Falcon might not be able to boast the same number of famous alumni as, say, Eton, but then it's not been around that long and our numbers are somewhat different.
Amongst our alumni are to be found....
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- Brendan Ashby - is a Zimbabwean former swimmer, who specialized in backstroke events. Since 2004, Ashby currently holds two Zimbabwean records in the 100 and 200 m backstroke from the World championships and U.S. invitational meets. He is also a former member of the swimming team for the Alabama Crimson Tide at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.
- Garth Barrett - Lieutenant-Colonel, CO of C Squadron, SAS, from 1978 to 1980, SAS and then CO of 3 Reconnaissance Regiment from 1980 to 1983.
- Glen Barrett - is a Zimbabwean former cricketer who represented several teams in Zimbabwean domestic cricket. He played predominantly as a middle-order batsman. After studying at the University of Cape Town in South Africa for three years, Barrett returned to Zimbabwe in 2002 and made his first-class debut, playing for CFX Academy in the 2001–02 Logan Cup. Later in life, he moved to Melbourne, Australia and pursued his first love, pole vault. After excelling at high school and holding the Zimbabwe Junior national record of 4.20m, he went on to hold the Zimbabwe men's national record of 4.56m from 2009 to 2017.
- David Beresford - (1 July 1947 – 22 April 2016) was a South African journalist who was a long-time correspondent for The Guardian newspaper. Posted to Belfast at the height of the Troubles, he was the author of Ten Men Dead (1987), a book about the 1981 Irish hunger strike in Maze prison in Northern Ireland, which has been called one of the best books ever written about the Troubles. He was later The Guardian's correspondent in Johannesburg, where he became noted for his coverage of the end of apartheid, breaking the news of some of the most significant events and scandals in the 1980s and '90s.
- Stephen Bhasera - is a Zimbabwean rugby union player playing in South Africa for the Golden Lions in the Currie Cup and the Golden Lions XV in the Rugby Challenge. His regular position is prop. After representing Zimbabwe a record four times at Craven Week, Bhasera earned a full scholarship to study at the University of Johannesburg, where he earned his LLB.
- Glen Bruk-Jackson - is a former Zimbabwean cricketer. A right-handed batsman, Bruk-Jackson played in two Test matches and one One Day International for Zimbabwe, all during their tour of Pakistan in December 1993. He played domestically for Mashonaland Country Districts and later Mashonaland.
- Christopher Cowdray - is a British hotel manager. He is the chief executive officer of the Dorchester Collection, a hotel operator in Europe and the US. Cowdray managed hotels in Africa, Asia, Australia, the Middle East and the United Kingdom. In the United Kingdom, Cowdray was previously the managing director at London's Claridge's. In 2004, Cowdray became the general manager at The Dorchester Hotel. Cowdray was appointed to chief executive officer of The Dorchester Collection in November 2007. In 2013, Cowdray was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award at the European Hospitality Awards for his achievements in the hotel community with the Dorchester collection.
- Guy Croxford - is a Zimbabwean former cricketer. He played thirteen first-class matches between 2000 and 2003
- David Curtis - is a former Irish Rugby Union international. He also played some first-class cricket while at Oxford University.He made his debut for Ireland against Wales in the 1991 Five Nations. He represented Ireland at the World Cup later that year, scoring a try in the pool stage against his country of birth and participating in their losing quarter-final team. In all he was capped for Ireland on 13 occasions and scored his only other points courtesy of a drop goal in an international friendly against Namibia. He now lives in Zimbabwe, making a living through selling wine and craft beer.
- Ethan Dube - is a former Zimbabwean cricketer who represented Matabeleland in Zimbabwean domestic cricket. He played as a right-arm fast bowler, but had his career cut short by knee and back injuries. After his retirement, Dube moved into sports administration, serving as chairman of the Matabeleland Cricket Association, as a selector for the Zimbabwean national team, and as a member of the government's Sports and Recreation Commission.
- Dion Ebrahim - is a Zimbabwean former cricketer, who played in 29 Test matches and 82 One Day Internationals (ODI) for the Zimbabwe national cricket team. He now lives in New Zealand where he works as a cricket coach.
