Jason Ratcliffe

Jason Ratcliffe
Personal information
Full name Jason David Ratcliffe
Born (1969-06-19) 19 June 1969
Solihull, Warwickshire
Batting style Right-hand batsman
Bowling style Right-arm medium pace
Role Batsman
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1988-1995 Warwickshire
1995-2002 Surrey
Career statistics
Competition FC List-A
Matches 136 110
Runs scored 6561 1856
Batting average 28.52 23.20
100s/50s 5/38 1/10
Top score 135 105
Balls bowled 1644 1635
Wickets 27 40
Bowling average 33.74 31.07
5 wickets in innings 1 0
10 wickets in match 0 -
Best bowling 6/48 4/44
Catches/stumpings 68/- 28/-
Source: Cricket Archive, 12 July 2013

Jason David Ratcliffe (born 19 June 1969) is a retired English first-class cricketer. A right-handed batsman and occasional right-arm medium-pace bowler, Ratcliffe played County Championship and domestic one-day cricket for Warwickshire between 1988 and 1994 and then for Surrey from 1995 until 2002.[1] His father, David Ratcliffe, also played for Warwickshire between 1957 and 1968.[2]

During his career, Ratcliffe received winner's medals for all the domestic competitions in County Cricket. He made over one-hundred appearances in both first-class and one-day matches, scoring 6,500 first-class runs with five centuries, and a further 1,856 runs in the shorter format.[3] He also took sixty-seven wickets across all forms of the game with his part-time medium-pace bowling. Following the recurrence of a persistent knee injury in 2002, he retired.[2]

Professional Cricketers Association

Following the end of his playing career he became an administrator, rising to assistant chief executive of the Professional Cricketers' Association in 2008,[4] at the time that lawsuits were arising between the Indian Premier League and the England Cricket Board.[5]

Ratcliffe’s innovative work for the PCA included setting up the Association’s Mind Matters,[6] series to raise awareness of mental health and wellbeing issues. He encouraged a number of high profile players including Marcus Trescothick, Andrew Flintoff, Mike Yardy, Iain O’Brien, Tim Ambrose, Graeme Fowler and Monty Panesar to talk openly about their battles with depression and other mental health matters and in the process created the organisation first Mental Health Charter.[7]

In a Radio Times interview, on February 13, 2015, Andrew Flintoff said, “England, and especially the Players Cricket Association, should be commended so highly for their work with mental health issues. There’s a guy there called Jason Ratcliffe (PCA Assistant Chief Executive), who is leading the way, not just in cricket but in everyday life for people.”[8]

Ratcliffe was also the initiator for the establishment of the PCA’s Confidential Helpline/Support network in 2007, a service available for all past and present professional cricketers in England and Wales offering them a 24 hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week support network.[9]

The PCA Benevolent Fund,[10] a charitable trust set up to help past and present cricketers and their dependants, also benefitted from Ratcliffe’s support and vision. The Benevolent Fund provided practical support in a number of areas including operations for Jack Bond, Brian Brain, Graham Barlow and Alan Rayment and the provision of specially-adapted vehicles for Winston Davis and Jamie Hood, who were both paralysed in accidents away from the game.

In addition, as a trustee of the Tom Maynard Trust,[11] Ratcliffe led ‘The Big Bike Ride’ fundraising challenge,[12] on behalf of the Trust and the Benevolent Fund, raising over £400,000 to date.

The PCA also helped to establish a network of Personal Development and Welfare Officers,[13] under Ratcliffe’s leadership to help provide players with practical support and advice to help smooth the transition to life after cricket.

Development of the PCA’s Most Valuable Player Rankings (MVP),[14] was devised and developed under Ratcliffe, leading to a million pound sponsorship by FTI 2010-2103 and most recently in April 2016, the launch of a ground breaking ECB/PCA joint venture to have players picked for a North v South 50 over challenge via the rankings system, an initiative conceived by Andrew Strauss to build prominence for the 2019 ICC World Cup.

Ratcliffe also worked closely to reintegrate Mervyn Westfield back into cricket after the former Essex fast bowler had served a jail sentence and been suspended from all cricket for his involvement in spot fixing. Westfield spoke to first year county players about his experiences at PCA Rookie Camps and also accompanied Ratcliffe on educational visits to South Africa in November 2015 [15]

Ratcliffe also supported Chris Lewis, the former England all-rounder and a team-mate at Surrey, while he was serving a long prison sentence for attempting to smuggle liquid cocaine into the UK. After he was released from prison, Lewis accompanied the PCA on a series of pre-season county visits in early 2016 where he spoke to current players about his experiences.

After several years of negotiating playing contracts,[16] mediating disputes with players and counties, in September 2016 The Cricketer Magazine named Ratcliffe at 27 in its Power List stating: “Ratcliffe is the closest thing English cricket has to a union boss. If an issue arises between a player and his employer, he is likely to be the first port of call. So many professionals have praised him for helping them find a path after cricket, or getting through personal difficulties; he encouraged Marcus Trescothick, Mike Yardy and Monty Panesar to bring their mental-health issues into the public domain and break down and old taboo." [17]

Ratcliffe also sits on the ECB’s Rule and Regulations cricket committee and is a member of the ECB’s Cricket Discipline Commission.

Ratcliffe was recently listed as number 27 of the 50 most influential people in cricket. [18]

Notes

  1. "Player Profile: Jason Ratcliffe". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Jason Ratcliffe announces his retirement from First-Class Cricket". ESPN CricInfo. 10 September 2002. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  3. "Player Profile: Jason Ratcliffe". ESPN CricInfo. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  4. "Sean Morris to head Professional Cricketers' Association". ESPN CricInfo. 7 January 2008. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  5. "Mind matters: the personal well-being series". The Professional Cricketers Association. 20 November 2010. Retrieved 20 November 2010.
  6. "Mental health charter". The Professional Cricketers Association. 20 November 2010. Retrieved 20 November 2010.
  7. "Freddie Flintoff: 'Weight targets for athletes can be dangerous – especially for women'". Radio Times. 13 February 2015.
  8. "Confidential Helpline". The PCA.
  9. "The PCA Benevolent Fund". The Professional Cricketers’ Association.
  10. "About The Trust". Tom Maynard Trust.
  11. "The Big Bike Ride 3". The Professional Cricketers' Association.
  12. "Personal Development". The Professional Cricketers' Association.
  13. "County MVP". The Professional Cricketers' Association.
  14. "The Professional Cricketers' Association". www.thepca.co.uk.
  15. "The Professional Cricketers' Association". www.thepca.co.uk.
  16. "Telegraph quartet among the Top 50 most powerful people in English cricket". The Telegraph.
  17. "The Power List". www.thecricketer.com.

External links

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