Tuesday 27 July 2021

Mike Hendrick:an obituary

It is always sad when one of the heroes of your youth passes away. So, the increased sadness for me in today's announcement of the passing of Mike Hendrick.

'Hendo' was the last genuinely great Derbyshire-born seam bowler. That word is over-used in the modern world, but it is well-deserved in this instance.

He was always talented, but stepped up a level with the advent of Eddie Barlow. The South Africa's demand for a higher level of fitness from all of his players saw Mike capable of bowling long spells, zipping the ball around off the turf and at times being close to unplayable

There was a school of thought that he sometimes bowled too short, that pushing it up a little more might see balls that passed the edge take it. He could point to a career record of 719 wickets at under 20 and he led the Derbyshire attack with style and class for years.

Besides, for much of that time runs were in short supply for a batting lineup that was rarely prolific. Pitching it up would cost runs that, at least in his early years, we seldom had to play with.

I still recall a spell against Yorkshire at Chesterfield, when he opened from the Pavilion End after we had once again been summarily dismissed. Against a very solid batting side, including Geoffrey Boycott, he beat the bat and took wickets in a spell that was simply magnificent. Had the ball been on elastic he could scarce have jerked it around better and the challenge for lesser mortals was clear. Boycott survived to the close.. just.. but it was one of the most compelling sessions of cricket I have watched.

He was the last in a long lineage of outstanding seam bowlers from within the county borders. I saw Harold Rhodes and Alan Ward, but it was hard to think that his predecessors were massively better than Mike. Perhaps Les Jackson, maybe on his day Bill Copson, but if one considers that he bowled on covered wickets, his figures take on a different complexion. He rarely wasted the new ball, indeed would have regarded it a sin. He emerged from a tough school under Denis Smith, where young players were never molly-coddled and blunt talk was commonplace. 

'If he drives like he bowls he won't hit owt', he said of one trialist who roared away in a sports car after an erratic spell in the nets. They didn't get to leave many when Mike bowled. 

He wasn't really a batsman, but in time-honoured fashion hit merrily when his time came. While it lasted it was spectacular, but crease occupation was seldom his game. He was a fine fielder anywhere, a secure pair of hands at slip, which was one way he differed from the greats of the past.

Like too many others of his vintage and later, the end was acrimonious and he moved to Nottinghamshire for a while, then became a highly-regarded coach.

He was a man of contrasts off the pitch. He could be dour, but life didn't always treat him as it should have and he was poorly treated  and often ignored by Derbyshire in his later years.

Yet he could be witty and downright funny. Some will recall the sketches that he did with Geoff Miller, as two Derbyshire miners on local radio. His reference to 'thon Eric Bartlett, from South Africa - he baaarls big benders y' know' lives with me and always brings a smile.

So too does his bowling. A tall man, with long arms and sometimes shaggy hair, his marking out of his run marked the beginning of nigh-gladiatorial combat, quarter neither given nor asked for. A loping run, an arm thrust skywards and an action that was natural, repeatable and classic. 

He did it for Derbyshire and he did it for England, home and away. In that respect he was more fortunate than some of his predecessors, who got scant recognition at top level, but then he was a special bowler. 

Bestwick, Warren, Copson, the Popes, Jackson, Gladwin and now Mike Hendrick. 

That is quite a pantheon, all of them sadly no longer with us. 

Rest in Peace, Mike. It really was a pleasure to watch you over all of those years. 

7 comments:

  1. Wonderful bowler during my cricket watching youth. Remember one day at Queens Park when Brian Bolus was captain and he managed to drop a sitter of a catch. Hendo loped from his fielding position to fetch one of the large, metal, cuboid waste bins that were dotted around the boundary edge and proceeded to lug it across the outfield and present it to his captain who was not amused.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That is really sad news that I hadn't seen before I read the blog. I spent a lot of time in the mid 70s watching cricket and chasing autographs at Chesterfield and elsewhere and Mike was always approachable and had time to sign. A fine player at a time when Derbyshire had some genuine internationals and I particularly remember him doing the business at Trent Bridge in the Gillette Cup QF in 1975. Quite a few of the players of that era have already passed on, but Mike was the first that i shall always think of as a young guy. Many thanks for your appreciation Steve.

    ReplyDelete
  3. A lovely appreciation, Peakfan. A sad passing of a true Great - a go-to bowler if ever there was one. RIP.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank you for a fine, thoughtful obituary of one of Derbyshire's best ever players. I enjoyed your comments on Denis Smith; schoolboy cricketers who went to winter nets with Derbyshire's "old school" coach found him difficult to please (I never ever heard him say "Well played" or "Good ball"). I then went to watch a pre-season indoor net with the Derbyshire team and he was just the same with them. I wonder what he'd have thought of the present side.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Great tribute to a Derbyshire Great. Part of my childhood watching Hendo bowl his metronomic line and length for Derbyshire and England. I wish I had a tenner for every time he beat the bat with yet another absolute beauty.

    RIP Mike Hendrick - you were a joy to watch.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Excellent full page obituary for Mike Hendrick in today's Times.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I only picked up the news of Mike Hendrick’s passing a few days ago. Unfortunately, as much attributable to my own waning interest with the way I feel the game has sadly declined in England.

    In many ways, Mike reminds me of better times, when county and Test cricket was to the fore and his qualities of accurate line and length carried greater weight in the game.

    I do recall travelling from Cheshire with my father to see him play at the old outposts of Buxton and Ilkeston, where he usually dominated proceedings with the ball. Being really chuffed to received his and Mike Page’s autographs as a young child. A first taste of the game.

    It is very sad to learn of the loss of your childhood heroes. Regrettably, Mike is yet another prime example.

    RIP Hendo.


    Mastervillain

    ReplyDelete

Please remember to add your name. Avoid personal comment at all times. Thanks!