Today: 30 June 2025
1 March 2024
2 mins read

Veteran Umpire Marais Erasmus Retires

As of now, he umpired in 80 Tests, 124 ODIs and 43 T20Is played by men, as well as in 18 women’s T20Is, and being the TV umpire in 131 men’s internationals across the formats….reports Asian Lite News

Veteran South Africa umpire Marais Erasmus said he would be retiring from his international umpiring career after the ongoing Test series between New Zealand and Australia.

Erasmus had played as a seam-bowling all-rounder for Boland in South Africa’s domestic cricket circuit, before transitioning as an umpire at the international level since 2006. As of now, he umpired in 80 Tests, 124 ODIs and 43 T20Is played by men, as well as in 18 women’s T20Is, and being the TV umpire in 131 men’s internationals across the formats.

“I’ll miss the privileges and the travelling. But I’ve had enough of being away and living outside of my comfort zone. I think having a more boring life is what I’m looking for. I decided in October last year and I informed the ICC that I would finish my contract in April and that would be that,” Erasmus told Cricbuzz.

Erasmus won the ICC Umpire of the Year award thrice — in 2016, 2017, and 2021, leveling alongside Richard Kettleborough and Aleem Dar in a list topped by Simon Taufel, who got the honour five times. He joined the ICC Elite Panel of Umpires from 2010.

Asked about his plans after retiring from international umpiring, Erasmus said, “For the first couple of months I’m just going to take the winter off. We have some travel planned domestically, and from September I’ll be in the hands of CSA.

“We still need to finalise how they want to use me. I’ll umpire in domestic cricket next season and play a mentoring role. I might go to the Khaya Majola Week (a schools event) or the club championships, and I’ll be watching and advising umpires.”

Erasmus also spoke about what he would miss the most about being an umpire in international cricket. “The challenge of the job, being in that moment of trying to get it right. That’s always something special and tough, and it’s exhilarating when you have a good game.

“There’s lots of camaraderie, because we’re all in it together even though there’s competition between the guys. We all understand the highs and the lows, and that when someone is going through a rough period you need to support him because your turn will come.

“To have seen the best players and been to the iconic venues and World Cups is a massive privilege. It’s been quite a journey from being a schoolboy who kept score while watching Eddie Barlow play at Newlands.”

ALSO READ: KL Rahul set to miss Dharamshala Test

Previous Story

Investopia Reviews Priorities For Economic Growth

Next Story

Polls Open in Iran

Latest from Sport

Ronaldo stays! Al Nassr deal extended

Portuguese icon commits to Saudi side amid swirling transfer rumours and global football spotlight Cristiano Ronaldo has officially extended his stay at Saudi Arabian club Al Nassr until 2027, putting an end

Headingley Heat or Swing Trap

Jaffer pointed out that Joe Root is undoubtedly the main guy that India should be looking to dislodge, even as others, including skipper Ben Stokes, are in indifferent batting form…writes Niharika Raina

Full Carse Ahead

Carse is adamant he will be taking the five-game series against India as an opportunity to show the different skills he brings to the table. England quick Brydon Carse is relishing the

New Lords in Town: The Proteas!

After decades of heartbreak in knockout clashes, South Africa finally shattered a 27-year curse, clinching Test glory with a five-wicket win over Australia in the 2025 WTC Final at Lord’s on Saturday.

RCB’s Long Wait Over

Long branded as underachievers, RCB finally buried that tag with a complete campaign in 2025…reports Asian Lite News For a fleeting moment, it looked like history was about to repeat itself! After
Go toTop