This week, we realised that Vincent wasn't only committed to the craft of fielding, a discipline he was fairly good at - he had also pledged his allegiance to the curly-haired, multifaceted Chris Cairns, the closest New Zealand have come to producing a quality all-rounder since Richard Hadlee. According to his testimony in a London court, Vincent underperformed during the 2008 season of the now-defunct Indian Cricket League on the behest of his boyhood hero. Vincent also named former Indian batsman Dinesh Mongia as a part of the racket, alleging that the Punjab left-hander was heavily involved in fixing matches during that season. The three players were teammates at the Chandigarh Lions. Cairns allegedly paid Vincent $50,000 each for the three matches in which he underperformed.
In the last few years, Vincent has garnered the inglorious reputation of being a habitual offender when it comes to matchfixing. In 2014, the 36-year-old was banned from all forms of cricket for life by the England and Wales Cricket Board after he confessed to fixing a county game between Sussex and Kent in 2011. A day after his contemptible expulsion from the game, Vincent gave an interview to Newztalk ZB, a New Zealand radio station, saying that he was a cheat and he had disgraced the country with his actions. Little did he know that his ordeal with match-fixing allegations was far from over.
But it wasn't always like that. On his Test debut in 2001, Vincent blazed his way to a century against Australia on a pacey deck at the Waca in Perth. The Australian bowling line-up that day comprised Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne, Brett Lee and Jason Gillispie.
The Kiwi top-order, till then, was largely unsettled. Matt Horne, Mark Richardson and Matthew Sinclair had all been tried alongside Nathan Astle - the mainstay of their batting- but with little success. Many at the time felt that in Vincent, skipper Stephen Fleming had found a reliable opener who could score at a brisk pace.
A career that took off on such a promising note plummeted just as fast. His mercurial ability soon gave way to inconsistency. In the little over 100 ODIs that he played for his country, Vincent averaged a middling 27.11. His Test career lasted just 23 matches. After his retirement from international cricket, Auckland-born Vincent plied his trade in the county circuit in England, turning out briefly for Lancashire, Worcestershire and Northamptonshire. He also has to his name the highest individual score by a Kiwi in ODI cricket - a 172 he scored against Zimbabwe in 2005. His last noticeable contribution for New Zealand was a whirlwind hundred against lowly Canada at the 2007 World Cup in the Caribbean. Later that year, he reportedly slipped into depression. Vincent will forever be remembered for being a player with massive unfulfilled potential.
Vincent's testimony is crucial for Cairns, who faces up to six years in jail for lying under oath during a cheating case in 2011. But Vincent's career could have been much more than courtroom battles and anti-depressants.
The man could have become a star. What a waste of talent.
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