Steve Waughs New Horizons
Ken Piesse
- 21 June 2000
A very special thanks to Shali for this article
Fatherhood has given tough, uncompromising Steve Waugh a new perspective on life. While dozens of Australians rushed to make England a home away from home, Australias captain was content to catch his breath and actively pursue a new interest. Ken Piesse reports...
When
Steve Waugh first saw the streets of downtown Mumbai, he was amazed. Even for
a kid born and raised in Sydneys rough and tumble west, nothing could
prepare him for the confronting sights of beggars, people without limbs and
children, all scavenging for money. Nothing affected him more deeply, though,
than to see young children sleeping on street corners with rats running over
them. He could not get used to the smell of the city, the atrocities or the
scorned left to die.
For years during Australian tours he felt overwhelmed and helpless. The opportunity, however, to meet with noted humanitarian Mother Teresa added a fresh perspective. Here was a tiny, frail lady, bent over with arthritis, slowly shuffling around, oblivious to her own ills and championing the welfare of others.
"There
was a calming aura about her," Waugh said. "When you were in her presence
you definitely felt more serene
and peaceful."
Of all the celebrity encounters he had enjoyed, from the Queen to Nelson Mandela and Sir Elton John, this was by far the most important and powerful. Just as thousands of others had gained strength from shaking Mother Teresas hand and receiving her saintly blessings, so did Waugh.
Now, in places like India where cricketers are feted like movie stars, Waugh has a godlike status and not only for his deeds with crickets world champions.
In Calcutta,
for example, Waugh is a hero for the masses as patron of the Udayan Childrens
Fund, which is assisting deprived children with leprosy. He spearheaded a $A250,000
fund-raiser which is allowing 44 young girls to live for a year in Udayan, away
from the seat of infection their homes and in healthy, positive
and caring circumstances.
"When
I was back in India recently, I went in for a photo with these 44 young girls,
who had all come from leper colonies," Waugh said. "All of them wanted
to come up and just touch me. Their family life was so terrible, they were desperate
for affection. It makes you feel good to know that in some small way, youre
helping these kids."
One of Waughs dreams is for an entire new wing to be built at Udayan, allowing 250 girls to be housed, counselled and educated so they, too, have a chance of a healthier and more rewarding life. Already there is a boys wing, but land is scarce and very costly.
"Its
a big process," Waugh says. "The most needy kids have to be selected
and teachers employed for them. But it is so very rewarding. You can see the
kids lives changing in front of you. You cant put a price on that.
Achievements on the sporting field are great, but after all this is only a game.
When you help people out, realistically its more important."
Waugh says his travels, especially to poverty stricken areas such as the Barrackpore leper colony in Calcutta, Kingstons Boys Town and the black township of Soweto in South Africa, are a disturbing, impossible-to-ignore reminder of the worlds imbalances. In Soweto, for example, many families live in ramshackle tin sheds hardly bigger than an average sized garage. Yet just an hour away is Sun City, the millionaires playground.
In Australia in May, Waugh spent a week promoting Camp Quality, for children who suffer from cancer. He found the work enormously rewarding and believes more high-profile, influential people have a certain moral responsibility also to become involved with charities for the young and the old.
"The
more you help people the more you grow as a person and feel good about yourself,"
he said. "And in return youre helping someone else. It's a win-win
situation. You see kids with a tough lifestyle and yet by doing just one little
thing, you can help make them happier. Many are in a bad way, or dying, but
their inner strength and courage are incredible."
Given more time, Waugh says he would become even more active in charity work. He and his wife Lynette have seen the agony and the trauma close friends have endured with sick children who have died. It was another motivating reason for his involvement in Australias Lend A Hand campaign aimed at raising $1m to give young cancer sufferers a quality of life others take for granted. Just as lepers are ostracised in Mumbai and Calcutta, he says many prefer to ignore Australias 4,000 cancer children.
He just
has to look at his own daughter, four-year-old Rosie banging away at the family
piano or eight-month-old son Austin, to realise how precious life is. "One
smile from them and you forget all your worries," he said.
Until
April and the conclusion of the first leg of a two-tiered one-day tournament
with South Africa, Waugh said he had been away from Sydney so often in the previous
two years that it took him weeks to truly settle back into home life. "It's
as if I hadn't been home for two years," he said. "Normally you unpack,
say hello, goodbye and then youre back into
it again."
Having just turned 35 and about to lead Australia in the first ever set of One-Day Internationals indoors against South Africa at Melbournes newly built Colonial Stadium, Waugh says his focus and passion for the game remain constant. He would love to make a Test triple-century and, from November, to extend Australias record of 10 consecutive Test victories past the current world record of 11, held by Clive Lloyds 1984/85 West Indians.
