Former Australia batsman Dean Jones passed away and the news left the cricketing world in shock.


A supplied photo of Prime Minister John Howard (right) speaking with Dean Jones from the Australian beach cricket team at the Cricket Tri-Nations series at Maroubra Beach, Sydney, Saturday, January 3, 2007. The match is the third round in a series where Legendary Australian, West Indies and English teams compete. The series has been played at Australian beaches throughout January and early February, and will end at Maroubra beach in NSW on February 4. (AAP Image/Sabine Albers) NO ARCHIVING, EDITORIAL USE ONLY

Former Australia cricketer and one of the revolutionaries of the modern ODI game Dean Jones has passed away. The 59-year-old, who was working on the IPL 2020 broadcast from a studio in Mumbai, suffered a cardiac arrest. He is survived by wife Jane, and daughters Isabella and Phoebe.

He was a central cog in Australia’s revolution in the mid-80s, which saw the Allan Border-led side capture its maiden World Cup title at the Eden Gardens in 1987. Jones would go on to feature 164 times in the 50-over format, finishing with 6068 runs at an excellent average of 44.61.

However, Jones just a limited-overs specialist. He played the first of his 52 Tests for Australia against a formidable West Indies side in the 1984 Port of Spain Test, scoring a gutsy 48 on debut and putting on over a 100 with Border despite being sick on the morning of the Test match. Steve Smith had pulled out with a stomach bug of his own and captain Kim Hughes decided to call on the Victorian.

More of Jones’s resilience was on display a couple of years on when he battled extreme dehydration enroute to his magnum opus 210 in the tied Test of Madras. Jones then went on to have a breakthrough Ashes series in 1989, scoring 566 runs and also topped the averages in his last Test assignment against Sri Lanka in 1992, before selectors dropped him in favour of Damien Martyn.

He finished his Test career with 3631 runs at an average of 46.55 including 11 centuries. In all he made, 19188 first class runs at 51.85 with a best of 324* against arch rivals New South Wales in the 1994-1995 season.