Julien Fountain

Julien Fountain
Personal information
Full name
Julien Fountain
Born (1970-07-25) 25 July 1970 (age 54)
Shoreham-by-Sea, Sussex, England
NicknameJules, The Professor, The Baseball Guy
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm off break
RoleCoach
Source: Cricinfo

Julien Fountain (born 25 July 1970) is an English professional cricket coach and former Great Britain baseball player. He is a specialist fielding coach. However, has also taken the role of head coach and assistant coach. During his career he has worked on the coaching staffs of various national cricket teams, including the West Indies, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and England. Fountain was part of the coaching staff for the Dhaka Gladiators of the Bangladesh Premier League during their 2012 season, when the team won the league.

Fountain is notable as the first baseball player to be used as a specialist fielding coach by any test-level cricket team, when he joined the West Indies team as a coach in 1998.[1] Fountain also became the first baseball coach to be a head coach of an International Cricket Council full member team when he was temporarily appointed as head coach of Bangladesh in 2010.

Baseball playing career

In July 1988, Fountain, a pitcher, was selected to represent Great Britain U19 Baseball Team at the European Championships in Bordeaux, France. The following year he made his debut for the Great Britain national baseball team. He also represented Great Britain in the European Baseball Championship in 1989, and again in 1991.[2] In 1989, Fountain played for Great Britain against the Major League Players Alumni Legends team at Old Trafford Cricket Ground. In 2002, he was recalled to the Great Britain team during a qualification tournament in Stockholm, Sweden.

Cricket coaching career

England Youth

In 1996, Fountain was approached by the British Baseball Federation to assist with a cricket course run by the National Cricket Association. This course was organized by Gordon Lord, who then involved Fountain with the coaching of England youth teams.[3] He later became the fielding specialist coach for all the England youth teams and coached notable players such as Andrew Flintoff, Chris Read, Ben Hollioake, Graeme Swann, Michael Carberry, and Owais Shah. He also coached the England women's cricket team.[4]

West Indies and Trinidad

In 1998 Fountain was appointed by the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) to coach the West Indies 'A' Team in Antigua. He was asked to also accompany the full West Indies cricket team on their tour of South Africa[1] and the WICB Advanced Course in Trinidad and Tobago. He was later retained as part of the West Indies backroom staff under head coach Malcolm Marshall. He rejoined the senior team in Jamaica and for a series in Barbados.[5][6][7]

Fountain accompanied the West Indies team to the United Kingdom for the Cricket World Cup. In 2000, following his involvement with the West Indies in the Caribbean and the Cricket World Cup, he was appointed as head coach of Queens Park Cricket Club in Trinidad. While at the club, fountain worked with players such as Dwayne Bravo and Devon Smith. While coaching in Trinidad, Fountain was approached to rejoin the West Indies team for their 2000-2001 Australia tour. During this tour Fountain took the field twice as West Indies substitute fielder. Following the tour of Australia, he returned with for a series against South Africa. This series saw Fountain's involvement diminished with allegations of underhand treatment of Fountain and other management members by the WICB.[8] Fountain later parted ways with the team.

Pakistan

Fountain was approached by the Pakistan Cricket Board to act as assistant and specialist coach for the Pakistan A cricket team[9] on their tour of Sri Lanka[10] under head coach Mudassar Nazar.[11] In 2006, Fountain was hired by Bob Woolmer as a specialist fielding coach for the Pakistan national cricket team on their tour of England.

West Indies and return to England

In 2007, the West Indies cricket team were touring England when head coach David Moore requested Fountain's assistance[12] for the remainder of the NPower Test Series and the ODI / T20 series.

Fountain returned to the National Cricket Performance Centre in England and was later selected as the head coach of the national Under 16 team for a series against Australia.

