- Dav Whatmore
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Dav Whatmore Personal information Batting style Right-hand bat Bowling style - Career statistics Competition Tests ODIs Matches 7 1 Runs scored 293 2 Batting average 22.53 2.00 100s/50s -/2 -/- Top score 77 2 Balls bowled 30 - Wickets - - Bowling average - - 5 wickets in innings - - 10 wickets in match - n/a Best bowling - - Catches/stumpings {{{catches/stumpings1}}} -/- Source: Cricinfo, 12 December 2005 Davenell Frederick Whatmore (born 16 March 1954, Colombo, Sri Lanka) is a former international cricketer who represented Australia. He had a very short international career from March 1979 to January 1980 in which he played just 7 Test matches and 1 One Day International. At first-class level, he scored over 6,000 runs for Victoria.
Contents
Early life
Whatmore was born in Ceylon (now known as Sri Lanka) and was educated at Royal Preparatory College, Colombo. He and his family migrated to Australia in 1962 as a direct consequence of the Sinhala Only Act. Thereafter he lived in Mentone, a suburb of Melbourne and studied at Mentone Grammar School.[1]
Coaching career
Sri Lanka
Whatmore retired from professional cricket in 1988/89 to pursue a career in coaching. He coached Sri Lanka in two separate spells, during the first of which he won the 1996 Cricket World Cup. In between those spells, he coached Lancashire where he won the National League in 1998 and 1999, and the NatWest Trophy in 1998.
Bangladesh
From 2003 to 2007, he had been coaching Bangladesh. Under his coaching, Bangladesh enjoyed relative success, coming from a side that could rarely win matches at all, to a team that can occasionally surprise even the most powerful cricket countries. Whatmore coached them to their first Test match victory early in 2005.[2] Bangladesh shocked the cricket world later that year with a victory over then top ranked Australia[3] and then South Africa when they were top ranked during the 2007 World Cup, where they also defeated India to reach the Super 8 stage. Whatmore announced his resignation from the Bangladeshi team after the conclusion of their matches at the 2007 World Cup. He stayed on until the conclusion of their home series against India on May 29.[4]
Chances in England, India and Pakistan
After announcing his intentions to not renew his contract, Whatmore was strongly linked with the job of national cricket coaches of India, England and Pakistan. But England named Peter Moores as their new coach while India appointed Ravi Shastri as the temporary national coach. Since Shastri declared that he was not interested in the job long-term, Whatmore was considered as a strong contender for the role of coach. During India's 2007 tour of Bangladesh, talks took place between him and BCCI officials, and although it seemed he was the favourite to get the job, on 4 June 2007, BCCI treasurer N Srinivasan, a member of the Search Committee announced that Graham Ford and John Emburey had been invited for talks, hinting that Dav Whatmore was not under consideration anymore.[5]
Whatmore was one of the three men interviewed by the Pakistan Cricket Board for the coaching job of the national team, but Geoff Lawson was preferred for the job after former Sri Lankan captain Arjuna Ranatunga suggested to the PCB that they not choose Whatmore for the job. Whatmore had had problems with Ranatunga in the past while he was the coach of the Sri Lankan national team and both of them used to speak against each other quite frequently in the media. [6]
IPL
Whatmore has been the coach of the Kolkata Knight Riders team since 2009. In 2009, they finished last in the group stage and were eliminated. In 2010, they finished 5th and were again eliminated in group stage. In 2011, they entered knockout stage as they were 4th in group stage, but lost to Mumbai Indians.
References
- ^ Dav Whatmore Up close and personal
- ^ Cricinfo - Enamul ends the long wait
- ^ Cricinfo - The toppling of the greatest giant of all
- ^ Cricinfo - Whatmore quits as Bangladesh coach
- ^ BCCI to invite Graham Ford for talks
- ^ Cricinfo - Whatmore's surprise at Ranatunga 'criticism'
External links
Sri Lanka squad – 1996 Cricket World Cup (1st Title) 1 Ranatunga (c) • 2 Atapattu • 3 Chandana • 4 De Silva • 5 Dharmasena • 6 Gurusinha • 7 Kaluwitharana (wk) • 8 Jayasuriya • 9 Mahanama • 10 Muralitharan • 11 Pushpakumara • 12 Tillakaratne • 13 Vaas • 14 Wickramasinghe • Coach: WhatmoreSri Lanka squad – 2003 Cricket World Cup Semi-Finalists 1 Jayasuriya (c) • 2 Atapattu • 3 Jayawardene • 4 Sangakkara (wk) • 5 De Silva • 6 Arnold • 7 Mubarak • 8 Tillakaratne • 9 Muralitharan • 10 Vaas • 11 Fernando • 12 Gunaratne • 13 Gunawardene • 14 Nissanka • 15 Buddhika • Coach: WhatmoreBangladesh squad – 2007 Cricket World Cup 2 Mashrafe Mortaza · 5 Javed Omar · 7 Habibul Bashar (c) · 15 Mushfiqur Rahim (w) · 19 Tapash Baisya · 29 Tamim Iqbal · 35 Rajin Saleh · 41 Abdur Razzak · 42 Shahriar Nafees · 47 Syed Rasel · 59 Shahadat Hossain · 75 Shakib Al Hasan · 76 Farhad Reza · 77 Mohammad Rafique · 97 Aftab Ahmed · 98 Mohammad Ashraful · Coach: WhatmoreKolkata Knight Riders – current squad 1 Sarabjit Ladda · 3 Jacques Kallis · 5 Gautam Gambhir (c) · 6 Laxmi Ratan Shukla · 9 Manoj Tiwary · 12 Shreevats Goswami · 16 Eoin Morgan · 18 Mark Boucher · 21 Iqbal Abdulla · 22 Rajat Bhatia · 24 Brad Haddin · 27 Ryan ten Doeschate · 28 Yusuf Pathan · 36 Manvinder Bisla · 55 Lakshmipathy Balaji · 58 Brett Lee · 75 Shakib Al Hasan · 99 Unadkat · — James Pattinson · 17 Pradeep Sangwan · — Shami Ahmed ·
Coach: Dav Whatmore
Categories:- 1954 births
- Living people
- Australia One Day International cricketers
- Australia Test cricketers
- Cricket coaches
- Victoria cricketers
- Australian people of Sri Lankan descent
- Burgher people
- Coaches of the Bangladesh national cricket team
- Coaches of the Sri Lanka national cricket team
- Old Royalists
- People educated at Mentone Grammar School
- Australian cricketers
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