Graham Thorpe lost his job as a batting coach in 2022 (Picture: Jason O’Brien/PA Wire)
A former England cricketer took his own life after losing his job as a batting coach,his widow said.
Graham Thorpe ‘spiralled into depression’ and had tried to take his own life in 2022 before he was hit by a train and killed at a railway station in Surrey last August.
Graham,55,had been diagnosed with anxiety and depression in 2018,but his widow Amanda told the inquest into his death that her husband had ‘found lockdown and Covid very difficult,very stressful’.
In 2022,a leaked video of Tasmanian police breaking up a drinking session between England and Australian cricket players was ‘blown out of all proportion’ and the fallout left Graham ‘distraught’.
Amanda said it was a ‘horrible’ time,and the later termination of his employment with the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) was a ‘real shock to Graham’ and the ‘start of the decline of his mental health’.
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Thorpe was a mainstay in the England set-up for many years,first as a batter between 1993 and 2005 before spending 12 years in coaching roles.
During a distinguished international career,he struck 16 Test hundreds for England,including a debut century against Australia at Trent Bridge in 1993,and represented his country 182 times in all formats.
The inquest continues.
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