News / National
Dave Houghton appointed Zimbabwe head coach
15 Jun 2022 at 07:30hrs | Views
FORMER Zimbabwe batter Dave Houghton has been appointed the side's new head coach, ahead of next month's T20 World Cup qualifier that will be held in the country. The 64-year-old takes over from Lalchand Rajput, who will now assume a new role as technical director.
Rajput's coaching contract was extended recently in March by Zimbabwe Cricket, but the board has now revamped the support staff.
Houghton had also coached Zimbabwe in the late 1990s, and was at the helm during their memorable run to the Super Six stage of the 1999 World Cup in England, following memorable group-stage wins over India and South Africa.
Houghton has also had coaching gigs with Derbyshire, Middlesex among various other teams in English county cricket. His most recent coaching stint was with Mountaineers in domestic cricket.
Houghton captained Zimbabwe in their inaugural Test against India in 1992, and scored a century on debut. It was the first of four that he made in 22 Test matches, scoring 1464 runs in total at an average of 43.05. His 266 against Sri Lanka in Bulawayo in 1994 remains Zimbabwe's highest individual Test score.
Zimbabwe's prep for the T20 World Cup qualifier is in some disarray – they were recently swept 3-0 at home by Afghanistan, but Hamilton Masakadza, the former batter and current director of cricket at ZC, hoped Houghton's appointment would help reverse their fortunes.
"We are delighted to be bringing in Dave and we count ourselves fortunate and privileged to be able to appoint such a vastly experienced and highly respected head coach at a time we are looking to improve our on-field performances," Masakadza said in a media statement.
Houghton will be assisted by Lance Klusener who has already rejoined Zimbabwe's support staff as batting coach.
"With Lance having also bounced back as batting coach, we believe we now have a formidable technical team that can push for World Cup qualification and ensure our players put in consistently competitive performances," Masakadza said.
"I would also like to thank Lalchand who has been in charge of the team for the past four years, an incredibly challenging period for our cricket."
Rajput's coaching contract was extended recently in March by Zimbabwe Cricket, but the board has now revamped the support staff.
Houghton had also coached Zimbabwe in the late 1990s, and was at the helm during their memorable run to the Super Six stage of the 1999 World Cup in England, following memorable group-stage wins over India and South Africa.
Houghton has also had coaching gigs with Derbyshire, Middlesex among various other teams in English county cricket. His most recent coaching stint was with Mountaineers in domestic cricket.
Houghton captained Zimbabwe in their inaugural Test against India in 1992, and scored a century on debut. It was the first of four that he made in 22 Test matches, scoring 1464 runs in total at an average of 43.05. His 266 against Sri Lanka in Bulawayo in 1994 remains Zimbabwe's highest individual Test score.
Zimbabwe's prep for the T20 World Cup qualifier is in some disarray – they were recently swept 3-0 at home by Afghanistan, but Hamilton Masakadza, the former batter and current director of cricket at ZC, hoped Houghton's appointment would help reverse their fortunes.
"We are delighted to be bringing in Dave and we count ourselves fortunate and privileged to be able to appoint such a vastly experienced and highly respected head coach at a time we are looking to improve our on-field performances," Masakadza said in a media statement.
Houghton will be assisted by Lance Klusener who has already rejoined Zimbabwe's support staff as batting coach.
"With Lance having also bounced back as batting coach, we believe we now have a formidable technical team that can push for World Cup qualification and ensure our players put in consistently competitive performances," Masakadza said.
"I would also like to thank Lalchand who has been in charge of the team for the past four years, an incredibly challenging period for our cricket."
Source - ESPNcricinfo