Marcus Trescothick

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I've not brought it out for people to use as a self-help book, to say this is how you cope with anxiety and depression. It's just to get it out in the open – there have been so many questions left unanswered and I've not helped that process. But this is the opportunity, and I hope people can understand why I did a few things I did. [129]

The book has been widely commended for its honesty, [130] with Trescothick's difficulties drawing comparison with Harold Gimblett's similar mental health problems. [131] Despite attempts by Pietersen to entice Trescothick back into the England set-up, Trescothick confirmed that his decision has been made and that he is putting his health and family first. [132] In November 2008 Coming Back to Me was named the 2008 William Hill Sports Book of the Year. [133] In April 2009, Trescothick turned down another request from new England captain Andrew Strauss to consider making himself available for England's World Twenty20 Championship campaign. [134]

Later county career

Trescothick continued his career with Somerset into 2009, having received a benefit year from his county, as well as a new stand in his name. During his benefit year he averaged 46.59 in the 4-day game, including three centuries, and he started 2009 with 52 against Warwickshire. [135] It was also announced on 20 April 2009 that Trescothick has become a patron of Anxiety UK, following the revelations of his biography. [136] As the season progressed, Trescothick found success in all forms of the game. On 1 June, he scored 69 from 47 balls as part of a 129-partnership with Craig Kieswetter against Glamorgan; [137] on 3 June he scored 52 against Worcestershire; [138] he was stumped five short of his second Championship century of the season against Lancashire; [139] and then scored 78 against Yorkshire on 14 June. [140] [141] By 16 June, he had scored a hundred apiece in the Friends Provident Trophy and the County Championship, both with averages in the high 50s. [142] On 31 July, he became the first player in the country to accrue 1,000 first-class runs in the 2009 season during the 1st innings of the County Championship match against Nottinghamshire. [143] He also performed well in the one day arena, taking Somerset to the final of the Twenty20 championship while continuing to reject any suggestions of returning for the final Test of the 2009 Ashes series. [10] He finished the season as the leading run scorer in the County Championship, scoring 1,817 runs. [144] With the departure of Justin Langer, Trescothick was named as Somerset captain from 2010 onwards. [145]

"Being made captain is a huge honour for me, particularly as I am Keynsham-born and have been associated with the club since my school days... I've been a player for 17 years and I believe the time is right for me to take on the role. I am really looking forward to the challenge." [146]

Trescothick was also named Most Valuable Player by the Professional Cricketers' Association for his 2,934 runs in all competitions in the 2009 season, [147] 1,745 of these in the County Championship. Over the winter he starred in a short film to promote Somerset, commissioned by inward investment agency Into Somerset. [148]

2009 Champions League Twenty20

With Somerset runners-up in the English 2009 Twenty20 Cup, Trescothick and his county travelled to India to partake in the Champions League Twenty20 in October. Though both Kieswetter and Hildreth were anticipated as successes, it was Trescothick who was described as having "been in sparkling form all season" and began the tournament under media scrutiny given his previous difficulties playing on tour. There was much speculation regarding any "recurrence of his stress-related illness that originally occurred in 2006", as this was to be his first overseas outing since an aborted attempt in 2008. [147] Trescothick himself responded to the media by making a statement to the BBC World Service which read "I know the risk and I know what happens when it goes wrong. In the last couple of times I have tried to go on tour it's failed, so of course [it is a risk]... Let's try and break the tradition of what has happened over the last few times... I can only try. It's a big competition for the players and for the club. I have got to try and make it happen." Meanwhile, Langer assured the media that Trescothick could pull out whenever he wished to. [149] Somerset, who began the tour without Trescothick as he was arriving later than most of the squad, commenced their warm up with a victory over the Otago Volts. [150] The opener arrived three days later, confident in his ability to complete the tour. [151] Somerset began with a close victory against the Deccan Chargers on 10 October, winning from the last ball. Trescothick was dismissed for 14 from 12 in his first match outside England since 2006, "after offering a fleeting glimpse of his talent" according to ESPNcricinfo. [152]

