News update
  • Sediment-borne fertility transforms northern Bangladesh     |     
  • 3 Armed Forces Chiefs, Jamaat Ameer visit Khaleda Zia at Hospital     |     
  • Army, Navy, Air Chiefs Visit Khaleda Zia at Dhaka Hospital     |     
  • EU, BDRCS, IFRC Partner to Strengthen Recovery of July Uprising Survivors     |     
  • Mushfiqur, Mahmudullah, Mominul find teams in BPL     |     

Ex England cricketer Robin Smith dies at 62

Greenwatch Desk Death 2025-12-03, 9:12am

images56-108971a3b1325d0e326d8d78c5f858b21764731589.jpg




Robin Smith, the former England batter renowned for his fearless stroke play during an era of frequent test defeats, has died at age 62.


His family announced through the England and Wales Cricket Board that Smith passed away unexpectedly at his home in Perth, Australia, on Monday. No cause of death was released.

Smith represented England in 62 test matches between 1988 and 1996, scoring 4,236 runs at an impressive average of 43.67 and registering nine centuries. Famous for his trademark square cut, he also featured in 71 ODIs and was part of the squad that reached the 1992 World Cup final. His unbeaten 167 against Australia in 1993 stood as England’s highest ODI score until 2016.

The family emphasized that his past struggles with alcohol and mental health following his retirement in 2004 “should not form the basis of speculation about the cause of death.”

Born in Durban, South Africa, to British parents, Robin Arnold Smith — affectionately known as “The Judge” — moved to England as a teenager, following his elder brother Chris, who also played at the international level. Smith made an impactful test debut in 1988 against the West Indies at Headingley, scoring 38 in a century partnership against the fearsome pace attack of Malcolm Marshall, Curtly Ambrose, Winston Benjamin and Courtney Walsh.

He produced two Ashes centuries and three against the West Indies, including his career-best 175 at St. John’s, Antigua, in 1994.

Tributes poured in from former teammates and cricket figures. Michael Vaughan wrote on X: “RIP Judge ... My hero.”
ECB chairman Richard Thompson said Smith “stood up to some of the fastest bowlers in the world with a smile and remarkable resilience,” giving England fans both pride and entertainment.

Nasser Hussain told Sky Sports: “He had no fear against the quicks. No grille, no visor — just that helmet. I’ve rarely seen anyone cut the ball better. England fans adored him.”
Former captain Michael Atherton added that while Smith appeared tough and unshakable on the field, he was shy off it but immensely popular: “He was someone who would do anything for you.”

Smith played over 300 first-class games for Hampshire, where he became a club legend. The county hailed him as a “true titan,” with chairman Rod Bransgrove calling him “one of the greatest, if not the greatest, Hampshire heroes,” deeply cherished by supporters and teammates alike, reports UNB.