So Farewell Then: Martin Saggers

who? oh him. “Martin who?” you ask.

“Exactly”, I reply.

You see, Saggers was the perennial ‘nearly’ man of English cricket. A late developer – his career really didn’t take off until he was 30 – he found himself behind not only Caddick and Hoggard in the queue for the national fast medium bowling slot, but a host of others such as James Kirtley, Ed Giddins and even the even-older Martin Bicknell.

Saggers eventually got the chance to play for England when Andrew Flintoff was injured on the 2003 tour of Bangladesh. Called into a squad which also featured such luminaries as Rikki Clarke, Richard Johnson and Gareth Batty, he took 2-29 in his first bowl in international cricket. Sadly, these were to remain his best figures and his Test career ended after just two more games.

That said, Saggers packed two dramatic moments into those six innings. The first was a tremendous backflip to catch Alok Kapali and the second when, recalled to the side against New Zealand in 2004, he dismissed Mark Richardson with his first international ball on home soil.

Saggers was a stalwart of the county cricket circuit. His career began in 1996 with Durham, but really took off after a move to Kent. Injuries dogged him throughout his career, but he finished with 415 first class wickets at a very respectable average of 25. With the bat he was something of a walking wicket, as his Test average of 0.33 suggests, though he did manage two first class fifties.

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0 thoughts on “So Farewell Then: Martin Saggers

  1. S says:

    This is completely unrelated, but how come there still hasn’t been any mention of this:

    “If you try to hit a six I will hit you on the bum”
    Sachin Tendulkar’s warning to Virender Sehwag during the Test against Pakistan in Multan, 2004.

    ??? its pure gold!

  2. This IS on topic! Lovely that you’ve paid tribute to a truly fab and underrated (in my opinion) cricketer. Martin will be much missed by Kent fans and his contribution always remembered. It was his wickets that kept Kent up in 2007 and it’s such a shame that injury has dogged him at the end of his career. I’m sure he would have contributed even more were it not for this. Lovely to see him celebrating with the team yesterday. Thanks, then, Martin and all the best for the remainder of your benefit year and for the future! (there are whispers that we could be seeing him in Umpire’s garb in due course…)

  3. SixSixEight says:

    Martin Saggers – we salute you!

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