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ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 final could be the last match I see, says Martin Crowe

Martin Crowe admits that ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 final between his beloved New Zealand and Australia could be the last game he'll ever see.

user-circle cricketcountry.com Written by Agence France-Presse
Published: Mar 28, 2015, 10:11 AM (IST)
Edited: Mar 28, 2015, 10:21 AM (IST)

Martin Crowe (middle) was recently inducted into ICC Hall of Fame © Getty Images
Martin Crowe (middle) was recently inducted into ICC Hall of Fame © Getty Images

Melbourne: Terminally ill Martin Crowe admits that Sunday’s ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 final between his beloved New Zealand and Australia could be the last game he’ll ever see. Known as one of the game’s most stylish batsmen, the 52-year-old Crowe has been battling a rare blood disease, double-hit lymphoma. “My precarious life ahead may not afford me the luxury of many more games to watch and enjoy. So this is likely to be it. The last, maybe, and I can happily live with that,” wrote Crowe in his column on www.espncricinfo.com. “I will hold back tears all day long. I will gasp for air on occasions. I will feel like a nervous parent.” Read: Martin Crowe inducted into ICC Hall of Fame during Australia vs New Zealand, ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 tie

Crowe will be at Sunday’s game at the Melbourne Cricket Ground hoping to see Brendon McCullum‘s New Zealand win a first World Cup title after previously falling at the semi-final hurdle on six occasions. “I will, like so many Kiwis making the short trek across the Tasman, feel this, as McCullum has stated clearly, to be the greatest cricketing time of our lives. Four million dare to believe, while 11 (and back up) dare to achieve.” Martin Crowe suffers relapse of cancer

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Crowe played in 77 Tests, averaged 45.36 and scored 16 centuries which still stands as a New Zealand record. His highest score of 299 at the Basin Reserve in Wellington against Sri Lanka in 1991 stood as a New Zealand best until McCullum scored 302 against India on the same ground last year. World Cup 1992: Martin Crowe’s New Zealand stun Australia at Eden Park as Dibbly-Dobbly-Wibbly-Wobbly rule roost