Franky goes to Sandy Lane
by Neil Manthorp 26/03/2001, 00:00
Of all the West Indian professionals who have played in South Africa in the last 20 years, none has been loved and respected more than Franklyn Stephenson who was an integral part of Free State's golden years.
If there is, or was, a better cricketer never to have played Test
cricket than Franky, then he has not yet been, or was not ever discovered.
Franky took over 800 wickets and scored over 8000 runs in the first
class game for Barbados, Sussex, Gloucestershire, Nottinghamshire, Free
State and, would you believe it, Tasmania. But South Africans will possibly
remember him most fondly for his off-field personality and charisma, with
Nicky Boje, Boeta Dippenaar and even Allan Donald all having their careers
and outlooks on the game significantly shaped by Franky.
Golfing enthusiasts may remember Stephenson entering the South Africa
PGA Tour School a couple of years ago when his cricketing days were coming
to an end, but he was just 'dabbling' in a new career and failed to win his
card.
Now, however, he is a full professional and keen to make as much of a
success of golf as he did with cricket. His bread and butter comes from
teaching at the exclusive Sandy Lane Gold Club where, of course, he is still
regarded as a cricketing hero by many of his pupils.
Franklyn appeared on an hour long television chat show on Sunday night
discussing the current Test series and wearing, would you believe, one of
his cherished Free State Eagles shirts.
"Ja, die Vrystaat's my span!" he chuckled afterwards.
The big all rounder took the demise of Hansie Cronje as badly as anyone:
"He was the best captain I ever played with and I ever saw. He was truly a
great captain," Stepehnson said before adding that he hoped to visit Cronje
at Fancourt to play the famous resort. "Can you believe I never got the
chance to play there when I was living in SA?"
Finally, to those who still think Jacques Kallis isn't a great cricket
thinker, read what Franklyn had to say about the over in which Kallis
dismissed Ramnaresh Sarwan on the last day of the second Test in Trinidad
which led, ultimately, to victory.
"He bowled four of the best balls of the match, all in a row. He set him
up so beautifully, it was a pleasure to watch. The bouncer that got him was
one of the fastest deliveries of the match and it was bowled with a ball 79
overs old. It was fantastic, a piece of cricketing genius."
That should put an end to that debate.