricket, accumulating 26,339 runs at an average of 40.08, and 53 centuries. As of February 2013, he holds the record of 119 consecutive innings without registering a duck in Test cricket.[1][2] Following his retirement, Gower became a successful cricket commentator with Sky Sports, and on 16 July 2009 he was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame.[3][4][5]
On the occasion of England's 1000th Test in August 2018, he was named in the country's greatest Test XI by the ECB.[6]
Early life
Gower was born in Tunbridge Wells in 1957. His father, Richard Gower OBE, was working for the Colonial Service in a position in Dar es Salaam, capital of the then British administered territory of Tanganyika Territory, where Gower spent his early childhood.[3][7] The family returned to England after Tanganyika was granted independence, when Gower was six years old, settling in Kent and later moving to Loughborough.[7] Gower attended prep school at Marlborough House School in Hawkhurst from the age of 8 to 13, where he leaned towards cricket as his preferred sport.[8]
He was awarded a scholarship to attend The King's School in Canterbury, where his father had once been head boy, as a boarder.[8] Gower made the school cricket First XI aged 14 and he was later to be made captain.[9] He also played for the rugby First XV before being dropped from the team for "lack of effort".[10] While at school, Gower played representative cricket for Public Schools against English Schools at under-16 level.
Gower finished school with eight O levels, three A levels and one S level in history. He sat the History exam for Oxford University and was offered an interview at St Edmund Hall, but missed a place.[11] Spurning a place at University College, London, Gower returned to school in an attempt to gain two more A levels but lost interest partway through the year.[12] Having played some matches for the Leicestershire Second XI the previous summer, Gower tried his luck at the club as a professional for the remainder of the year, for £25 per week.[11] In the summer, Gower returned to University College, where he studied law, but after six months he returned to professional cricket.[13]
Gower is nicknamed "Lord Gower" by his Sky Sports colleagues, in allusion to his aristocratic ancestry and public school education. As a member of the Gower family formerly of Glandovan, he is a distant cousin of the Leveson-Gower family, Dukes of Sutherland.[14][15] Per Gower's autobiography, An Endangered Species "there was reckoned to be land in the family in Pembrokeshire two or three generations earlier, which an errant ancestor gambled away in a moment of boredom, and a connection with a place called Castell Malgwyn, now a country house hotel, in Cardigan."[16]
Personal life
Gower was in a 10-year relationship with his girlfriend Vicki Stewart during the 1980s but subsequently broke it off with an announcement in The Times on New Year's Day 1990. He subsequently married his Anglo/Icelandic wife Thorunn Nash at Winchester Cathedral in 1992, with Chris Cowdrey as his best man. They live in Hampshire and have two daughters, Alex and Sammi, born in 1994 and 1996 respectively.
Playing career
Gower enjoyed one of the most prolific first-class cricket careers in English history, in both domestic and international competitions.[3] Gower's career run total in test matches is also the fourth highest by an English player, behind only Alec Stewart with 8,463, Graham Gooch with 8,900 and Alastair Cook with 12,472.[17] He played domestic cricket from 1975 until 1993, largely with Leicestershire until 1989, when he moved to Hampshire. He was a stalwart batsman at both clubs.[3]
Domestic career
Gower made his debut for Leicestershire on 30 July 1975, during that season's County Championship, against Lancashire at Stanley Park, Blackpool.[18] Winning the toss, Lancashire chose to bat first and amassed 259 thanks largely to a century by David Lloyd, who would later become Gower's co-commentator. Gower, batting at number seven, scored 32 before he was dismissed by Ken Shuttleworth, Leicestershire making 321 and taking a first-innings lead. Lloyd made 90 in the second innings as Lancashire declared on 305, with Gower taking one catch to dismiss Jack Simmons for 17. The match, lasting only three days with 100 overs as a maximum limit imposed on both teams for each innings, ended in a draw, with Leicestershire reaching 90 without Gower getting to bat again.[19] Gower continued to make little impression during the rest of the 1975 season, playing in only two more matches and ending the season with 65 runs at 13.00.[20] He enjoyed greater success in his debut List A season, playing in eight matches, scoring 175 runs at 25.00 with two fifties.[21]
