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This is an archive article published on December 3, 2014

Phillip Hughes funeral: Michael Clarke’s emotional eulogy

Clarke sucked back deep breaths at Macksville High School hall during the tribute to his "little brother's" spirit.

Michael Clarke (L) is comforted as he cries with other mourners as the casket containing Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes is driven away after his funeral service in the town of Macksville (Source: Reuters) Michael Clarke (L) is comforted as he cries with other mourners as the casket containing Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes is driven away after his funeral service in the town of Macksville (Source: Reuters)

Australia captain Michael Clarke urged mourners to “dig in and get through to tea” as he choked back tears in an emotional eulogy for Phillip Hughes at the cricketer’s funeral on Wednesday.

A near-constant presence at Hughes’s bedside during his two-day fight for life, Clarke sucked back deep breaths at Macksville High School hall during the tribute to his “little brother’s” spirit.

“Oh, he would definitely be calling me a sook (crybaby) right now, that’s for sure,” Clarke began, gasping for air in the stifling hot room packed with 1,000 people.

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“I don’t know about you, but I keep looking for him. I know it is crazy but I expect any minute to take a call from him or to see his face pop around the corner.

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“Is this what we call the spirit? If so, then his spirit is still with me. And I hope it never leaves.”

Hughes died last Thursday at the age of 25, two days after being rushed to hospital for emergency surgery, having been struck by a rising delivery during a domestic match at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

Clarke joined fellow cricketers and Hughes’s father and brother among the pallbearers in delivering the coffin to the hearse before it set off in procession through the cricketer’s hometown of Macksville, New South Wales.

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The 33-year-old skipper spoke of his visit to the SCG wicket on the night of Hughes’s death.

“I knelt down and touched the grass, I swear he was with me,” said Clarke, who had helped usher Hughes into Australia’s state ranks then the national team.

“Picking me up off my feet to check if I was okay. Telling me we just needed to dig in and get through to tea.

“Telling me off for that loose shot I played. Chatting about what movie we might watch that night. And then passing on a useless fact about cows.

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“And I could see him swagger back to the other end, grin at the bowler, and call me through for a run with such a booming voice, a bloke in the car park would hear it.

“Is this what indigenous Australians believe about a person’s spirit being connected with the land upon which they walk? If so, I know they are right about the SCG. His spirit has touched it and it will forever be a sacred ground for me.”

Clarke said Hughes’s death would strengthen the bonds of cricket around the world.

“Phillip’s spirit, which is now part of our game forever, will act as a custodian of the sport we all love. We must listen to it. We must cherish it. We must learn from it,” he added.

“We must dig in,” Clarke faltered, crying.

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“We must dig in and get through to tea. And we must play on.

“So rest in peace, my little brother. I will see you out in the middle.”

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