Once I started wearing helmet, I regained confidence: Chatfield recalls concussion
The first Test he played could well have been his last, but Ewen Chatfield enjoyed an enduring love affair with cricket, which ended only after he turned 68.
By : migrator
Update: 2020-02-25 20:13 GMT
Wellington
Richard Hadlee’s new ball partner for the longest time, Chatfield had a scary beginning to his international career in 1975, when England bowler Peter Lever’s bouncer struck him on the temple and he immediately fell unconscious exactly 35 years ago in his debut Test for New Zealand.
He had swallowed his tongue after getting concussed. He was saved by opposition team physio Bernard Thomas, who sprinted onto the Eden Park to give the player mouth-to-mouth resuscitation before being rushed to the hospital.
Chatfield spoke about how the incident impacted him but asserted that he never felt he would not be able to make a comeback. “No, I didn’t think that way that I will never return to cricket,” the 69-year-old, who played 43 Tests and 114 ODIs, said. “I mean I didn’t go through any concussion test. It was not needed because I was already knocked out by that bouncer. I was obviously concussed,” Chatfield added with a dash of humour.
Chatfield played his final first-class game in 1990 but his swansong cricket match was as recently as in 2019 when he turned up one last time for his club Naenae Park.
What mental adjustments did he make once he was back after recovering from the concussion against Australia in 1977? “Those were the days (1975) when helmets weren’t there. So when I started playing again (1977), I got myself a helmet and it gave me confidence,” Chatfield said.
“Look, I wasn’t technically the best batsman around so the helmet helped me regain a bit of confidence to play the game. Obviously, I wouldn’t be picked if I couldn’t bat,” he added. But even back in 1975 when concussion as a subject was not in vogue, Chatfield went through concussion protocols and he is happy that ICC has put rules in place. “I took a break for six to seven weeks and all the winter and I kept going to the doctor till he was satisfied that I was cleared to play,” he said. “If you look at it, it’s pretty similar to what happens now. ICC has rightly got a protocol in place now,” he added.
Chatfield was at best a medium pacer, but for nearly 10 years, he complemented the great Richard Hadlee, something he is still proud of. “Richard and I were not the norm as new ball pairs because he was bowling in 140s and I was just about late 120s when it came to speed. Unusual it was. but during that phase, New Zealand didn’t have any other quicker bowlers to partner Richard. So I made the team,” he signed off.
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