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Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Tue Feb 21, 2012 10:28 pm
by zimfan1

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Tue Feb 21, 2012 10:45 pm
by sloandog
Fantastic! How does he make a living ?

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2012 2:30 am
by ZIMDOGGY
imagine my surprise, today the 22/2/12

i sit down on the toilet, with my newspaper, in the middle of doing a poo ( more like diarrhoea as im slightly lactose intolerant and i had finished a coffee, it was slightly runny and brown, same texture as mud)

i open the back page of the sports section in the bigggest australian newspaper, and the first article i see is this:


http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/ ... 6277632157

didnt even know he was blind"?

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2012 2:59 am
by CrimsonAvenger

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2012 3:00 am
by CrimsonAvenger
http://www.africasia.com/services/news_ ... ecaad45.01
Cricket commentator Dean du Plessis gauges the on-field action with his ears: a bowler's grunt as he reaches the crease, the drag of feet across the pitch, or the crack of a bat slamming into a ball.

The Zimbabwean is one of the world's few sightless sports analysts, plying his remarkable expertise by training his acute hearing on the stump microphones despite being born with a blindness that was meant to kill him.

"I was born with tumors on both my retinas, so I was only meant to be alive for three to maximum five months -- but I'm 35, not out now, so still playing a good innings," he said.

Alongside daily radio work, sports bulletins and a newspaper column which he writes on his voice-enabled cellphone, Du Plessis also sits in the broadcasters' commentary booth where he provides colour to the anchor's match breakdown.

"Robin Jackman will say something like 'driven through the covers, that will be four, good shot'," he explained, smoothly gearing into cricket jargon with radio-esque poise.

"And then it will be my job to say 'well, that is arguably Jacques Kallis' most favourite shot, outside the offstump, a little bit of width, which allowed him to free his arms."

Du Plessis says he gets no preferential treatment but is wholly dependent on the stump microphones which identify each player's unique characteristics.

These range from England Test skipper Andrew Strauss's "yeah, come on, come on, come on" when wanting to make a run for it, to former Australian spinner Shane Warne's huge grunt, and South African Graeme Smith on a hook or pull shot.

"If I turn my microphones down, I really will be blind," he said.

"Obviously having followed the game for just over 20 years and having commentated for 10 going on 11 years, you get to understand, and you get to know which player does what and that's pretty much how I know what's going on out there."

'It's just my way of adapting to the situation'

It was the stupendous noise of 80,000 roaring Indian fans in a radio broadcast more than 20 years ago that piqued his interest in the sport while at a boarding school for the blind in South Africa, where he would later drum up mock match reports.

Faced with sceptics who believe he is being fed information, Du Plessis says he would slip up if forced to concentrate on too many voices. But he does fear making a mistake each time he goes on air.

"Touch wood, it hasn't happened yet, thank goodness, and I wouldn't wish that upon my worst enemy," he said. "But I do understand that you're not going to be perfect the whole time and a time is going to come when I am going to get it very, very wrong.

"And I just hope that when that happens, that people will be a little understanding -- that at the end of the day, regardless of me being able to see or not to see, I'm only human."

His blindness has led to amusing situations. Australia opener David Warner -- the "nicest guy" he's met in the past six months -- assumed his blank gaze was booze-induced and came over to see if he was okay, said Du Plessis.

"They are amazed," he says of how people react to him.

"But, you know, to me it's a little silly because, if you really think about it, it's nothing as spectacular as what people make it out to be. It is just my way of adapting to the situation."

Former Zimbabwean national coach Kevin Curran describes Du Plessis, who was taught the game by his late cricketer brother Gary, as "an inspiration to us all".

"If you didn't know that he was blind from birth, I mean, you wouldn't realise it. I often say 'how does he know that, how does he know that?'"

Du Plessis, a Harare resident, sees his future outside Zimbabwe and says he would be at the airport in a flash if offered a job elsewhere.

"I love this country, it's where I grew up, it's where I was born," he said. "But at the end of the day I have to look after myself as well and there's not enough cricket that is being played here at the moment.

"And, more importantly, there's not enough broadcasting opportunities for me because of that. So I'm quite prepared to settle down anywhere.

"I want to be a full-time cricket broadcaster for many years to come so, as they say in cricketing terms: if the ball is there and if you want to hit it, then hit it hard."

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2012 7:23 am
by foreignfield
Legend!

It would be nice if his radio summaries from domestic matches were put online. Or if he did a Logan Cup podcast for each round of matches.

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 2:58 am
by Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic)
The leading Australian newspaper, African newspaper and other links, almost all of them are focusing on his disability rather ability. "Bind commentator", "sightless commentator" and so on. Dean is a person first like you and me and a person with visual disability later. PwD’s (persons with disabilities) are not diagnoses or disabilities; they are people, first. Do you want to be known for your psoriasis, sexual dysfunction, lact intolerance, scabies? People first language puts the person before the disability, and describes what a person has, not who a person is. I would like to know Dean as a person for his abilities and not his disabilities. What about you?

Further references from my website:
http://infiniteability.yolasite.com/resources/PFL10.pdf
Disability etiquette @ the bottom of this webpage
http://infiniteability.yolasite.com/

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 4:50 am
by eugene
Dean is a great commentator and I always enjoy listening to his work. I wonder if he is aware of ZCF?

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 10:46 am
by Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic)
eugene wrote:Dean is a great commentator and I always enjoy listening to his work. I wonder if he is aware of ZCF?
I did mention about ZCF last year in one of our personal mail exchanges

Re: Dean Du Plessis

Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 11:46 pm
by ZIMDOGGY
Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic) wrote:The leading Australian newspaper, African newspaper and other links, almost all of them are focusing on his disability rather ability. "Bind commentator", "sightless commentator" and so on. Dean is a person first like you and me and a person with visual disability later. PwD’s (persons with disabilities) are not diagnoses or disabilities; they are people, first. Do you want to be known for your psoriasis, sexual dysfunction, lact intolerance, scabies? People first language puts the person before the disability, and describes what a person has, not who a person is. I would like to know Dean as a person for his abilities and not his disabilities. What about you?

Further references from my website:
http://infiniteability.yolasite.com/resources/PFL10.pdf
Disability etiquette @ the bottom of this webpage
http://infiniteability.yolasite.com/

What you are talking about is the truth, but i think we should ease up as people are just impressed/amazed by his ability to overcome it. blindness and commentary is like blindness and driving...rarely mix.