New Zealand's finest batsman and one of the most elegant stroke-makers of the 1980s and 1990s, whose Test average of 45 belied his immense class and influence.
Martin Crowe was New Zealand's greatest batsman, a technically gifted right-hander who was rated among the finest players of his generation. He scored 17 Test centuries and led New Zealand to the semi-finals of the 1992 World Cup, where he finished as the tournament's leading run-scorer. Tragically cut short by lymphoma, Crowe remains New Zealand cricket's iconic figure and a true great of the game.