
'Trailblazer' and former England fast bowler David Lawrence dies at 61
Lawrence, the first British-born Black cricketer to represent England, was diagnosed last year with MND, a degenerative condition that causes muscle wastage and affects the brain and nerves.
"It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Dave Lawrence MBE (King's Birthday Honours) following his brave battle with Motor Neurone Disease," Lawrence's family said.
"Syd was an inspirational figure on and off the cricket field... A proud Gloucestershire man, Syd took on every challenge with everything he could and his final contest with MND was no different.
"His willingness to encourage and think of others right up to the end was typical of the man he was. As President of Gloucestershire County Cricket Club, Syd took on the role with incredible pride and passion and loved every minute of it."
Lawrence, who earned five Test caps for England, made 280 appearances for Gloucestershire and took 625 wickets for the county.
His Test debut came at Lord's against Sri Lanka in 1988, with his career highlight being a five-wicket haul against the West Indies at the Oval in 1991.
In 2022, Lawrence became Gloucestershire County Cricket Club's first Black president and he was named one of the inaugural Honorary Life Vice-Presidents of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) earlier this year.
ECB chairman Richard Thompson described Lawrence as "a true trailblazer of English cricket and a man of immense courage, character, and compassion".
"His impact on the game extended far beyond the boundary ropes," Thompson added in a statement. "As a fast bowler, he thrilled crowds with his pace and passion. As a leader and advocate, he broke barriers and inspired change, becoming a powerful voice for inclusion and representation in our sport."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ARN News Center
an hour ago
- ARN News Center
India withdraw from semi-final against Pakistan in veterans' tournament
India have withdrawn from a semi-final clash with Pakistan in a tournament featuring retired players amid tension between the two countries, organisers of the World Championship of Legends (WCL) said on Wednesday. A group match between the two teams was also called off earlier this month in the veterans' competition sanctioned by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB). Tickets will be refunded for the semi-final match which was scheduled to take place in Birmingham on Thursday, WCL organisers said in a statement on Instagram, adding that Pakistan will advance to the final. India and Pakistan, who have not played bilateral cricket since 2013, are set to face off in the Asia Cup on September 14.


The National
an hour ago
- The National
Moroccan runner Anass Essayi determined to reach pinnacle of athletics 'even if I don't love it'
Does one need to love what they do in order to succeed in it? That's a question Moroccan runner Anass Essayi has been grappling with as he recently made a confession in a candid message he posted to his Instagram. One of his nation's most talented and promising middle-distance runners, Essayi is a two-time Olympian who is ranked in the world's top 15 in 1,500m and who placed seventh in the 3,000m short track at the World Indoor Championships a few months ago. A bronze medallist in 1,500m at the Youth Olympics in 2018, Essayi has been busy training in the Atlas Mountains in Ifrane, gearing up for September's World Athletics Championships in Tokyo. Ifrane, situated nearly 1,700m above sea level, is a hotbed of elite runners looking for some altitude training and it is where Morocco 's athletics national team is based. In Ifrane, Essayi is surrounded by excellence, and trains in an environment bursting with talented runners. And while the 24-year-old Moroccan may share their dedication and discipline, he admits he does not share their passion for running. 'This is not easy to say, but I need to let it out. Track has never been fun for me. Not once. I've never trained with joy in my heart,' Essayi wrote in a post he shared on social media last month. 'I kept hoping that would change, but it hasn't. Most days, I felt drained, numb, even depressed. And yet – here I am. Still competing. Still running. Still showing up. 'People tell me you need to love the sport to succeed in it. Maybe they're right. But maybe, just maybe … some of us are just made for it. That's what keeps me going. Not passion, but purpose. 'I'm sharing this to say: It's OK to feel stuck. It's OK to not enjoy what you're good at. But don't stop trying. Don't stop looking for the joy. This isn't the end of my story – it's just a turning point. And I'm working on falling in love with this journey, one step at a time.' Essayi is not the first professional athlete to make such a confession. Tennis hall-of-famer Andre Agassi famously revealed his disdain for his sport in the very first page of his autobiography Open. 'I play tennis for a living though I hate tennis, hate it with a dark and secret passion, always have,' wrote the American legend. Pushed into tennis by an overzealous father, Agassi resented the sport and the pressure that came with it. He still ended up winning eight Grand Slams and an Olympic gold medal, and was ranked No 1 in the world for a total of 101 weeks. It wasn't until late in his career that the American began to change his perspective towards the sport. 'Just because I didn't choose my life, doesn't mean I can't take ownership of it. Just because I didn't choose my life, doesn't mean I can't choose to choose it,' Agassi recently said on Andy Roddick's podcast Served. Essayi is trying very hard to choose the life that was chosen for him a decade ago. At 14, in his hometown of Ain El Aouda just outside Rabat, Essayi was spotted running a race by coaches at a local club. They kept going to his house asking him to join their track team and his father pushed him to do it. 'I always skipped training but with time, my dad made me go, so I had to go every day to train with them,' he told The National. In his second year of training, Essayi placed third in the national championship and was asked to join the Moroccan national team in Ifrane. He didn't want to leave home but, urged by his father, he moved to the mountains to train and attend high school. 