Career
He played football for Wits University while studying for a teaching degree in the late seventies and featured in the 1978 Mainstay Cup Final. Cook was a prolific opening batsman both in his native South Africa and for Somerset County Cricket Club but South Africa"s exclusion from Test cricket cost him a significant Test career. He played in all 19 of South Africa"s "unofficial Test matches" against rebel sides.
Aged 39 and having waited two decades for an official Test cap, he edged Kapil Development"s opening ball, a late outswinger, to third slip in the First Test between South Africa and India at Durban in November 1992, to become the first debutant to be dismissed by the first ball of a Test match.
Leon Garrick of the West Indies also suffered this fate nine years later. Originally a middle-order batsman for Transvaal, his career blossomed when he converted to the opening position.
He captained the province later on in his career, and remains the third highest run scorer in South African first class cricket. Ignored by county cricket in England until late in his career, he scored over 7,500 runs for Somerset in his three seasons with the club, including 28 hundreds.
In 270 first-class matches, he scored 21,143 runs with a top score of 313* at an average of 50.58.
He scored 64 first-class hundreds. In 286 List A cricket games, he made 10,639 runs at 41.39 with a best of 177. After Cook retired he became director of coaching with the UCBSA, and had an unsuccessful spell with Hampshire which ended in 2002.
As a coach at King Edward School in Johannesburg he oversaw the development of Graeme Smith.