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Alec Stewart
Wisden CricInfo staff - June 20, 2001

Wisden overview
When Stewart is in full flow, there are few who can live with him. Relying on touch, he is in his element against the quicks, cover-driving with a neat flourish and pulling with panache – most memorably when he thundered two centuries during England's storming of fortress Bridgetown in 1993-94. He is less secure against the spinners, however, and his instinctive style means his career has been a sequence of purple patches and less colourful troughs. Stewart's strength as an opening batsman has been compromised by the selectors' desire for balance: he and Jack Russell swapped the wicket-keeping gloves regularly throughout the 1990s, but Stewart, better standing back than standing up, eventually became the regular No. 1. He took over the England captaincy from Mike Atherton in 1998 and promptly led the side to its first major series win for 12 years, against South Africa. But Stewart's leadership was based on passion not nous, and when England lost another Ashes series and flopped in the 1999 World Cup, he was harshly axed. He hit top form again during the 2000 one-day triangular series, and when he scorched a century in his 100th Test, the sheer length of the standing ovation he received suggested that Stewart had become a national institution. But his squeaky-clean image took a blow during England's 2000-01 tour of Pakistan when an Indian bookmaker alleged that Stewart had accepted money for information during England's trip to India in 1992-93. Stewart survived, though, and remains a pivotal figure in the England side, where his love of the football-manager-style soundbite has earned him the nickname Gaffer. Against India at Lord's in 2002, he crowned his achievements by becoming England's most-capped Test cricketer, overtaking Graham Gooch's record of 118 matches. Lawrence Booth

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