During his playing days, Coney's height, reach, and reactions as a slip fieldsman, earned him the nickname "The Mantis". He wrote
Playing Mantis: An Autobiography in 1986. Along with
John Parker and
Bryan Waddle, he wrote
The Wonderful Days of Summer in 1993. In the
1986 Queen's Birthday Honours, Coney was appointed a
Member of the Order of the British Empire, for services to cricket. In 1990, he was awarded the
New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal. In 2001 he made a television documentary series,
The Mantis and the Cricket: Tales from the Tours, which looked back on New Zealand's cricket history, using interviews with former players and historical footage. The first part follows the
1937 New Zealand Cricket team which toured England with interviews of
Walter Hadlee,
Merv Wallace,
Jack Kerr and
Lindsay Weir. He now lives in south Oxfordshire and works as a commentator/summariser for
Sky TV and
Test Match Special, where he is noted for his regular use of the word "parsimonious". He commentates for radio during New Zealand's home matches during the summer. Coney is trained as a stage lighting designer; in 2008 he lit
I Found My Horn, a solo play which has enjoyed runs at the
Tristan Bates and the
Hampstead theatres. ==References==