Gower was retained for the 1976 season, however, playing in a total of seven first-class matches. He enjoyed greater success, with 323 runs at 35.88 including a maiden century, 102*, and a second fifty.[20] In one day cricket, he played another eight matches, scoring 188 runs at 23.50 however failing to reach fifty, falling short on one occasion with a season-best of 48.[21] The 1977 season saw Gower play 25 matches, with another career best of 144*, his only century of the season. He amassed 745 runs at 23.28, with three other half centuries.[20] In the one day format he was far more prolific, he played 24 matches, scoring 867 with a best of 135*, one of two hundreds that year, along with four fifties, all at 48.16.[21] After two first-class matches against Sri Lankan domestic teams over the winter of 1977–78, in which he scored 76 runs at 38.00 in first-class and a score of 22 in the only one day fixture,[20][21] Gower topped 1,000 runs in a season for the first time in his career, scoring 1098 runs at 37.86 including two hundreds, five fifties and a call up to the national team.[20]
Gower returned to England in 1978 from an international tour with a career best 200*, forming part of his 957 runs for the season at 41.60, with eight fifties to go with that one hundred.[20] For his efforts that season, Gower was awarded Wisden Cricketer of the Year.[22] Wisden recorded that "The sun scarcely graced the English cricket scene with its presence in 1978, but when it did it seemed to adorn the blond head of David Gower. The young Leicestershire left-hander could do little wrong. He typified a new, precocious breed of stroke-players, imperious and exciting, who added colour and glamour to an otherwise bedraggled English summer."[23] The 1980 season in England saw Gower again top 1,000 runs, with 1142 at 48.89, including five hundreds and a career best 156*. This was the most prolific first-class season of Gower's career thus far.[20] He also played 21 one day matches, with 616 runs including another century.[21] His winter international tour was then followed up with a prolific performance during the 1981 season, which included the 1981 Ashes series. During this season, Gower played 19 matches, scoring a career best 1418 runs at 48.89, including one knock of 156*.[20] Against Essex at Grace Road he shared an unbroken county record second wicket stand of 289 with Chris Balderstone.
After another successful international tour, Gower returned to England to peak 1,000 runs again with a career-best 1530 at 46.36, with two hundreds, and scored five further hundreds for only the second time in 1983, where he again topped 1,000 runs, 1,253 this time at 46.40.[20] He came narrowly close to 1,000 runs in the 1984 season, ending with 999 at 35.67, and then scored 1,000 runs, including a then career-best of 215, at 54.70, in 1985. Gower scored one century in England and Australia in the next two seasons, before topping 1,000 runs for three consecutive series', in 1987, 1988 and 1989, with a total of seven centuries including his career best 228.[20]
In 1989, he moved to Hampshire, and upon return from the 1989–90 tour of the West Indies, where he scored only four in one match, he scored 1,263 runs for his new club at 46.77, and he scored 1,142, 1,225 and 1,136 in his final three seasons, ending his last, 1993, with four centuries at 42.07.[20] This was despite being so out of form at times that Brian Mason, a personal counsellor, was asked to work with Gower on his poor form.[24] His final three seasons had seen poorer returns in one day cricket, with his last century coming in 1992, and with his final season returning 347 runs at 26.69.[21] In his final first-class match,[18] Gower faced Essex at Chelmsford on 16 September 1993. Batting at number four, he made a farewell century of 134 before he was stumped in the first innings, and with future captain Nasser Hussain and then captain Graham Gooch both making centuries as Essex fell short of Hampshire's 347 with their own innings of 268, Gower came out to bat for the final time in Hampshire's second innings. He made 25. Gooch, then the England captain having succeeded Gower, came back onto the field for Essex to score his second century of the match.[25]
International career
