Cricket Legends Jeremy Coney & Haidee Tiffen Enter NZ Hall of Fame

New Zealand Cricket has announced the induction of Jeremy Coney and Haidee Tiffen into its Hall of Fame, marking the first additions since its inaugural class. Haidee Tiffen, a star all-rounder and captain, was instrumental in New Zealand's 2000 World Cup victory and led the team to the 2009 final. Jeremy Coney captained the men's team through a golden era, securing historic Test series wins against Australia and England in the mid-1980s. Both players are celebrated for their leadership, skill, and significant contributions to New Zealand cricket history.

Key Points: Jeremy Coney, Haidee Tiffen Inducted into NZ Cricket Hall of Fame

  • First new inductees since inaugural class
  • Tiffen was 2000 World Cup champion
  • Coney led historic Test series wins
  • Tiffen was elite all-rounder and captain
  • Coney known for clutch performances
5 min read

Jeremy Coney, Haidee Tiffen inducted into New Zealand Cricket Hall of Fame

New Zealand cricket legends Jeremy Coney and Haidee Tiffen are inducted into the Hall of Fame, honoring their historic careers and leadership.

"It is a huge honour to be inducted into the Hall of Fame - Haidee Tiffen"

Wellington, March 25

New Zealand legends Jeremy Coney and Haidee Tiffen will be inducted into the New Zealand Cricket Hall of Fame, the first additions to the HOF since the inaugural 'First Eleven' was revealed last summer.

An alliance between New Zealand Cricket (NZC), the New Zealand Cricket Players Association, and the New Zealand Cricket Museum, the Hall of Fame (HOF) seeks to immortalise the country's greatest cricketers, so that the players and fans of today can feel a sense of identity and a connection to those who have gone before them.

Last summer's inauguration saw the induction of Bert Sutcliffe, John R. Reid, Jackie Lord, Trish McKelvey, Glenn Turner, Richard Hadlee, Debbie Hockley, Martin Crowe, Emily Drumm, Daniel Vettori, and Brendon McCullum, as per a NZC press release.

Coney, who led the New Zealand men's team through its first so-called "Golden Era" in the 1980s, and Tiffen, one of the best all-rounders in the world during the decade from 1999-2009, are the first to be added.

One of New Zealand women's cricket's most accomplished leaders, Tiffen debuted against South Africa as a 19-year-old in 1999, and made 128 international appearances (53 as captain) across formats, including a remarkable streak of 71 consecutive ODIs.

She was a star of New Zealand's 2000 World Cup triumph on home soil, scoring 187 runs at 46.75, including two fifties in two innings.

As captain, Tiffen led the team to the 2009 World Cup final in Australia, topping both aggregates and averages with 279 runs at 46.50, including a century against Pakistan in Sydney, her penultimate international innings.

An elite all-rounder, she was shortlisted for the ICC Women's Player of the Year in 2006 (one of seven nominees) and bowled with great skill alongside her reliable batting. She also featured in New Zealand's inaugural women's T20I against England in 2004, and scored 124 in her two Tests.

Tiffen played 117 ODIs for NZ, scoring 2,919 runs at an average of 30.19, with a century and 18 fifties. She also featured in two Tests, scoring 124 runs in four innings, including a fifty. In nine T20Is, she scored 121 runs.

"It is a huge honour to be inducted into the Hall of Fame and to be alongside some of my role models already inducted, like Debbie Hockley, Sir Richard Hadlee and Emily Drumm," she said.

"As a young girl from Timaru, representing New Zealand was always a dream. Cricket has given me so much incredible friendships, challenges, and memories that will stay with me forever. I am very grateful to the game and everyone who supported me along the way," she added.

Regarded as one of New Zealand's most courageous competitors, Coney led the New Zealand men's team to three historic and successive Test series victories in 1985 and 1986: against Australia in Australia, Australia in New Zealand, and England in England, all of which were first-time achievements.

Excelling in batting, bowling, fielding, and leadership, he was renowned for thriving in crises. His maiden Test century of 174 not out against England at the Basin Reserve in 1984 came after a 244-run first-innings deficit, rescuing New Zealand from near-certain defeat in an epic eight-hour stand.

The following season, another unbeaten hundred (with a famous last-wicket 50-run partnership alongside Ewen Chatfield) delivered a dramatic two-wicket win against Pakistan in Dunedin.

Across 52 Tests, Coney scored 2668 runs at 37.57 (including three centuries and 16 fifties) and took 64 catches, many at second slip, where his success rate was near-infallible.

His medium-pace bowling delivered 27 Test wickets and 54 in ODIs, including a crucial four-wicket haul at Leeds in 1983 that helped secure New Zealand's first Test win in England. In 80 ODI innings, he failed to score only once, scoring 1,874 in 88 matches and 80 innings at an average of 30.72, with eight fifties.

"I think back to the skinny wraith from Ngaio in Wellington, spending his primary schoolboy afternoons alone on our tennis court immersed with a ball, my older brother's bat (which had to be replaced in the precise position it lay prior to his return from college)," he said.

"In that wash-house I first heard the seductive clink of buckles from pads... It was on this tennis court using this borrowed equipment I created unlikely and (as yet) unregistered, test victories over England and Australia.

"One might imagine the pleasure supplied when these mythical encounters became a reality for me," he continued.

Coney said he was honoured to be recognised.

"It's been fun and a challenge. That this range of feelings through good times and bad, competing hard as part of a team, might result in my inclusion alongside those I have admired is a little beyond my expectations yet considerably gratifying," he added.

Inductees for the HOF must have represented New Zealand, and must have been retired for at least five years, with selections guided by outstanding performance as players, including leadership, influence, and world-class stature in their prime.

Coney and Tiffen will be formally recognised at the New Zealand Cricket Awards on Thursday.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Jeremy Coney's leadership in the 80s was something else. Beating Australia in Australia and England in England back-to-back? That's the stuff of dreams for any cricket nation. New Zealand cricket has such a rich, understated history. Well deserved honour for both.
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Arjun K
Reading about Tiffen's 71 consecutive ODIs is mind-blowing. That level of fitness and consistency is what separates the greats. New Zealand does a fantastic job honouring their legends. We could learn a thing or two about preserving our own cricket heritage with more systematic halls of fame.
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Sarah B
Coney's story about practicing alone as a kid with his brother's bat is so relatable to any cricket-loving child, whether in NZ or in the gullies of Mumbai. It's the pure love for the game. His quote about it being "fun and a challenge" sums up sport perfectly.
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Vikram M
A respectful point: while the Hall of Fame is a great initiative, the article mentions the inaugural list had 11 names. Adding just two more a year later feels a bit slow. Many deserving players from past eras are waiting. The process should perhaps be a bit faster to honour them in their lifetime.
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Karthik V
Tiffen's stats are seriously impressive – 2919 ODI runs as an all-rounder is no joke. She was a proper match-winner. It's good to see women cricketers from that era getting their due. The Black Caps have always been a likeable team, on and off the field. Congrats to both legends!

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