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Phil Tufnell
Wisden CricInfo staff - June 21, 2001
Wisden overview The Bad Boy of English cricket in the 1990s, but the best spinner - left-arm or otherwise - as well. With a kick of the back leg, a skip and a jump, he has an approach to the wicket that is all his own, but Tufnell has great control of flight - he talks of his "ball on a string" - and tends to beat batsmen in the air rather than off the pitch. And the arm ball is hard to spot. His batting is more straightforward, and consists of the shuffle to square leg when facing the fast bowlers or the optimistic waft outside off stump. Known as The Cat because of his love of dressing-room naps, he purred into action in his fifth Test against West Indies at The Oval in 1991, and produced another matchwinning performance in Christchurch that winter. But a troubled private life, a strained relationship with the establishment, and some uninspired captaincy meant he has been in and out of the team since then. Only occasionally has he returned to his mischievous, attacking best, although his Middlesex career, kickstarted by an irresistible partnership with John Emburey, never stalled. In April 2003, however, he abruptly retired from first-class cricket, to become the unlikely star of a reality TV show. Rarely seen without a beer and a fag, Tufnell has always been something of a folk hero. Lawrence Booth
© Wisden CricInfo Ltd
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