Self-described “accidental cricketer” is Sunil Narine’s replacement at Oval Invincibles

Matt Roller26-Aug-2022Peter Hatzoglou is sitting opposite me in a cafe in Kennington when he gets his phone out to show me his Instagram DMs. He opens up his chat history with the late Shane Warne and scrolls back to July 2021, when in the middle of a Melbourne lockdown, he first sent Warne a message.”Hey Warnie (sorry I’m not exactly sure what to call you),” it started. “Just reaching out to chat about legspin…””I didn’t have a state contract,” Hatzoglou says. “I felt like I didn’t have any people to bounce ideas off. I knew he was in Melbourne at the time so I just reached out to him, thinking, ‘what’s the worst that can happen?'”Much to his surprise, Warne responded. They started to exchange messages and when Hatzoglou backed up his breakthrough Big Bash League season with Melbourne Renegades by winning the title with Perth Scorchers, Warne floated the possibility that, if he spent the Australian winter playing in the UK, the 23-year-old might be in line for a contract with his London Spirit side in the Hundred.At the time, Hatzoglou was juggling his playing commitments with a job as a risk management consultant at KPMG in Adelaide. After returning to the office as a Big Bash winner, he discussed his plans with two of the firm’s partners, and made the decision to head to the UK.Shortly after Warne passed away in March, Hatzoglou explained the situation to Andrew Papageorgiou, a fund manager in Melbourne he had worked with. “He told me, ‘Pete, mate, they don’t do state funerals for accountants’,” Hatzoglou says, “and I was just like, ‘right, I’ve got to get over there’.”