About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 47. Chapters: Adrian Kuiper, Alan Igglesden, Andrew Watts, Ashwell Prince, Benjamin Hector, Billy Stelling, Brandon Williams (cricketer), Brendon Adams, Carl Bradfield, Carl Raubenheimer, Cedric English, Charl Langeveldt, Charl Willoughby, Claude Henderson, Clayton August, Daniel Childs, Dan van Zyl, David Millns, Dawid Malan, Dewald Botha, Dominic Daniels, Douglas Gain, Eddie Barlow, Emile Kriek, Faan Fourie, Faiek Davids, Ferisco Adams, Gerhard Strydom, Godfrey Stevens, Gordon Parsons, Graham Roope, Hennie de Wet, Henno Jordaan, Henry Davids, Henry Williams (cricketer), Hillroy Paulse, Iain Anderson (cricketer), Ian Callen, Imran Nackerdien, Jan Frylinck, Jean Bredenkamp, Johannes Bothma, Johann Louw, John Commins (cricketer), John Stephenson (cricketer, born 1965), Jonathan Trott, Justin Ontong, Karl Nieuwoudt, Keegan Petersen, Kenny Jackson (cricketer), Kevin Curran (cricketer), Kim Barnett, Lee-Roy Walters, Lenert van Wyk, Lizaad Williams, Lloyd Ferreira, Louis Koen (cricketer), Mackie Hobson, Marais Erasmus, Mario Olivier, Matthew Friedlander, Mike Cann, Neil Carter (cricketer), Neil Johnson (cricketer), Neil Snyman, Nicholas Northcote, Ockert Erasmus, Omar Henry (cricketer), Omphile Ramela, Pepler Sandri, Peter Swart (cricketer), Petrus Jeftha, Phillip DeFreitas, Phil Newport, Pravin Amre, Quinton Kannemeyer, Rabian Engelbrecht, Rayno Arendse, Roger Telemachus, Simon Base, Stephanus Grobler, Stephen Jefferies, Steve Palframan, Stiaan van Zyl, Thami Tsolekile, Tiaan Cloete, Trevor Penney, Uwe-Karl Birkenstock, Warren Groeneveld, Waylain September, Wayne Radford (cricketer), Wickus van Vuuren. Excerpt: Ashwell Gavin Prince (born 28 May 1977) is a cricketer who plays Test and One Day International cricket for South Africa. A left-handed middle order batsman, he has a high-batted stance and is strong through the offside. He is noted for his gritty style of batting and also for being an athletic fielder in the covers. At the age of 29, he became the first non-white man to captain the South African cricket team when he stood in for the injured Graeme Smith in two Tests. Ashwell Prince made his first-class debut on 27 October 1995, playing for Eastern Province B against Griqualand West B in the UCB Bowl. Two matches later, on 1 December, he played his first match for the full Eastern Province team. Opening the batting with Philip Amm, Prince was dismissed leg before wicket by fast bowler Roger Telemachus without scoring in each innings. Recounting the incident 14 years later, Prince remembered the match as his first-class debut. Prince moved from Eastern Province to Western Province in the mid 1990s under the instruction of Duncan Fletcher who saw potential in him. Ashwell played two seasons for English cricket team Morecambe Cricket Club in his earlier career. Western Province won the 2000/01 SuperSport Series. After scoring 539 runs in the competition, Prince was named the club's player of the season. During the South African winter, Prince underwent an operation on his shoulder. His first match after the procedure was in February 2002 for South Africa A against the touring Australians. Prince made his Test debut in February 2002, against Australia at the Wanderers. His inclusion in the side was partly due to the quota system in South Africa. He however justified his spot in the side by making 49 and top scoring. In the third Test at Durban he narrowly missed out on a half century again but his 48 was influential in his sides victory. In 2002/03 he struggled in series against Bangladesh and Sri Lanka and was dropped from the team. With good form in domestic cricket h