Gower was selected to play for the England Young Cricketers in 1976 against the West Indies equivalent team. Gower played one match, on 27 August, at the Queen's Park Oval in Port of Spain. Opening the batting, Gower made only 10 runs in the first innings as England were bowled out for 164, however after the West Indies had made 201 Gower fell short with 49 in the second innings, stumped off a spin bowler. England were dismissed for 202, and bowled the West Indies out for 143 to take a 22-run victory.[27] He made his debut in Test cricket in 1978 at Edgbaston, scoring a boundary via a pull shot off his first delivery, bowled by Pakistan's Liaqat Ali.[3] He went on to make 58 in England's only innings, followed by 56 at Lord's and 39 at Headingley.[28] On 27 July, Gower played against New Zealand, scoring his maiden Test hundred, 111 off of 253 deliveries in the first innings, and making 11 in the second. He made scores of 46, 71 and 46 in the rest of the series, the latter including his first Test six, earning him selection for the following Ashes Tests in Australia.[28]
Gower might have been more at home in the 1920s or 1930s, cracking a dashing hundred for MCC, the darling of the crowds, before speeding away in a Bugatti and cravat for a night on the town.[29]
Scyld Berry on Gower, The Observer, 1984
Gower made his Ashes début at the Gabba, Brisbane on 1 December 1978. He made 44 and 48* in the first Test, before making his maiden Ashes hundred, 102 from 221 balls in Perth. These were to be his only significant contributions, however, and he saw out the rest of the series with scores of 29, 49, 7, 34, 9 and 21, until a meticulous 65 in the final Test at Sydney.[28] He then faced four Test matches against India over the summer of 1979, beginning the series with a fast-paced 200* at Edgbaston, followed by an 82 at Lord's. Ducks at Leeds and The Oval followed, however, and he struggled against Australia in the winter of 1979 with 17, 23 and three. A battling 98* at Sydney was again followed by another duck and 11 as Gower's form deserted him. After 16 against India in February 1980, and 20 and one against the West Indies, Gower's form picked up marginally with scores of 45, 35 and 48 against Australia and the West Indies. One more fifty followed at Bridgetown, however Gower eventually broke the run of poor form with a hard-fought 154* from 403 deliveries at Kingston.[28]
Gower's timely revival of form ensured his selection for the 1981 Ashes series, however apart from an 89 at Lord's, Gower failed to convert the success he was having in the domestic game to the Test matches, with many scores in the 20s or lower.[27] Two scores in the 80s against India, one against Sri Lanka and two 70s against Pakistan over the winter of 1981/82 kept in him contention for an international place, however centuries were lacking in his game. In August 1982, however, Australia received the England touring team at Perth, where Gower made 72 and 28. He followed this with 18, 34 and 60 at Brisbane and Adelaide before a compact 114 in the second innings of the Adelaide match revived his hundred count.[27] Two more hundreds in the summer of 1983 against New Zealand, and knocks of 152 and 173* against Pakistan in 1984 ensured his place in the side.[27]
Following his 173* in the last Test against Pakistan, Gower suffered another drop in form, managing only three fifties in the next 18 Test innings against the West Indies, Sri Lanka and India. In 1985, however, after low scores at Leeds, Gower enjoyed a "golden season" in the 1985 Ashes.[30] He scored 86 and 22 at Lord's against Australia, and 166 at Trent Bridge. Following this, he scored 47 at Old Trafford, and then at Edgbaston on 15 August, scored 215 from 314 balls, his career best score, and immediately followed this with 157 at The Oval.[27] In addition, he forged two partnerships over three-hundred runs, with 331 scored with Tim Robinson (148) during Gower's own double-century, and 351 with Gooch's 196 at The Oval.[30] He ended the series with 732 runs at 81.33, leading England to a 3–1 victory.
Gower struggled in 1986. His mother had died a week before he left to captain the England tour to the West Indies which ended in a 5–0 defeat (Gower's second at their hands). Back in England against India, Gower lost the captaincy after two Tests both of which were lost. Retained as a senior player for the New Zealand series and the subsequent Ashes tour, his fortunes began to turn in December with 136 against Australia at Perth.