Trescothick was unable to avoid a recurrence of his previous difficulties when travelling abroad, however, and returned home on 15 October, citing the same "stress related illness". Brian Rose, who Trescothick had approached initially after Somerset's defeat by Trinidad and Tobago on 12 October, [12] released a statement to the media stating "Marcus admitted a couple of days ago that he wasn't 100% so that's fair enough. I think his future will be in domestic cricket and that may even help him with this particular form of illness. I think over the next two or three years you'll see Marcus Trescothick performing wonderfully well in county cricket." [153] Michael Vaughan, who had by then retired from cricket, praised Trescothick's "courageous" decision, as did Vikram Solanki, then PCA chairman. [154] Journalist Andrew Miller called for an end to the rising criticism of Trescothick's decision from the public, [155] while Paul Hayward of the Guardian also derided those critical of the Somerset player's actions. [156] Despite returning home, Trescothick continued to affirm his commitment to the club by signing a new three-year contract with optional fourth year, in December. He was named captain for the 2010 season. [157]

Captaincy 2010 – 2015

Trescothick batting for Somerset against Yorkshire in 2010 Marcus trescothick batting.jpg
Trescothick batting for Somerset against Yorkshire in 2010

Trescothick led Somerset into the 2010 season as captain, and began strongly in the County Championship with a century and four half-centuries from his first eight games, though he struggled in the newly formed Clydesdale Bank 40 with only 95 runs from the first five matches, and in the Friends Provident T20 173 runs at 21.62 with a best of 50. [158] This half century came on 25 June, where together with Kieron Pollard helped secure victory over Sussex, and was scored from 31 balls. [159] Despite Trescothick's four-day form, however, Somerset struggled early on, with only one victory over Yorkshire. [160] In a Twenty20 match against Hampshire on 9 July at Taunton, Trescothick hit a half-century from 13 deliveries, including five sixes and five fours – a record fastest fifty in English domestic Twenty20 cricket. He was eventually dismissed for 78 from only 32 balls. [3] He went on to lead Somerset to runners-up position for all three English domestic competitions, losing out to Nottinghamshire in the County Championship, Hampshire in the Twenty20 and Warwickshire in the CB40 competition. [161]

In 2011 Trescothick started off the county championship season very strongly and was the first batsman in the country to score 1000 championship runs. He was awarded the 2011 season MVP (Most Valuable Player) award for his performances throughout the season. [162] He ended 2011 with six centuries in the County Championship, batting with an average of 79.66 across the year. Somerset earned record financial returns that year, [163] but again failed in the semi-final and final stages of all major competitions. [164]

Across all three formats, Trescothick took 2,518 runs for his county. ESPNcricinfo's George Dobell noted in their end of season round-up that "He continues to dominate county attacks in a way that only Graeme Hick and Mark Ramprakash – of recent batsmen – could match. There are times when he makes the bowlers' job appear impossible." [164] However, as 2012 – Trescothick's 19th season at Somerset – approached, there was talk of resting him from the newly formed one-day cricket championship that following year. [165] Trescothick did not travel with the rest of the side to the Champions League T20 in India. He missed part of the 2012 domestic season due to an ankle injury, and struggled for form going seven four-day matches without a half-century until passing fifty against Sussex in August and going on to score a century. [166] By the end of the season he had played only five one day games, scoring 118 runs at 39.33, two T20 matches making only 31 runs in total, and nine County Championship games in which he scored 506 runs at 38.92, including two centuries. [167] This was his lowest home-season aggregate since 1995. [24] He nevertheless made a statement to the media voicing his wish to continue playing into his forties, and took up a winter commentary stint with Sky Sports to cover England's tour of India. [168] The 2013 season, however, found Trescothick averaging only in the mid-twenties, [169] and failed to score a century for the first time since 1998. [170] He remained, however, the second-highest run maker for Somerset, behind only Nick Compton, [171] and retained the captaincy for the 2014 season. [170] He continued to appear as a commentator and analyst for Sky Sports in the off-season, in particular during coverage of the 2014 World T20. He also publicly lent his support to England's Jonathan Trott during the latter's departure from the 2013–14 Ashes series, empathising with Trott's stress-related illness in a statement to Sky Sports which recalled his own experiences, recalling that "you just can't take any more, you just can't get through the day let alone go out there and play a Test match and win a Test match." [172]