'It was very hard for me the first week and I decided to go back to my home, but my coach kept saying, 'Anass, you'll be good, you'll be good',' Essayi recalls. 'It was honestly very hard. The weather was very cold and I'm not used to being away from home. 'But with time you get used to it and you have to make some kind of decisions for your future.' He stuck around and upon graduation, he enrolled in Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane, where he studied for a year and a half before he moved to the United States to study at and run for the University of South Carolina. That was another big transition for Essayi, who was keen to pursue a degree that would secure his future beyond running but knew it would be challenging given he didn't speak English that well and didn't know anyone there. He also realised the style of training at the university was different to what he was accustomed to – 'they only race for the last lap, which I didn't like much,' he said – so he convinced the coaches he would not be training with the school team and would instead continue training with his Moroccan coach from back home. Mind you, his coach couldn't travel to the United States, so Essayi ended up training alone for large stretches of time. He graduated from university with a degree in retail management last year and returned to Morocco to rejoin the national team in Ifrane, where he's been based ever since. Last month, Essayi clocked personal best times in 1,500m at a meet in Rome (3:30.74) and in the mile at a meet in Oslo (3:49.16). Nine days later he decided to tell the world he didn't like running. For Essayi, the joy of winning a race is fleeting, while the agony of defeat lingers for what feels like an eternity. 'It's not something that I enjoy. That's the answer,' Essayi explains. 'Like, 'Oh, I have a run in 20 minutes, I'm very excited for that' – no, I don't have these feelings, you know? 'And even when we win a championship or something, the happiness is five minutes. But when you don't qualify for the next round or when you don't finish with the first five or six [runners], you get depressed or you get sad for a whole month. 'For example, the [Paris] Olympics, even though I was proud, I finished 13th overall, it's a good thing you have to be proud of. But still, the whole month, the whole summer, I wasn't that happy. That's something I don't like about running. 'When you win, it's a five-minute happiness after the race. But when you don't win, it's very hard to accept the result. You say, 'Oh, the training, where has it gone?'' Does he feel excited ahead of competitions? 'No, that's the big problem. I'm not excited at all. But still, I do great,' he responds with a smile. Essayi's coach Abdelaziz Bouzam believes his charge can do much better if he loved the sport. Two-time Olympic gold medallist Soufiane El Bakkali, who shares a training base with Essayi, has also been urging him to embrace running. 'I am one of the people who tell you that you should love this sport because you have the ability to reach your dream and go far. Just focus on your dream. Good luck, champion' commented El Bakkali on Essayi's Instagram post. El Bakkali is a source of inspiration for Essayi. The 29-year-old Moroccan became the first non-Kenyan in 40 years to win the 3,000m steeplechase at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. He defended his Olympic crown in Paris last year. 'Just being with him and training with him is something that encourages us all,' said Essayi. 'It's very good to see him train and how modest he is. And the training, just when you see him, you say, 'I could get at some point to where they all arrived'. 'Even if I don't like it, I still have goals. I still want to achieve medals. I still want to do great things. Anass Essayi 'It's very motivating to see athletes train with you and live with you and eat the same thing.' Essayi was barely 20 years old when he competed in his first Olympics in Tokyo in 2021, which he describes as a bad experience. 'It's just I was very young and I didn't know anything,' he reflects. 'But like the second one [in Paris], I learnt from the first one and I made it to the second round, which I'm very proud of. And I missed the final by one spot, which is crazy.' Essayi acknowledges he has conflicting feelings about his sport and believes he'll know for sure how he feels about running if he finds himself missing it post-retirement. For now, he has vowed to keep trying to fall in love with running and he's hoping to reach the 1,500m final at Worlds in September. After Worlds, he would like to add the 5,000m to his programme with the goal of competing in both distances at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. Beyond LA 2028, Essayi sees himself potentially switching to road racing, moving up to half marathons and marathons. In an attempt to ignite his passion for the sport, he is on the hunt for a psychologist or mental health coach in Morocco, and is considering changing his training environment or finding a new training group to run with. For him, quitting is not an option and it's not because of fear of not being good at anything else. 'When I think about it, I'm good at running, why should I stop?' he says. 'I'm not scared [of quitting]. I studied in America, so if I decided to stop running, I could easily find a job, especially here in Morocco or in another country. 'I think God gave me a lot of things that I could be great at, not only running. But right now, I'm good at running. I'm one of the top athletes in Morocco. So why stop? And I have the support system, my coach, my family. 'Even if I don't like it, I still have goals. I still want to achieve medals. I still want to do great things. 'I will never be down or just stop like that because I don't like it. I'm trying to be in love with it.' There is a quote attributed to the late Muhammad Ali, where he says: 'I hated every minute of training, but I said, 'Don't quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion'.' If the boxing legend loathed training, there might be hope for Essayi just yet.


