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Wills International Cup: Hollioake high on heat and humidity (27 October 1998)

ADAM Hollioake, England's one-day captain, yesterday re-lived graphically his near collapse during the first round defeat by South Africa a few hours earlier in this knock-out mini world cup

27-Oct-1998
27 October 1998
Wills International Cup: Hollioake high on heat and humidity
By Peter Deeley in Dhaka
ADAM Hollioake, England's one-day captain, yesterday re-lived graphically his near collapse during the first round defeat by South Africa a few hours earlier in this knock-out mini world cup.
When he came off after batting for two hours in almost unbearable humidity and heat, Hollioake admitted: "I wasn't talking too much sense or thinking clearly."
He led the side out into the field but had to come off again for nine overs. "If I hadn't I think I would have passed out on the spot and I didn't want that to happen in front of 40,000 spectators."
In the dressing room, Hollioake said he had "an attack of the munchies: chocolate bars, noodles, bread. I couldn't stop eating. Dean Conway, our physiotherapist, had to stop me.
"After that I felt on cloud nine - as if I had just smoked 10 joints. But I wasn't thinking good. I went back on and told Graeme Hick to keep on captaining for the next two overs otherwise I might do strange things like putting in three slips.
"The first few overs I had no idea what was going on. Dean had told me to be careful otherwise I might end up on a drip. In the interval, I was walking round the dressing room asking for sun cream. Harvey [Neil Fairbrother] said, 'what are you talking about? It's night time out there'. "
Hollioake reckoned that in the 24 hours before and after the game here he consumed 15-20 litres of bottled water as well as special glucose drinks. In the interval, he had sat under a cold shower for 20 minutes.
"I don't quite know how it all happened," he said. "It was a mixture of heat exhaustion and dehydration. There was just no respite from it. I still feel sore all over."
The England captain admitted that with hindsight the side would have been better served by having two recognised spinners. "We thought the wicket would be similar to Sharjah," he said, "where the medium-pacers were dangerous. But our attack didn't really suit the conditions this time."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)