Stanford Professional Franchise Teams

In 2008, Fountain was hired by Stanford T20 Cricket, as the fielding coach for the newly formed Stanford Superstars team.[13] The Stanford Superstars were to play in the Stanford Super Series of cricket between Middlesex County Cricket Club from England, along with Trinidad and Tobago national cricket team, England and the Superstars in a round robin series of games, culminating in a game against England for $20 million. The Superstars won the series, winning every game and received the $20 million prize, the largest winners pay cheque ever offered in cricket.[14][15]

Return to Bangladesh

Fountain helped as a fielding coach for Bangladesh against New Zealand. This is the first time Bangladesh had a series win over a full-strength Test-playing nation. As well as handling the fielding,[16] he took a small hand in both batting & bowling coaching whilst working with Bangladesh.[17] During the 2010 series against Zimbabwe, Fountain was temporarily appointed as head coach, whilst Jamie Siddons attended the birth of his second child in Australia. He was also on the coaching staff for the Bangladesh national cricket team during the 2011 Cricket World Cup, where Bangladesh were knocked out at the group stage.

Having both had experience as baseball, Fountain and Ian Pont, while coaching Bangladesh, combined to use their cricket and baseball backgrounds to design a completely new slower ball for pace bowlers or variation ball for spin bowlers.[18]

In 2012, Fountain was hired as specialist fielding coach by the Dhaka Gladiators in the Bangladesh Premier League with Dhaka winning the tournament.

In March 2012, Fountain was appointed as fielding coach for Pakistan.

South Korea

In 2014, Fountain was hired as head coach of South Korea for the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea.[19] South Korea played three games during the tournament and reached the quarter-finals, where they were beaten by Sri Lanka.[20]

Other Work

Other National Teams

Ireland

In 2009, Fountain was appointed as specialist fielding coach to the Irish cricket team under former West Indies cricketer, Phil Simmons, during their World Cup Qualifying Tournament in South Africa. Ireland won the tournament and retained their ODI status and qualified for the 2011 Cricket World Cup. Fountain also assisted Ireland when they played against Scotland and England.[21][22]

After Coaching

In January 2015, Fountain launched a project in the USA designed to help former professional baseball players make the transition to playing T20 Cricket.[23]

In February 2015, Fountain was invited to join the Honorary Advisory Board of the American Cricket Federation.[24]

References

  1. ^ a b "Good move by Windies Board" Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  2. ^ "Julien Fountain" (PDF). Great Britain Baseball Scorers Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2009.
  3. ^ "Fountain Throws Up New Ideas" The Independent retrieved 3 November 2009
  4. ^ "Fountain of knowledge" retrieved 3 November 2009 [dead link]
  5. ^ "A Team of Substance"[permanent dead link], April 1999 Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  6. ^ "A series fit for a King"[permanent dead link], April 1999 Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  7. ^ "How 'our man in Washington' made Lara a winner again"[permanent dead link] 4 April 1999 Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  8. ^ "Ricky Skerritt Interview"[permanent dead link] Caribbeancricket.com retrieved 30 July 2010
  9. ^ "Pakistan A to leave for Sri Lanka on 10th June"[permanent dead link] Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  10. ^ "It's captains' day as Hasan Raza defies Sri Lanka A"[permanent dead link] Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  11. ^ "Gunawardene century saves Sri Lanka from freefall"[permanent dead link] Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  12. ^ "Digicel funds fielding coach for windies england tour" Archived 10 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 3 November 2009
  13. ^ "Stanford Superstars to hold training camp"[permanent dead link] Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  14. ^ "Gayle leads Superstars to millions"[permanent dead link] Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  15. ^ "Stanford Super Series" BBC Sport retrieved 3 November 2009
  16. ^ "Fountain of Hope" retrieved 8 November 2010
  17. ^ "Julian to make the tail wag" retrieved 8 November 2010
  18. ^ "Pont to launch butterfly during cricket wc"[permanent dead link] retrieved 04/04/2011
  19. ^ "Fountain moulds Asian Games Host's". SportAsia.com. Archived from the original on 14 December 2014.
  20. ^ Peter, Rutherford. "Baseball switch a boon for South Korea". Reuters. Archived from the original on 29 January 2016.
  21. ^ "Johnstone heroics in vain for Ireland"[permanent dead link] Cricinfo retrieved 3 November 2009
  22. ^ "Rankin blow for Phil" Belfast Telegraph retrieved 3 November 2009
  23. ^ Paul, Rhys. "T20 takes off:Baseball fuels cricket's rise". CNN.
  24. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 November 2021. Retrieved 28 February 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)