The National
2 hours ago
- The National
Pakistan showed pragmatism by recalling Shaheen Afridi and resisting major changes after Bangladesh T20 defeat
Shaheen Afridi has been recalled to Pakistan's T20I squad for a three-match series against West Indies which begins in Florida on Friday. Widely seen as the country's best fast bowler over the past five years, Shaheen was struggling to find rhythm in the recent T20 Internationals. For that reason, he was either rested or dropped for Pakistan's last two T20 series (at home and away against Bangladesh). Shaheen had an alarming dip in his form in the format. Post T20 World Cup 2024 in the USA, the left-arm quick took just six wickets at an average of 49.83 and went wicketless in six of the nine T20Is. However, after his Pakistan Super League heroics, where he led his team Lahore Qalandars to a third PSL title in four years and finished as the tournament's top wicket-taker with 19 scalps at an economy rate of 7.76, it was just a matter of time before he was recalled into the side. Shaheen's knack for striking early was on display in the recent PSL as he claimed five wickets in the first over of the innings and went at just 5.58 per over. Notably, 10 of his 19 wickets came during the last four must-win matches, underlining his ability to deliver under pressure. As Shaheen is a new-ball specialist, his return has come at the expense of losing Salman Mirza, another Lahore Qalandars new-ball bowler, who in his debut T20I series against Bangladesh grabbed seven wickets in three matches with an economy of 5.21. In most teams, such squad rotations are seen as routine. But in Pakistan, where recency bias often overrides long-term thinking and emotion-driven decisions can complicate selection, this sparked a debate. In fact, reactions on social media would make one believe Pakistan had dropped a legend like Wasim Akram. Such overreactions highlight why players in Pakistan are reluctant to rest and often continue playing without their workload being managed because newcomers can get preference after performing in low-stakes series. Though Mirza's seven wickets came against a 10th ranked team and on substandard pitches, the possibility of him and Shaheen bowling together for Pakistan in the near-future cannot be ruled out, especially considering the lack of new-ball bowling options in the country. Since the start of 2024, Pakistan's opening bowlers have gone at 8.09 an over, the worst analysis for a Test playing nation in men's T20 Internationals. Pakistan's economy in powerplay during this period is also third worst (8.70), behind only West Indies (9.06) and England (9.42). A major factor behind Pakistan's poor numbers at the start of the innings is use of part-time bowlers or those who are in the team due to bowling being their secondary skill. Under the new leadership of head coach Mike Hesson and captain Salman Agha, Pakistan have played six T20Is, all of which featured the new ball being shared by bowlers selected primarily for their batting: Saim Ayub, Faheem Ashraf and Agha himself. The trio of Saim, Faheem and Agha also bowled 15 out of 36 overs in the powerplay in the recent six T20Is. Faheem accounted for 17 wickets in the recent PSL, so there can be an argument that he qualifies as a bowler, but it must not be forgotten that those 17 wickets came with an economy of 11.19, the worst among 28 bowlers in the tournament who bowled at least 20 overs. For years, Pakistan have been labeled as a conservative batting side in the powerplay. That idea is beginning to change with the introduction of aggressive batters like Saim, Sahibzada Farhan, Mohammad Haris and Hasan Nawaz. But there is a risk that, while modernising their batting, Pakistan may now become a defensive bowling side if underpowered bowlers continue to bowl in the powerplay. The hope is that the 41 per cent of overs bowled by weaker bowlers during powerplay is only an experiment rather than a long-term strategy. With a packed T20 schedule ahead, the management and the selectors do have room to try combinations. That flexibility may also explain why the batting unit wasn't overhauled despite the recent series defeat in Bangladesh. It is worth noting that some of the best sides like Australia, England and New Zealand have struggled in Bangladesh in recent years due to the slow and low pitches. Bangladesh's home conditions have faced repeated criticism for stifling batting development, which is evident from their record as the third-best home side and second-worst away team over the last four years. For once, Pakistan selectors and management deserve credit for showing restraint. They resisted the urge to make reactionary changes, stuck with the new attacking batting group and reinstated experienced bowlers like Shaheen and Haris Rauf. That patience might again be tested in Florida. In the recent edition of Major League Cricket, the average first innings total in Florida was just 147, significantly lower than the 190-plus average totals in Dallas and Oakland (San Francisco). For Pakistan, that means the upcoming series could be another tough test but also an opportunity to finalise their best squad before marquee events like the Asia Cup in the UAE and the T20 World Cup early next year.