- Craig Evans - is a Zimbabwean cricketer. He played in three Tests, against Sri Lanka, India and Australia, but was considered as a specialist at the one-day game. He appeared in the 1996 Cricket World Cup, with his highest international score 96 not out against Sri Lanka at SSC, Colombo in the Singer World Series in 1996. In February 2020, he was named in Zimbabwe's squad for the Over-50s Cricket World Cup in South Africa. However, the tournament was cancelled during the third round of matches due to the coronavirus pandemic
- Gavin Ewing - is a Zimbabwean former cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and bowls a right-arm offbreak. As a teenager, he spent a short time at Potchefstroom Boys High in South Africa before returning to Zimbabwe to complete his schooling at Falcon. He plays for Zimbabwe and Matabeleland. He was initially called up for the 2003–04 tour in Australia, having previously played in the 1999 Under-19 World Cup and finished in the list of the top ten wicket players.
- Neil Ferreira - is a Zimbabwean cricketer.Having also tried his hand at sports including tennis, squash, and hockey, he made his name as a left-handed opening batsman for the academy and for Manicaland. He is also a wicket keeper. His first Test involvement was in the August 2005 Test against New Zealand. Prior to playing for his country, Ferreira also played first-class cricket for Manicaland C.C., scoring an impressive 501 runs in the 1999–2000 season and also being the leading run scorer in the 2001–02 season with 650 runs. On 8 August 2005 Ferreira received his Zimbabwean test cap being the 70th cricketer to represent Zimbabwe.
- Keith A.A. Fox - is the Duke of Edinburgh Professor of Cardiology at the University of Edinburgh. He is a founding fellow of the European Society of Cardiology and is currently Chair of the Programme of the European Society of Cardiology. In addition, he was President of the British Cardiovascular Society from 2009 to 2012. He was awarded the Silver Medal of the European Society of Cardiology in 2010. Professor Fox's major research interest lies in the mechanisms and manifestations of acute coronary arterial disease; his work extends from underlying biological mechanisms to in vitro and in vivo studies and clinical trials. He is the author of more than 587 scientific papers. Professor Fox is chairman of the RITA program, co-chairman of ROCKET-AF and OASIS program, and chair of the GRACE program (the largest multinational study in acute coronary syndromes), and a lead investigator for studies on novel antithrombins, anticoagulants and antiplatelets. He is an International Associate Editor of the European Heart Journal and a member of the editorial boards of a number of journals. His current areas of research include the inhibition of coronary thrombosis and the role of platelets and inflammation in acute coronary syndromes.
- Frederick Goldstein - was a cricketer who played first-class cricket in England and South Africa from 1966 to 1977. After leaving Falcon, he was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to St Edmund Hall, Oxford in 1965. He went on to win a first. Outside of cricket,Goldstein worked at the University of Cape Town (UCT) Information Technology Department for many years, starting in 1971 as Senior Systems Programmer and becoming a professor. He was involved in the early days of the Internet in South Africa. As Director of the Information Technology Department, he provided support at a policy and strategic level to set up an internet link between UCT and Rhodes University in Grahamstown.
- Sunu Gonera - is a director and producer who has, in a very short space of time, carved out a career which sounds less like a real life and more like a movie. After completing a degree at UCT, he worked his way up in the film industry, and within three short years garnered several prestigious directing awards. Dubbed in the world of commercials' as one of the finest directing talents, he continues to produce a body of work with a unique voice that has inspired such prestigious clients as Nike, VW, Coca Cola and U.S Tennis Association to mention a few. His short film "Riding with Sugar" based on his own full length feature script screened at Cannes in 2006. In June of the same year, he beat out several more seasoned Hollywood directors and landed his first full length feature directing assignment with Lionsgate. Five months later, Sunu sold his home in South Africa, and moved his wife and kids to Hollywood to make his feature directorial debut on 'Pride' starring academy award nominee Terrence Howard, Bernie Mac, Tom Arnold and Kimberley Elise. The director and Howard were nominated for a NAACP Image Awards.
- A. C. Grayling - is a British philosopher and author. Until June 2011, he was Professor of Philosophy at Birkbeck, University of London, where he taught from 1991. In 2011 he founded and became the first Master of New College of the Humanities (now Northeastern University London), an independent undergraduate college in London. He is also a supernumerary fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford, where he formerly taught. Grayling is the author of about 30 books on philosophy, biography, history of ideas, human rights and ethics, including The Refutation of Scepticism, The Future of Moral Values, What Is Good? and The Meaning of Things. He was a trustee of the London Library and a fellow of the World Economic Forum, and is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Royal Society of Arts. For a number of years he was a columnist for The Guardian newspaper, and presented the BBC World Service series Exchanges at the Frontier on science and society. Grayling was a director and contributor at Prospect magazine from its foundation until 2016. He is a vice-president of Humanists UK, honorary associate of the National Secular Society, and Patron of the Defence Humanists.