In 1987 Gower declined to play in that year's Cricket World Cup as he did not wish to travel, having been on nine successive winter tours since his debut. He never again declined an opportunity to play for England, however. Yet rumours that Gower lacked serious commitment gained currency in 1989 when, as England captain he walked out of a press conference claiming he had tickets for the theatre.[31]
More controversially, during the 1990–91 Ashes Tour in Australia, England were playing a warm up match in Queensland when Gower, together with batsman John Morris, chose to go for a joy-ride in two Tiger Moth biplane without telling the England team management.[32] Both had been dismissed earlier that day, however they decided not to remain at the ground to "watch Allan Lamb and Robin Smith flat the Queensland attack before a small crowd".[33] For this, Gower was fined £1000, a penalty that could have been steeper had he released the water bombs he had also prepared.[34] Gower also posed for press photographs with the plane the next day.
Gooch was enraged, as he was by Gower's mode of dismissal at a crucial stage of one of the Test matches. During the fourth Test at Adelaide, Gower walked out to the crease to the tune of Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines.[26] The last ball before lunch was bowled down the leg side to a leg trap, and all Gower needed to do was block. However, Gower flicked idly at the delivery and was caught at leg-slip. According to Mike Atherton in his autobiography, "Gooch was at the other end and as he walked off his face was thunderous". This was another example of the strained relationship between the two. His score of nought in the second innings at Melbourne in 1991, when England were chasing quick runs for victory, ended his world record, unbroken sequence, of 119 Test innings without registering a duck.[1] Gower scored 73 and 31* in the following matches against Pakistan; however on 9 August 1992 he was dismissed for one by Waqar Younis in what would be his last Test match, at The Oval.[35] It is often thought that Gooch was instrumental in Gower being left out of the following tour of India.[3][26] The selection decision prompted a vote of no confidence in the selectors at the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), but it was to no avail as Gower was not included.[36] In response to Gooch's perceived regime of hard work over talent, Gower retired from international cricket in early 1993.[3][26]
Playing style
Gower, a left-handed batsmen, played with a dominant top hand and a "most graceful" style of batting[3][37] though he had a reputation for being aloof. His languid style was often misinterpreted as indifference and a lack of seriousness, an air he bolstered with a variety of "misdemeanours" from apparently "lazy" shots, to practical jokes, even to his preference for blue (not white) socks.[38] Wisden described him as "fluffy-haired, ethereal-looking" who played "beautifully, until the moment he made a mistake. Sometimes, the mistake was put off long enough for him to play an innings of unforgettable brilliance."[3]
At times Gower's habit of getting out just when he ought to have been settling in may have frustrated fans and selectors, but in half-hour highlight-package terms he was worth a dozen Allan Borders and a hundred Geoffrey Boycotts.[39]
The Guardian on Gower.
Gower was repeatedly lambasted by the media as being "laid back" or "nonchalant"[39] with a "devil-may-care" approach some found infuriating, as Wisden records, "the difference between an exquisite stroke and a nick was little more than an inch" in his style of batting.[3] Peter Roebuck recorded that "Gower never moves, he drifts" while Frances Edmonds in the Daily Express spoke of Gower in 1985: "Difficult to be more laid back without being actually comatose."[40] Gower himself commented in 1995 in an interview in The Independent: "I was never destined to be on the ball 100 per cent of the time. I don't have the same ability that Graham Gooch has, to produce something very close to his best every time he plays. There were Test matches where I suddenly felt, at the end of it, 'Well, I wish I'd really been at that one.'[41]
Gower was also a right-arm off break spin bowler despite batting left-handed, who took one Test wicket at 20.00 out of the six overs he sent down in the occasional instances when called on to bowl. His domestic cricket added another three wickets to give him an overall average of 56.75,[3] however Martin Williamson, the managing editor of ESPNcricinfo, records Gower, along with James Whitaker, as "probably two of the worst bowlers in the country" in 1983.[42] On one occasion, during Steve O'Shaughnessy's 35-minute century for Lancashire, Gower conceded 102 for 0 from nine overs.[42] In the 1986 Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge, Gower became the only England bowler to be called for throwing in a Test in England. Handed the ball by captain Mike Gatting with New Zealand requiring only one run to win, Gower deliberately threw his first ball to Martin Crowe. Technically the game ended with the no-ball call, but Crowe hit a four off the ball which was permitted to stand, leaving Gower with the unusual match bowling figures of 0-0-4-0 (1nb).[43]
