Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Ex-Australian spinner Yardley dies at 71

Cricketer was a mentor of Sri Lankan great Muralitharan later



Bruce Yardley
Image Credit: Supplied

Melbourne: Former Australian bowler and influential coach Bruce Yardley died on Wednesday at the age of 71 after a battle with cancer.

Playing at a time when the Test landscape was dominated by fast-bowlers, Yardley started out as a medium-pacer himself before switching to off-spin midway through his career and earned his Test debut for Australia at the age of 30.

Bruce was a significant figure in Australian cricket, contributing in many ways on and off the field.

- Cricket Australia CEO Kevin Roberts, on the death of former coach Bruce Yardley

Using a distinctive long run-up better associated with pace bowling and employing his middle finger rather than his index finger to get the ball to turn, Yardley went on to take 126 wickets for Australia in 33 Test matches.

He also picked up 344 wickets in a first class career that spanned 24 years.

Advertisement

“Bruce was a significant figure in Australian cricket, contributing in many ways on and off the field,” Cricket Australia CEO Kevin Roberts said in a statement.

“As a player, it took him more than 10 years of persistence playing first class and Premier cricket to find the art of off-spin, earning him a Test debut at the age of 30.

“Off the field, Bruce had an infectious personality and was regarded as one of the best spin-bowing coaches in the world, coaching Sri Lanka and mentoring the greatest Test wicket-taker of all time, Muttiah Muralitharan.”

Yardley coached the Sri Lankan team in the late 1990s and defended Muralitharan when the Sri Lankan, who has a record 800 Test wickets, was investigated for having an illegal action in 2004.

“Very sad to hear about the passing of Bruce Yardley,” former Sri Lanka captain Kumar Sangakkara said on Twitter. “He was a good man to get to know and a great friend of Sri Lankan cricket. May he rest in peace.”

Advertisement