Trescothick began the 2014 season strongly. He scored 112 in a warm-up game against Middlesex, [173] followed by 95 against a university team. [174] Subsequent scores of 20, 17 and five in the next three innings prompted George Dobell of ESPNcricinfo to comment that "Trescothick does not look anything like the batsman he once was," [175] but he returned to form on 28 April with a further century against Sussex. It was his first in the County Championship since 2012, [176] and was followed on 22 May with a second hundred, against Durham at Taunton. This century came 618 days after the last time he scored a hundred at his home ground. [177] He passed 1,000 runs for the season on 25 September against Yorkshire, in the final game of the year's County Championship. [178]

In 2015, Trescothick scored over 1,000 runs for the season, including three centuries and eight 50s, [179] and completed the milestone yet again in July 2016 against Nottinghamshire. [180]

Continuing career after captaincy

In January 2016 after six seasons in the job Trescothick stood down from the Somerset captaincy to let experienced new overseas signing Chris Rogers lead the team. [181] Trescothick finished his first season without the captaincy since retiring from England duty with a season average of over 53 and also became the Somerset cricketer with the highest number of first class catches in the history of the club. [182] He extended his contract with Somerset for the 2017 season [183] during which he broke the record previously belonging to Harold Gimblett for most first class centuries for Somerset [184] and signed another 12 month extension with Somerset in August 2017, to the end of the 2018 season, his 26th season with Somerset. [13] On 25 September 2018 Trescothick took three consecutive slip catches as Craig Overton registered a hat-trick in the county championship against Notts. It was only the third time in first-class cricket all three dismissals in a hat-trick were caught by the same non wicket-keeping fielder. [185] [186] On 27 June 2019 Trescothick announced that he would retire from professional cricket at the end of the 2019 season. [187] His last on-field appearance came as a substitute fielder in the final few minutes of Somerset's County Championship game against Essex at Taunton on 26 September 2019. He was greeted with a standing ovation and left the field to a guard of honour from the opposition. [188]

Post-playing career

In retirement, Trescothick has served as batting coach for the England Test team. On July 30, 2024 Marcus Trescothick appointed interim head coach of England white-ball team after Matthew Mott steps down. [189]

Career records and statistics

Test matches

Records:

One Day Internationals

Records:

Personal life

Trescothick married Hayley Rowse in Trull, Somerset, on 24 January 2004, [193] and the couple have two daughters. [194] [195] [196] He lives in Taunton, and also owns property in Barbados, near similar properties owned by Michael Vaughan and Andrew Flintoff. [197] Trescothick is an honorary vice-president of Bristol City F.C., as well as being a keen golfer. [16]

Honours

Trescothick was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2006 New Year Honours for services to cricket and Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2024 New Year Honours for services to mental ill health, as mental health ambassador for the Professional Cricketers' Association. [198] [199]

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Marcus Trescothick

OBE
Tresco 1.jpg
Trescothick in 2007
Personal information
Full name
Marcus Edward Trescothick
Born (1975-12-25) 25 December 1975 (age 48)
Keynsham, Somerset, England
NicknameTresco, Banger [1]
Height6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
Role Opening batsman
International information
National side
Test debut(cap  603)3 August 2000 v  West Indies
Last Test17 August 2006 v  Pakistan
ODI debut(cap  158)8 July 2000 v  Zimbabwe
Last ODI5 September 2006 v  Pakistan
ODI shirt no.23
T20I debut(cap  10)13 June 2005 v  Australia
Last T20I28 August 2006 v  Pakistan
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
Awards
Preceded by William Hill Sports Book of the Year winner
2008
Succeeded by
Sporting positions
Preceded by English national cricket captain
2004 & 2006
deputising for Michael Vaughan
Succeeded by
Preceded by Somerset County Cricket Captain
2010–2016
Succeeded by