In the field, Gower is noted by biographer Meher-Homji as being a "magnificent outfielder who took amazing catches and threw with accuracy and power to run out the blasé batsman." Ambidextrous in the field and when bowling, Gower also plays both golf and hockey, writes and kicks right-handed.[30] However, he was far less effective as a fielder late in his career, especially in one day matches, since a chronic shoulder injury – usually described as the shoulder being "thrown out" – meant that he usually bowled the ball in when fielding, rather than throwing it in, significantly reducing the speed of the return and allowing batsmen easy runs.[44]
Commentating
It's the old'uns versus the young'uns, Ian and myself versus Nasser and Mike. There's a lot of cross-generational banter as well as pure dressing-room banter. It helps pass the time of day, really.[45]
Gower on Sky commentary
Since leaving the game, Gower has enjoyed a new career as a cricket broadcaster and television personality, including being one of the team captains on the popular BBC comedy sports quiz, They Think It's All Over from 1995 to 2003. He also presented four series of the BBC2 cricket magazine show, Gower's Cricket Monthly from 1995–1998 and, at the same time was one of the BBC's main cricket commentators. Gower also spent time commentating on several cricket series in Australia in the 1990s. His commentary for Channel Nine, with his trademark relaxed calls of play and generous attitude to the players and fellow commentators, proved extremely popular with Australian cricket viewing audiences.
Gower has been the main presenter of international cricket coverage for Sky Sports and regular commentator for many years until 2019 when Sky decided not to renew his contract alongside retired cricketer David "Bumble" Lloyd and former England captains Mike Atherton, Nasser Hussain and Ian Botham. He also commentates on the matches – a role he has also played in Brian Lara International Cricket series – and has found success.[3][45] Matthew Engel of ESPNcricinfo wrote that Gower's commentating career has been "so successful that his cricket seemed mere preparation."[3]
Later life and interests
One of Gower's interests is conservation. In 1989, Gower joined Gerald Durrell and his wife Lee, along with David Attenborough in helping to launch the World Land Trust (then the World Wide Land Conservation Trust). The initial goal of the trust was to purchase rainforest land in Belize as part of the Programme for Belize. Gower is also a Patron of the David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation, and he is Vice-President of the Nature in Art Trust,.[46] In 1992, he was named an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE).
Gower is also a director of an Internet wine company.[47] Gower and his wife, Thorunn, are Patrons of Southampton-based charity Leukaemia Busters. He was also awarded the "Oldie of the Year" award in 1993 by The Oldie magazine.[48][49] He is the author of a number of written works on cricket, including Gower: The Autobiography with The Independent journalist Martin Johnson in 1992, David Gower: With Time to Spare with Alan Lee in 1995 and Can't Bat, Can't Bowl, Can't Field also with Johnson.[50] In 2009, Gower was inducted into the ICC Hall of Fame.[5]
In August 2014, Gower was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian opposing Scottish independence in the run-up to September's referendum on that issue.[51]
See also
Notes
- ^ a b Frindall, Bill (2009). Ask Bearders. BBC Books. p. 106. ISBN 978-1-84607-880-4.
- ^ "Records / Test matches / Batting records / Most consecutive innings without a duck". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Player Profile: David Gower". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ "Border, Harvey, Gower, Underwood inducted into Hall of Fame". The Sports Campus. 17 July 2009. Retrieved 16 July 2009.
- ^ a b "ICC Hall of Fame". ICC. Archived from the original on 16 July 2009. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ "England's greatest Test XI revealed". ICC. 30 July 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2009.
- ^ a b Gower, pp. 42–43.
- ^ a b Gower, p. 44
- ^ Gower, p. 45.