- Adam Huckle - is a Zimbabwean former international cricketer who played in eight Test matches and 19 One Day Internationals (ODI) from 1997 to 1999 for the Zimbabwe national team. In his second Test in 1997, against New Zealand, Huckle took 11–255 in the match (6–109 and 5–146). As of December 2023, this remains the only occasion of a Zimbabwean bowler taking 11 wickets in a Test match.
- Robert Jackson - is a British politician who was a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from 1979 to 1984 and member of parliament (MP) for Wantage from 1983 to 2005, having been elected as a Conservative. Jackson was raised in Nkana, Northern Rhodesia, where his father worked on the copper mines. After Falcon, he studied at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, where he rose to the presidency of the Oxford Union. He was then elected to a fellowship of All Souls College, Oxford, one of the UK's most prestigious academic distinctions. He had worked as a political advisor to senior ministers prior to being elected and also as political advisor to the Governor of Rhodesia, Lord Soames, during its transition to independence as Zimbabwe. He edited the Round Table Journal from 1970 to 1974. In government, he served as a junior minister at the Department of Education and Science (1987–90), the Department of Employment (1990–92) and the Office of Public Service and Science (1992–93). On 15 January 2005, Jackson defected to the Labour Party, stating that the Tories had "incoherent" policies on public services, "dangerous" views on Europe, and had "wobbled" on the issue of Iraq.
- Stuart W. Jamieson - is a British cardiothoracic surgeon, specialising in pulmonary thromboendarterectomy (PTE), a surgical procedure performed to remove organized clotted blood (thrombus) from pulmonary arteries in people with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH). In his early career, he wrote on xenograft hyperacute rejection and in December 1980 was part of the team that performed the first successful human heart transplant using the then newly discovered immunosuppressant cyclosporine. In 1981, he was part of Bruce Reitz's team that performed the world's first successful combined heart-lung transplant procedure at Stanford University. Following that, he continued to make significant contributions to heart-lung transplant procedures, and led programmes in cardiothoracic surgery in both adults and children. In 1986, he was elected president of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT), whilst he was professor and head of cardiothoracic surgery at the University of Minnesota. Later, he became dean of cardiovascular affairs and chair and distinguished professor of surgery at the University of California, San Diego, where he co-founded the Sulpizio Cardiovascular Center.
- Gail Kelly - is a South African-born Australian businesswoman. In 2002, she became the first female CEO of a major Australian bank or top 15 company, and in 2005 was the highest-paid woman in an Australian corporation. She is the former CEO of Westpac, a role she held from 2008 to 2015. In 2010 Kelly was named 8th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes; in 2014, she was listed in 56th place. She married Allan Kelly in December 1977 and, when the couple moved to Rhodesia, she taught Latin at Falcon while he served in the Rhodesian Army.
- Ryan King - is a Zimbabwean former cricketer. He played sixteen first-class matches between 1998 and 2003. He began his career with support from his father, John, a former cricketer. As a student of the 2000 Academy, Ryan had first-class cricket experience, including a stint as CFX Academy team vice-captain. He captained his school team at both Whitestone Falcon. He then played two seasons in Australia before returning to Zimbabwe and joining the Matabeleland Logan Cup side and the Academy. During his time at the Academy, he won the 'Academy Student of the Year' award for 2000.
- Charlie Knaggs - is a colonel in the British Army. As commander of the First Battalion, Irish Guards, he was Field Officer in Waiting during the Trooping the Colour ceremony in 2005. He was deployed with his battalion to Helmand Province, Afghanistan, shortly thereafter as part of the NATO force providing security. He was awarded the Order of the British Empire in the 2006 Birthday Honours, and became the Clerk to the Worshipful Company of Ironmongers in July 2018.
