His batting progressed, and in that year he became the first under-16 at Forest to score 1,000 runs in a season since 1901.
Hussain himself admitted that batting never came as naturally to him as leg-spin bowling.
Throughout his career he batted with little left elbow and plenty of bottom hand, and backed-up with the bat in his right hand.
While continuing with his cricket, he also studied Natural Sciences at the University of Durham – a strong cricketing university – where he belonged to the College of St Hild and St Bede.
1968
Nasser Hussain (born 28 March 1968) is a British cricket commentator and former cricketer who captained the England cricket team between 1999 and 2003, with his overall international career extending from 1990 to 2004.
A pugnacious right-handed batsman, Hussain scored over 30,000 runs from more than 650 matches across all first-class and List-A cricket, including 62 centuries.
1975
His father moved the family to England in 1975.
1987
He joined Essex in 1987 after developing from a spin bowler to batsman while at school and playing for the various Essex youth teams, as the leg-spin of his youth deserted him.
1989
He was selected for England initially on the back of 990 runs scored for Essex in the County Championship of 1989, though injury and poor form would limit his international caps during the early 1990s to three Tests of a 1990 West Indies tour, and four further matches in 1993.
He graduated in 1989 with a Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree.
1990
Hussain made his Test cricket debut in 1990 against the West Indies with the match ending just before lunch on the final day.
1996
Only in 1996 did he become a regular England Test cricketer.
1997
His highest Test score of 207, scored in the first Test of the 1997 Ashes at Edgbaston, was described by Wisden as "touched by genius".
He played 96 Test matches and 88 One Day International games in total.
In Tests he scored 5,764 runs, and he took 67 catches, fielding predominantly in the second slip and gully.
Born in Madras, Hussain was led into cricket by his father, and his family moved to England when Hussain was a young child.
1999
Although regarded as somewhat of a firebrand in his youth, Hussain succeeded Alec Stewart as captain in 1999 and led England in forty-five Test matches until resigning in 2003.
Overseeing four consecutive Test series victories and England's rise to third in the Test rankings, Hussain is regarded as one of England's most able captains.
Simon Barnes of The Times wrote that Hussain was "perhaps the finest captain to hold the office."
After resigning the captaincy, Hussain played on in Test cricket until the debut Test of future captain Andrew Strauss – the ability of whom was witnessed by Hussain who scored a century in the same match – and growing calls for him to leave the team, prompted him to yield his position and retire.
He joined Sky Sports as a commentator shortly thereafter.
2005
His 2005 autobiography Playing With Fire won the Best Autobiography category of the 2005 British Sports Book Awards.
Hussain was born in Madras, India into a Muslim family.
His father, Raza Jawad 'Joe' Hussain, was an Indian Muslim and a keen cricketer and field hockey player.
Hussain recalled in his 2005 autobiography that the family gave up a prosperous life in India – where the family were comfortable – in order to obtain for the children the benefits of the English educational system.
The family moved to Ilford, and Hussain later took charge of the indoor cricket school in Ilford where he used to bowl for hours on end at his elder brothers.
He was a talented leg-spin bowler, and with his ability starting to show, at just eight years old, Hussain was selected to play for the Essex Under-11s, and at 12 years old, was the youngest to play for Essex Under-15s.
He meanwhile continued his education at Forest School, Walthamstow.
At the age of 14 Hussain was selected to play for England Schools where he first came into contact with his friend and future England colleague Mike Atherton.
Born five days apart, Hussain and Atherton soon found their careers progressing in parallel as they captained, batted and bowled legspin for England age-group teams.
As well as Atherton, who was considered the "Golden Boy" of the North at the time, Hussain played with and against others such as Mark Ramprakash, Graham Thorpe and Trevor Ward.
At the age of 15, and captain of England Schools, Hussain "grew a foot in height in the winter" and the trajectory of his bowling was altered.
He recounts "I went from bowling out Graham Gooch in the indoor school with everyone watching, to hitting the roof of the net or bowling triple-bouncers to deadly silence."
Hussain's father initially refused to accept that his son could not bowl to the previous high standards and continued to push him into bowling, while Hussain, full of frustration at his sudden loss of ability felt he was letting his father down.
Concerns over his father's expectations of him would continue throughout Hussain's career, as he related in his biography after retiring.
After the loss of his bowling, Hussain dropped behind his contemporaries; Atherton, Ramprakash and Martin Bicknell all began to receive professional county contracts while Hussain was not being selected for representative games and England tours.
Hussain switched to batting while he was still captain of Essex under-16s and moved himself up the order to get more runs and to bowl less.
2018
He was a descendant of Muhammad Ali Khan Wallajah, the Nawab of Arcot State in the second half of the 18th century.
Nasser's mother Shireen (originally Patricia Price) is English.
As a child, Nasser's first experiences of cricket were family visits to Chepauk, where his older brothers Mehriyar 'Mel' Hussain – who would go on to play briefly for Worcestershire – and Abbas used to bat on the outfield while he chased after the ball.