- ^ Gower, p. 46.
- ^ a b Gower, pp. 49–50.
- ^ Meher-Homji, p. 35.
- ^ Gower, p. 51.
- ^ Burke's Landed Gentry- Wales and the North West, ed. Charles Mosley, 2006, p. 157
- ^ "www.burkespeerage.com". www.burkespeerage.com. 30 April 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
- ^ An Endangered Species, David Gower, Simon & Schuster, 2013, p. 33
- ^ "England – Test Matches – Most matches". ESPNcricinfo. Archived from the original on 23 November 2016. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ a b "First-Class Matches played by David Gower". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ "Lancashire v Leicestershire County Championship 1975". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "First-class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by David Gower". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f "ListA Batting and Fielding in Each Season by David Gower". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ "Wisden's Five Cricketers of the Year". ESPNcricinfo – Wisden. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ "Wisden – 1979 – David Gower". Wisden and ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ Hopps, p. 27.
- ^ "Essex v Hampshire – Britannic Assurance County Championship 1993". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ a b c d Gibbs, p. 133-134.
- ^ a b c d e "West Indies Young Cricketers v England Young Cricketers – England Young Cricketers in West Indies 1976 (Only Test)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ a b c d "DI Gower – Batting analysis – Innings List". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ Hopps, p. 25.
- ^ a b c Meher-Homji, p. 36.
- ^ Williamson, Martin (8 April 2006). "Dropping the pilot... from a great height". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ Williamson, Martin (14 January 2006). "When Gower's tour took off". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
- ^ Gibbs, p. 130.
- ^ Gibbs, p. 132.
- ^ "Last day for a languid hero". ESPNcricinfo. 9 August 2003. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ Gibbs, p. 135.
- ^ Menon, Suresh (9 March 2009). "The myth of the elegant left-hander". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ Wheen, Francis (1 April 2007). "The golden years". The Observer. London. Retrieved 1 September 2007.
- ^ a b Pearson, Harry (19 June 2004). "Why David Gower is the Euro 2004 style icon". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 March 2009.
- ^ Hopps, p. 26.
- ^ Smith, Giles (28 August 1995). "Brilliant but fallible, swashbuckling but reserved: David Gower is the sort of hero that sport no longer admits". The Independent. London. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
- ^ a b Williamson, Martin (20 May 2006). "The record that never was". ESPNcricinfo. Archived from the original on 5 January 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ Frindall, Bill (31 January 2007). "Stump the Bearded Wonder No. 139". BBC. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
- ^ Discussing fielding with Sir Ian Botham on Sky TV during the Australia-England ODI on 1 July 2012, Gower said "... in my pomp, I had a decent arm. Only when my shoulder went it was much restricted. ... The underarm in tended to be embarrassing."
- ^ a b Thompson, Jenny (2006). "Living the Sky Life". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
- ^ "Nature in Art – Trust". Nature in Art Trsut. Archived from the original on 9 May 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2010.
- ^ "The class of '81". BBC News. 14 August 2001. Retrieved 11 March 2009.
- ^ "Eric Sykes wins Oldie award". BBC News. 5 February 2002. Retrieved 2 April 2009.
- ^ [1] Archived 29 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Amazon.co.uk written works by David Gower". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 4 April 2009.
- ^ "Celebrities' open letter to Scotland – full text and list of signatories". The Guardian. London. 7 August 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
References
Printed
- Gibbs, Barry. My Cricket Journey (Wakefield Press, 2001) ISBN 1-86254-569-3
- Gower, David; Johnson, Martin (1993). Gower: The Autobiography. London: Fontana. ISBN 0-00-637964-8.
- Hopps, David. A century of great cricket quotes' (Robson, 2000) ISBN 1-86105-346-0
- Meher-Homji, Kersi. Heroes of 100 Tests (Rosenburg Publishing, 2003) ISBN 1-877058-11-4
Website
- Ryan, Christian. "The Best I've Watched: David Gower's Perth 72, 1982". ESPNcricinfo.
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