Richard Hoskin
Richard Neville Hoskin is a former first-class cricketer who played for Otago from 1980 to 1993. Since his retirement from the game he has worked as a sports administrator and businessman.
Playing career
A right-handed batsman who usually batted at number three or four, Hoskin, who was born at Invercargill in 1959, played his first match for Southland in the sub-first-class Hawke Cup in 1977–78. At the age of 19 he was appointed to captain the team in 1978–79.He made his first-class debut for Otago in 1980–81, and remained a fixture in the side until his retirement after the 1992–93 season. In his fourth match, against Northern Districts, he scored 57, and his first century, 117.
He toured Zimbabwe with a Young New Zealand team in 1984–85 but played in only one of the four matches. It was his only first-class match for a team other than Otago.
His most successful seasons were 1985–86 and 1987–88, when in each case Otago won the Shell Trophy. In 1985–86 he scored 401 runs at an average of 40.10, with a highest score of 111 off 133 balls against Central Districts when Otago successfully chased 342 for victory in 70 overs. In 1987–88 he made 599 runs at 49.91, including three centuries – 101 against Auckland, 157 against Northern Districts, and 105 against Wellington – to lead Otago's batting aggregates.
He continued to play for Southland in the Hawke Cup, captaining them during their reign as title-holders from 1989 to 1992. He later played a few matches of Hawke Cup cricket for Central Otago, and scored 74 and 162, the two highest scores on either side, when Central Otago beat Taranaki in 1996 to win the title for the first time. When a Hawke Cup "team of the century" was selected to mark the centenary of the competition in 2011, he was one of the 11 players chosen.