Marcus Trescothick: pulled out of an Ashes tour because of depression
When Faisal Iqbal got under Marcus Trescothick’s skin in the Oval Test in 2006, he was, perhaps, emulating one of the mind games that his uncle — Javed Miandad — used to play. But at the time, no one, including Faisal, had a clue that Trescothick was fighting a battle with an inner demon — depression.
Trescothick’s frailty was evident when he lost his cool and, in turn, hurled abuses back at Faisal who was standing at forward short leg. One delivery later he hit the ball straight into the hands of Mohammad Hafeez at the point region and got out.
It must have been more than ‘gamesmanship’ for Trescothick. A few months down the road he had to pull out of England’s Ashes tour due to depression. He was perhaps the first renowned international cricketer of the new millennium who openly discussed the dark side of his life — depression — in his autobiography Coming Back to Me.
Depression is a serious illness. A sizeable number of cricketers suffer from it too. It’s time people around them, and they themselves, talked about it before it gets too late
Most of us would have thought that ‘pressure’ in international men’s cricket is so immense that it can mentally break some of the players. But then England women cricket team’s wicketkeeper Sarah Taylor shared her issues in public, which somewhat changed the common perception that the men’s game was more ‘competitive.’
Now the question is: depression plaguing cricketers hailing from ‘western’ nations only? One has hardly heard any stories about cricketers from the subcontinent, West Indies or South Africa who may have gone through this terrible mental turmoil.
Not many people remember that, in 1982, amid clandestine arrangements to sign cricket contracts, a 14-member Sri Lankan ‘rebel’ team toured South Africa. At the time, the 24-year-old Anura Ranasinghe was also a member of that team. But after returning home he just couldn’t cope with the consequences of that rebel tour and suffered depression. He resorted to drinking as a crutch for his mental problems. He died in his sleep in 1998. He was 42.
Max Babri, a renowned sports psychologist in Pakistan, who has worked with the Pakistan cricket squad which won the 2009 World T20 Championship and was part of the Pakistan cricket team which toured India in 2013, says that depression is a state of mind and it happens to everyone including cricketers. “Everyone goes into depression and it is a feeling when one is low and thinking that I may not be able to achieve what I want to achieve in life that the future looks a little darker. Sometimes it comes from early childhood programming where a child has gone through frequent unnecessary scolding.”
Many would argue that if you are religious or spiritual then you’re at a lower risk of suffering from depression. Most cricketers from the subcontinent practise religion staunchly and they strongly believe in spirituality, which may give us an impression that it works. This argument is quite valid to a certain extent. But then what about the common people who also live in the countries of this region? Don’t they practise religion? Are they also immune to depression? Of course, not! And cricketers are no exception. After all, it is an illness at the end of the day.