He is also on the verge of becoming the first Australian to amass 300 One-Day International appearances and of surpassing Allan Borders awesome record of 429 international games. Being named as Mark Taylors full-time successor in January 1999 has been challenging and highly fulfilling, and has changed his perspective on the game.
"Sometimes
you need challenges to keep you going and the captaincy has given me that,"
he said. "It took a while to find my feet but Ive really appreciated
the opportunity. Its a great honour. Things are going well and Id
like to do it for a bit longer."
He says time off away from the game is precious and highly necessary in his case to nurse his battle-scarred legs. However, he refuses to consider stepping down from the one-day team to concentrate on Test cricket.
"Cricketers like getting into the routine of playing and training. The problem comes sometimes when you have a bit of time off and it can be hard to get up again and get going. I want to play for Australia at both codes and be captain at both codes. If Im not good enough or injury prevents me, then I wont."
He says
a county cricket return à la David Boon is unlikely as his priorities
have changed. "Maybe Im too old. I havent had too many offers
for a while!" he said. "But there are other things in life which are
just as important if not more so now; things like spending time at home and
having a normal lifestyle and seeing your friends and family, some of whom
I havent seen for a couple of years. There would have to be exceptional
circumstances for me to go back."
No one has been more mortified than Waugh to see the games name tarnished by the match-fixing scandal. He firmly believes 99 per cent of the games in which he has played have been beyond reproach, but admits one or two one-day games ended in puzzling circumstances.
As to his own career regrets, he says being dropped shortly after a triumphant maiden tour of England in 1989 made him a better, more determined player. "You have to see the depths of the valley before you see the peaks," he says. But had he been more professional in his outlook early on, after being plucked into a rebel-ravaged Australian team in 1985/86, he might have retained his place.
Its
one thing I would change if I had my chance again, he said. "I tended
to take it for granted a bit. It came a bit too
easy, playing for Australia. It was hard to survive in the early 1990s and that
toughened me up for later years. I know Im a lot more professional and
a lot more ready to play for Australia now than when I first played."
Life
after cricket will include a long-awaited autobiography, after six tour diaries
and a book of photographs. Contracted to Channel 9, like his vice-captain Shane
Warne, he also intends to commentate, rejoining his old mates like Ian Healy
and Mark Taylor who have made such a successful transition from playing into
the media box.
First,
though, he is eyeing the new world record and looking forward to an even stronger
Australian team with an extra fast bowler, Jason Gillespie, again vying for
selection. He says the present Australian XI would be competitive against any
other side to have played the game, Bradman's Invincibles included. Brett Lee
has added extra firepower and when
Gillespie returns to his best, competition for the available fast bowling places
will be even keener. He doubts there will be any fall-off in motivation, even
if the world record falls.
"The
guys respect playing for Australia and are keen to win. They want to keep up
the same high standards. We know how well we can play and we dont want
to drop below that. It's a matter of personal pride as well. We're trying to
build up our own culture and pass it on to young guys. There are always ways
you and the team can improve."
Having
become in April the first Australian Test team to win 10 matches in a row, Waugh
says the players are relaxed and focused, as they showed by winning the last
Test in Hamilton, despite being 29 for 5, chasing New Zealands 232, on
the second morning.
"We're
really enjoying our cricket right now and doing things which arent probably
the norm," Waugh said. "Things like at Wellington, Colin Miller bowling
spin to the left-hander and, in the same over, medium pace to the right-hander.
Sure enough he got a wicket Mathew Sinclair. We had nine slips in a one-day
game in Zimbabwe (for Damien Fleming at
Harare). We weren't taking the mickey out of the opposition. We thought it was
the right thing to do. And the crowd loved it. There was no harm done. Maybe
we're throwing the text book out of the window a bit, but were having
fun on the field and trying to back ourselves."
Asked
about a likely retirement age, he said age is often irrelevant and he believed
he could still lead for some time yet, certainly to England for a fourth tour
next year and onwards.
"I
dont see myself being an age," he says. "I see myself being
competitive and really enjoying it. My age has got nothing to do with how I
play, or my attitude. Age can be overplayed sometimes. If you still have that
fire in the belly and youre good enough you can play until any time you
want to. If you lose that competitive edge where youre in a difficult
situation and cant fire up, that to me is my time when I'll know I can
walk away. At the moment if I walk out to bat at 30 for 3 or 40 for 3, I still
get excited about the challenge. It shows that Im still ready to play
cricket at this level."
Asked
how many more big innings he is capable of playing after some incredible knocks
in the 1999 calendar year, none better than his World Cup 120 against the South
Africans at Headingley, he says: "You always hope you can play better.
I'd love to score a triple-hundred in Test cricket. Its one of my dreams.
I dont know if its possible batting at
five and six. There is always something to aspire to and play that perfect innings.
"Batting there in most of my one-day career, you dont often get a
chance to play that sort of innings. I'd swap 10 average one-day hundreds to
get
a 120 in that sort of situation again."