Rod Marsh, Australian cricket great, dies at 74

Rod Marsh
Rod Marsh also served as the chairman of selectors. File photo: Action Images/Jason Cairnduff/Reuters

Brisbane: Rod Marsh, an Australian cricket great and the wicketkeeper who formed a prolific wicket-taking partnership with pace bowler Dennis Lillee, has died a week after suffering a heart attack during a fundraising event in Queensland state.

Marsh was 74 and passed away in Adelaide after being moved closer to his family on Monday.

He had been in a medical induced coma having had a heart attack while on his way to a charity event in Bundaberg in Queensland on February 24.

The Sport Australia Hall of Fame on Friday confirmed Marsh, who played 96 Test matches for Australia from 1970 to 1984, had died in an Adelaide hospital.

Marsh held a Test record of 355 dismissals by a wicketkeeper, including 95 off the bowling of Lillee.

He is third on Australia's all-time dismissals list behind Adam Gilchrist (416) and Ian Healy (395).

He also played 92 One-Day Internationals for Australia before retiring from top-flight cricket in February, 1984.

A left-handed batter, he was the first Australian wicketkeeper to score a century in Test cricket, and finished his career with three.

He later led the national cricket academies in Australia and in England and was the inaugural head of the International Cricket Council's world coaching academy in Dubai.

In 2014, he was appointed as Australia's chairman of selectors and held the position for two years.

He was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1985.

The hall of fame's chairman, John Bertrand, said Marsh was was tactical, spoke without fear and spotted the talents of young cricketers.

"The term caught Marsh, bowled Lillee' became folklore," Bertrand said. 

(With Reuters and AP inputs)

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