- Graham Lord - (16 February 1943 – 13 June 2015) was a British biographer and novelist. His biographies include those of Jeffrey Bernard, James Herriot, Dick Francis, Arthur Lowe, David Niven, John Mortimer and Joan Collins. He was born in Southern Rhodesia, raised in Mozambique, and after Falcon, took an honours degree in History at Churchill College, Cambridge, where he edited the university newspaper, Varsity. After working briefly for the Cambridge Evening News, in 1965 he joined the Sunday Express in London as a reporter and feature writer, where he spent 23 years as Literary Editor, wrote a weekly column about books and interviewed almost every major English language author of the 1960s to 1990s, including Graham Greene, Dame Muriel Spark and Ruth Rendell. In 1987 he launched the £20,000 Sunday Express Book of the Year Award. After leaving the Sunday Express in 1992 to become a full-time author, he wrote regularly for The Daily Telegraph, The Times and the Daily Mail. From 1994 to 1996, he edited the short story magazine Raconteur.
- Tafadzwa Madondo - (17 February 1981 – 17 November 2008) was a Zimbabwean cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman and right-arm off-break bowler and wicketkeeper who played for Manicaland. Born in Bindura, he was the brother of Test player Trevor Madondo. Madondo made a single first-class appearance for the side, during the 2000–01 season, against Matabeleland. He was killed at the age of 27, in November 2008, when he crashed his motorbike while vacationing in Bali.
- Trevor Madondo - (22 November 1976 – 11 June 2001) was a Zimbabwean cricketer who played in three Test matches and 13 One Day Internationals from 1998 to 2001. At Falcon he also played hockey and rugby. He gave up his studies at Rhodes University to become a full-time cricketer, but died from malaria in 2001, aged just 24. He was the fifth-youngest Test player to die. In November 2008, his younger brother, Tafadzwa, (also a Zimbabwean cricketer) died in a motorbike accident while vacationing in Bali.
- TJ Maguranyanga - is a Zimbabwean professional player for ASM Clermont Auvergne in the French Top 14. He was a member of the Golden Lions Under-18 Craven Week team in 2019. He represented Zimbabwe at the Under-13 Rugby Craven Week in 2015, and went on to represent the Golden Lions at national youth competitions, playing in the Under-16 Grant Khomo Week in 2018 and Under-18 Craven Week in 2019. In 2019 he represented Zimbabwe Under-18 Sevens side at the Capricorn Group International Junior Sevens Tournament in Windhoek, Namibia. He was selected as captain for 2020. In December 2024, Maguranyanga became an American football player, being selected for the National Football League's International Player Pathway (IPP) program.
Keegan Meth - is a former Zimbabwean cricketer. He played domestically for the Matabeleland Tuskers and represented Zimbabwe in international cricket. He made his debut for Zimbabwe in 2006, in a One Day International (ODI) against Kenya at Bulawayo. He was aged 18 at the time. He lost three teeth, suffered a broken jaw, and lacerations to his lip when he was struck by a ball hit by Nasir Hossain off his own bowling while playing in the last ODI of the UCB Cup on 21 August 2011 against Bangladesh. Meth made his Test debut against Bangladesh in 2013 along with Richmond Mutumbami and Timycen Maruma. - Patrick Mavros - is the founder of an African luxury brand of jewelry. PatrickMavros was founded in 1980. Patrick, gifted his wife, Catja, with a pair of earrings that he had sculpted for her. The jewelry was noticed by her hairdresser who requested a similar pair, soon other ladies visiting the salon were asking for the earrings. This was the genesis of the business which today is regarded as the definitive luxury brand from Africa and whose followers span the globe.
- Chief Nhlanhlayamangwe Felix Ndiweni - is an Ndebele traditional leader from Zimbabwe. He is a Chief in the Matabeleland region of Zimbabwe. Chief Ndiweni lived in Canvey Island, Essex for several years and left the UK in 2010 to assume the Chieftainship in Matabeleland.
- Jordane Nicolle - is a Zimbabwean cricketer. He played fourteen first-class matches between 2001 and 2005
- Mluleki Nkala - is a Zimbabwean international cricketer. He took the wicket of Sachin Tendulkar with his second ball in senior international cricket in 1999. He also took five wickets against England in a test match in Nottingham in 2000. He was a member of the Zimbabwean Test and One Day International teams, and also captained Zimbabwe in three Under-19 One Day Internationals in 1999–2000. He has coached at Edinburgh Cricket Club in Melbourne, Australia and in early 2010, Nkala returned to Zimbabwe to play professional cricket with the Mid-West Rhinos franchise. He played his last first class match in 2014.
