As Brendon McCullum's beard grew in Wellington during the second test against India, so did his batting strength, eventually enabling him to become the first New Zealander to make a triple century in a test. It's a common trend. Andrew Alderson examines how the cultivation of face foliage empowered six
Cricket: McCullum the latest to tell a great beard-time story

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Hashim Amla. Photo / Getty Images
WG Grace
Holds a natural gravitational pull for musings on cricketing beards - and the entire beard genre. His chin remains a myth covered in shrubbery. He risked getting out handled ball any time a delivery came near his face. His beard was cricket's version of golf's fescue grass rough - it identified him as much as his initials and helped create the game's first icon.
Dan Vettori
The bristles took a sustained hold early in his captaincy, transforming him from Peter Pan to Wise Man. Banishing his razor for a few days (anecdotal reports estimate a few hours) gave him the air of a sage figure, devoid of the capacity to err. That's how it needed to be. Vettori's feats leading from the front to knit a relatively weak team from 2007-11 are arguably the least recognised in New Zealand cricket history.