2014 New Zealander of the Year: Brendon McCullum
By Dylan Cleaver
A panel of senior Herald journalists and editors has chosen Mary Quin
and Brendon McCullum as our 2014 New Zealanders of the Year. The two
stood out from 10 finalists profiled in the Herald and on nzherald.co.nz
this week and from a long list of newsmakers who had singular
achievements, made a difference for others or showed particular courage.
McCullum and Quin both stood up when it mattered - he both on and off
the pitch, she in an international courtroom. Our full list of finalists
is here.
Brendon McCullum |
In this year of years for Brendon McCullum his boldest stand was not
taken on the fields of Eden Park, the Basin Reserve or Sharjah, but in a
room with anti-corruption investigators. In doing so, he has pitted
himself against Chris Cairns, a man he considered a friend and hero, and
who is now accused of lying in court when he said he was never involved
in match-fixing.
It is not an easy topic to broach, but then again, nothing about this
saga has been easy, ever since the Herald broke the news that three
former New Zealand internationals were being investigated for their role
in match-fixing.
McCullum will have to stand trial
Has McCullum, who will likely have to take the stand when Cairns'
perjury trial goes to the High Court of London in October next year,
ever regretted coming forward and telling investigators that Cairns
allegedly twice approached him with a view to manipulating batting
spreads? McCullum pauses, temporarily lost for words. "How is the best
way I can describe this? I'm still strong in my belief that we have to
fight corruption," he says. "Corruption and doping are the two biggest
challenges professional sport faces and corruption more so because
people aren't trying to win - that eats away at the core of sport."
In doing so, McCullum, 33, has exposed himself to a backlash. Cairns'
subsequent actions indicate his defence strategy will be to attack the
credibility of his accusers.
It could get brutal. "I'll continue to stand up for [the integrity of
sport]. I believe strongly in it," McCullum says. "I hope people can
understand why I'm doing that. It's not easy and it's opened me up for
even more criticism, which I still can't work out.. But I firmly believe
that's what we have to do. The game's too good to us to let it happen."
Brendon excelled in 2014
The game has been very good to Brendon McCullum in 2014.. He has
joined Sir Donald Bradman and Michael Clarke as the only players who
have scored two double hundreds and a triple century in the same
calendar year.
But perhaps more than the match-winning and - in the case of the
groundbreaking 302 - match-saving innings, McCullum's year has been
defined by the success of his team. For too long the Black Caps were far
too easy to dislike.
They weren't very good but the players carried themselves as if they
were entitled to respect. When they were bowled out for 45 by South
Africa in McCullum's first test as captain, New Zealand cricket looked
like an implosion waiting to happen. Less than two years on from that
disaster, we are talking about this being a golden era of New Zealand
cricket. The principal reason for that? McCullu
It would be easy to point to his at times incandescent batting, but
it has been McCullum's ability to galvanise this team into one that
plays cricket the right way, that never gives up, which has been most
impressive. It sounds trite, but he really has infused the best of our
national characteristics into this team: innovative, occasionally
daring, never submissive.
It didn't happen by chance. In the wake of the calamitous 45 all out,
McCullum retired to his room, grabbed a beer from the fridge and was
soon joined by coach Mike Hesson, assistant coach Bob Carter and manager
Mike Sandle. "We looked at each other and sort of went, 'Well, we've got
that out of the way, let's strip everything away and start again.' "It
might sound presumptuous, but we decided that it wasn't important how I
wanted the team to look, or the way the coach wanted the team to look,
it was how New Zealanders wanted us to play. If we're being honest, at
that point the perception of the New Zealand cricket team was that we
were over-paid, under-delivering, lazy prima donnas.
And I was one of those prima donnas. "We decided that we couldn't win
every game, but what we could do is change the way we played and the
attitude towards us and the attitude within the group... Players
changed, players' personalities and behaviours started to change. "We
wanted to be known as a team that no matter what situation we were in,
we were going to make it bloody tough for the opposition to beat us.
That might beat us, and if they outplay us that's fine, but we're
going to make it hard. "We're going to play an attacking style of
cricket; in the field we're going to chase the ball to the boundary as
hard as we can; you're going to see a team that works incredibly hard
off the field; and you're going to see a team that's respectful and
even-keeled in their emotions.
You see that now with the way Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor
celebrate hundreds compared to other teams around the world. Very rarely
do we get into confrontations on the field.. We want to be known as a
team that respects the game, works hard and plays attacking and
innovative cricket.
"The country can cop us losing, but they can't cop us being those
other things." Even in the afterglow of glory a caveat remains. Said
Martin Snedden, former New Zealand seam bowler, chief executive and now
board member, just a week ago in the Herald:
"He's not everybody's cup of tea." McCullum has been criticised for
being a slave to T20 mammon, for stopping wicketkeeping, for being
arrogant, for being tattooed and, mostly, for being the man who
benefited from the axing of Ross Taylor. He is the most polarising
cricketer of his generation - talkback manna. McCullum has learned to
live with the fact that for a certain section of the population, he will
just never measure up. "It is tough, but it's harder on family and close
friends. Everyone can say they don't listen to the radio or read the
papers, but you're going to hear [the criticism]. I'll listen to it,
understand what's going on and then work out what's true, what's not and
I won't let it affect me emotionally any more either way.
Own opinions
"People are going to have their own opinions but I've just got to
make sure I surround myself with good people and lead the life I want to
live, come what may." McCullum says the public have been very good to
him, he's never faced any open hostility. The barbs, he says, mostly
come from the media and former players including the particularly toxic
Parker Group, led by former New Zealand batsman John Parker. "I question
some agendas.
That's the only thing for me I can't work out. Some of the former
players who criticise me I've never met, yet they have an opinion of me
based on what? "Even when the team was struggling, what were they
actually try to get out of it? I would have thought, as a former New
Zealand player, the benefit of the team should be at the forefront of
their minds, not pushing someone else's agendas."
It's a rare flash of discord. McCullum is a man at peace with himself
now. As the clock winds down on his career, he has finally figured out
that it's more important to live up to your own expectations, not
others. Of course, close to 1000 test runs in a calendar year helps.
"You dream all these scenarios when you're young, but I had reached a
point in my career where I kind of felt like I hadn't nailed it. Now I
can look back and, whatever unfolds from here, see that I've had an
impact on the game. "I know I'm never going to go down as a great player
but when I do decide to leave the game, at least I'll know I've made a
contribution to it. "I don't think I could have said that before this
year."
Our finalists:
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