- Stephen Peall - is a former Zimbabwean cricketer who played in four Test matches and 21 One Day Internationals between 1992 and 1996.
- Nigel Pegram - is a South African born British actor. He is best known for playing Eric in Robert's Robots (1973–1974), Group-Captain Ruark in Get Some In! (1977–1978), Sir Reginald in All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989), Mrs Willa Westinghouse in The American Way (1986), General Woundwort in Watership Down (2001) and starred as Nigel in three series in the ITV comedy drama series Outside Edge (1994–1996). As a character actor, has played various roles on stage, TV and film. In 1968, Pegram married Zanzibar-born ex Royal Ballet principal and actress April Olrich, one of his co-stars in Wait a Minim! They remained married for 46 years until her death in April 2014. Upon her death. he took over sponsoring her April Olrich Award for Dynamic Performance which she founded at the Royal Ballet School in Richmond Park.
- Greg Rasmussen - is a 2023 Indianapolis Prize nominee and wildlife conservation biologist who has studied the critically endangered painted dog, previously known as the African wild dog, for over thirty years, one of the longest studies of the species ever conducted. Working in the Hwange National Park area in Zimbabwe, he is the founder and executive director of Painted Dog Research Trust (PDRT) whose mission is to both continue with research into the species and build for the future of conservation by meaningfully incorporating Zimbabwean students to develop local capacity and tomorrow's conservationists. His work has proven successful with the national pack size doubling thanks to these dedicated efforts. He is also the founder and a former director of the Painted Dog Conservation (PDC) project in Zimbabwe which grew to be a model for conservation, incorporating antipoaching, community outreach, and child conservation education, developing long-term community conservation. Dr. Rasmussen is a research associate and part time lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe; he is also affiliated with the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit at Oxford University in the UK where he completed his PhD.
- Neill Stansbury - is a lawyer who chaired the ISO technical committee ISO/TC 309 that published for the first time on October 15, 2016, the ISO standard, ISO 37001 for Anti Bribery Management Systems. As the title suggests, this standard sets out the requirements for the establishment, implementation, operation, maintenance, and continual improvement of an anti-bribery management system (ABMS). It also provides guidance on the actions and approaches organizations can take to adhere to the requirements of this standard.
- Bryan Strang - is a former Zimbabwean international cricketer who played in 26 Test matches and 49 One Day Internationals between 1995 and 2001. His older brother Paul Strang also played international cricket for Zimbabwe. In 2001, Strang helped bowl Matabeleland out for a national record low score in first-class cricket of 19 runs, taking 5 wickets for 6 runs. His best bowling figures in ODI cricket of 6 for 20, against Bangladesh in 1997, are a Zimbabwean record. In 2008 he received an honorary degree in Sports Sciences from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, and, returning to Zimbabwe, he went into coaching at schools like Lilfordia School and St. George's College in Harare.
- Paul Strang - is a Zimbabwean cricket coach and former international player. A leg-spinning all-rounder, he played in 24 Test matches and 95 One Day Internationals for Zimbabwe between 1994 and 2001. He played Test cricket alongside his brother, Bryan Strang; their father, Ronald Strang, was a first-class umpire and was TV umpire for two of Zimbabwe's Test matches in 1994/5. Strang has since moved into coaching, joining the Auckland Aces as a high performance coach in 2008, and becoming the full-time coach soon afterwards. He played in the 1999 Cricket World Cup in England, where Zimbabwe beat Kenya, India and South Africa to qualify for the "Super Six" stage. His remain the best bowling figures by a Zimbabwean in an innings in Test cricket (the best match figures belong to another Falconian, Adam Huckle). He only played in three further Tests, with his international career curtailed in 2000 by a chronic injury to the muscles of his right hand.
- Heath Streak - (16 March 1974 – 3 September 2023) was a Zimbabwean cricketer and cricket coach who played for and captained the Zimbabwe national cricket team. He was the all time leading wicket taker for Zimbabwe in Test cricket with 216 wickets and in ODI cricket with 239 wickets. Streak remains the only Zimbabwean cricketer to have taken over 100 Test wickets and completed the double of 2,000 runs and 200 wickets in ODIs. He was also one of only four Zimbabwean bowlers to have taken over 100 ODI wickets. He holds the record for the most five-wicket hauls by a Zimbabwean in Tests, having achieved the feat seven times. Streak was part of the 'golden era' of Zimbabwe cricket between 1997 and 2002. His relationship with Zimbabwe Cricket soured on several occasions during his international career, as well as during his coaching career. His father, Denis Streak, was also a first-class cricketer. On 3 September 2023, Streak died from cancer at his farm in Matabeleland at age 49.
- Andy Waller - is a former Zimbabwean cricketer who played two Test matches and 39 One Day Internationals for the national cricket team. After retiring as a cricketer, he became the coach of the Namibia national team. In April 2009, Waller was named the coaching manager of Zimbabwe Cricket. In September 2009, he was named the head coach of Mid West Rhinos, one of the Zimbabwe's newly introduced five cricket franchises.
- Brighton Watambwa - is a Zimbabwean cricketer who in 2014 captained the Belgium national cricket team. Watambwa played six Tests for Zimbabwe between April 2001 and March 2002, taking 14 wickets. Following a contract dispute with the Zimbabwe Cricket Union, Watambwa emigrated to the USA in the autumn of 2002. After obtaining a degree from the University of Miami, he moved to Belgium in 2009.
- Andy Whittall - is a former Zimbabwean international cricketer who played in 10 Test matches and 63 One Day Internationals between 1996 and 2000. He made his Test and ODI debuts against Sri Lanka in September 1996. After Falcon, he graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge with a degree in engineering and also earned four blues playing for the University cricket side. He was formerly a housemaster at Ferox Hall at Tonbridge School, and also taught maths and coached the 1st XI cricket team.
- Guy Whittall - is a former Zimbabwean international cricketer who played 46 Test matches and 147 One Day Internationals (ODIs) and captained Zimbabwe in four ODIs. He played as an all-rounder and was known as an aggressive middle-order batsman and an effective medium pace bowler.Whittall escaped from a leopard attack on 25 April 2024 with injuries.At Falcon, he captained the 1st XI but also played hockey and rugby. He was selected for the national schools cricket side aged 16 and toured New Zealand and England. Whittall also played rugby for Zimbabwe schools, playing as a centre. He went on to play for the national side, including going as a squad member to the qualification tournament for the 1995 Rugby World Cup. His first-class cricket debut came at the age of 18, playing for Young Zimbabwe. He first played for Zimbabwe against Worcestershire, opening the batting and was selected for the Zimbabwean team to tour England in 1993. Although he would not get a game in England, he was included in the side for the tour to Pakistan later the same year. Although he never took a five wicket haul, Whittall took over 50 Test wickets for Zimbabwe. In 2000, he became the first fielder for Zimbabwe to take four catches in an innings of an ODI
- Sean Williams - is a Zimbabwean international cricketer who is a former captain of the national team in Test cricket. He plays Tests and One Day Internationals, and formerly T20Is, primarily as a batting all-rounder. In first-class cricket, Williams plays for Matabeleland Tuskers. He scored his first Test century in his third Test. Playing against New Zealand at Bulawayo in July 2016, he scored 119 off 148 balls. His first century was the fastest ever by any Zimbabwean in Test Cricket. In April 2019, in the ODI series against the United Arab Emirates, Williams scored the fastest century for a Zimbabwe batsman in an ODI match, doing so from 75 balls. In June 2023, Williams scored Zimbabwe's fastest ever ODI century, a record which was broken only two days later by Sikandar Raza. In the same World Cup Qualifier tournament, Williams went on to score 174 off 101 balls against USA to help Zimbabwe reach its highest ever ODI total of 408. In that match, USA were all-out for 104 , and Zimbabwe won the match by 304 runs, registering the second biggest win in all men's ODIs.
- Craig Wishart - is a former Zimbabwean cricketer, who played Tests and ODIs for 10 years. He played domestic cricket for Mashonaland and Midlands as well as the Zimbabwean national team. He has a Test record batting score of 114, with a 22.40 batting average, and a one-day record batting score of 172 not out, achieved against Namibia in the 2003 Cricket World Cup, the sixth highest in World Cup history and the highest scored by a Zimbabwean player in ODIs. Wishart retired in 2005, citing "stress from the problems in local cricket"