Frank Worrell’s central role in the transformation of West Indian cricket

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Updated 11 July 2024
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Frank Worrell’s central role in the transformation of West Indian cricket

  • Two recent biographies, ‘Son of Grace’ by Vaneisa Baksh and ‘Worrell’ by Simon Lister, have sought to establish the essence of the man on and off the cricket field

On July 10, England’s men’s Test team opened play against the West Indies at Lords in the first of a three-match series.

There is a perception that England is the stronger side, largely because so many senior West Indian players are not in the squad. A number have chosen to play lucrative franchise cricket in North America in July and August.

In terms of Test cricket, there is a callowness about the West Indian squad. Only four have played more than 20 Tests, whilst the squad’s aggregate number of Tests is 237, only 60 more than that notched up by England’s James Anderson, for whom the Lords Test is scheduled to be his last.

The aggregate number of Tests played by England’s squad is 606, so it is well ahead on experience. In addition to Anderson, Joe Root has played 140 Tests and Ben Stokes 102, whilst four others exceed 20.

This imbalance is a far cry from the mid to late 1970s to the early 1990s when the West Indies dominated world cricket. The West Indian team won the inaugural ODI World Cup in 1975 and retained the title in 1979, before relinquishing it to India in 1983.

Since then, the West Indies have failed to reach an ODI final. During the 1980s the West Indies were imperious in Test cricket, setting a then record of 11 consecutive victories in 1984 and twice drubbing England 5-0. The success was based on a fearsome four-man fast bowling attack and four of the best batters in the world.

Seeds for this era of dominance had been laid during the 1960s, something that the captain of the 1980s dominant team, Clive Lloyd, has always been quick to point out and acknowledge. Two men, the previous captains, stand out, Sir Garfield (Gary) Sobers and Sir Frank Worrell.

Sobers, for me, is the finest all-round cricketer of all time, certainly the finest I ever had the privilege of watching. Worrell, by all accounts, was a fine player, batting in a languid, yet classical style. However, it was his role in the transformation of West Indian cricket that is his legacy.

In his autobiography, “Cricket Punch,” published in 1959, before he became captain of the West Indies, Worrell revealed little of himself. A biography in 1963 by a Guyanese broadcaster, Ernest Eytle, with commentary by Worrell, was a cricket book.

A slim biography appeared in 1969 by Undine Guiseppe, followed by one by English writer Ivo Tennant in 1987 that revealed much more about Worrell, the person. After a pictorial biography was published in 1992 by Torrey Pilgrim, interest in Worrell seemed to fade.

West Indian cricket also hit difficult times. Although high-class international cricketers emerged to replace those who retired, there was not enough strength in depth nor funding to counter the alternative attractions of basketball, athletics and football for young athletes.

Therefore, it is a surprise — a pleasant one — to discover that two new biographies of Worrell have been published recently. The first of these is “Son of Grace” by Vaneisa Baksh in 2023, a book in preparation for at least a decade.

The second is “Worrell” by Simon Lister, launched on June 6, 2024. Both have sought to establish the essence of the man within and beyond the cricket field. Both had to engage in prolonged research because many of the sources of information about their subject had been destroyed or lost.

Worrell died of leukemia in 1967, aged only 42. His wife, Velda, died in 1991, aged 69, whilst their daughter Lana, died shortly afterwards, aged 42. Two close, key sources of insights were not available.

Fortunately, Everton Weekes, one of the famous three “Ws” — Worrell, Weekes and (Clyde) Walcott — lived until 2020, aged 95, willingly providing insights into Worrell’s life. Other former playing colleagues also did, along with children of those with whom Worrell grew up and played alongside.

Etched in many, if not most of the minds of cricket aficionados of a certain age, is the iconic photograph which captures the moment when the first Test of the 1960-1961 series between Australia and the West Indies ends in a tie off the very last ball of the match.

Worrell, as captain, is credited with keeping his players relaxed but alert by virtue of his serene leadership. In 1963, he led the team to a 3-1 series victory over England, before retiring from cricket.

After that, he became warden of Irvine Hall at the Jamaican campus of the University of the West Indies and was appointed to the Jamaican senate in 1962. This exemplifies his sense of public duty, although he did say that he was not suited to politics.

It should be noted that these positions were in Jamaica, not his native island of Barbados, which he had left in 1947. It seems that he preferred the bigger island, which offered more job opportunities and represented an escape from the cloying color bar in Barbados that, according to the British colonial secretary in 1942, “divides the races more effectively than a mountain chain.”

Worrell was a federalist and nowhere was this more evident than in his captaincy. The West Indies is not one cricketing nation, but a collection of players from 13 independent island countries of different histories, cultures, religions and social mores.

Prior to Worrell becoming captain in 1960, the previous six captains had all been white, their positions reflecting ongoing systemic racial bias. But by 1960, a wind of change was blowing. Worrell’s appointment shut the door forever on the process by which a West Indian captain would be chosen based on race and color.

Worrell showed that it was possible to be black and successful. He knew that his players were all individually good and sought, successfully, to weld them into a cohesive force, with clarity of purpose. No longer were they to be treated as subordinates.

His passion for social equality extended beyond cricket. We will never know what he may have achieved in broader society had he lived longer. What is apparent is that the dominating Test teams for which he sowed the seeds no longer exist.

In their place are T20 players who have earned riches far beyond those which Worrell could ever have envisaged when advocating for social justice.


A remarkable act of batting defiance

Updated 05 September 2024
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A remarkable act of batting defiance

  • Ian Bestwick recently added his name to those of the great ‘blockers,’ facing 137 deliveries and scoring zero runs in an English county league match

Cussedness — deliberate obstinacy — is a behavioral trait often associated with people in northern England. My experience of this quality stems from an upbringing in mining communities in Derbyshire, in the East Midlands.

When Ian Bestwick strode out to bat for Darley Abbey Cricket Club’s 4th X1 in Division Nine South of the Derbyshire County Cricket League on Aug. 24, he could have had little idea that he was about to take cussedness to a new level.

Bestwick was to face the might of Mickleover CC’s 3rd X1 bowlers. In 35 overs, these opponents had amassed a total of 271 for four declared, of which 19-year-old opening bat Max Thompson blasted 186. In the Derbyshire league, matches in Divisions 7 to 10 consist of 80 overs, with the team batting first limited to a maximum of half the overs. However, teams are allowed to declare their innings closed after 30 overs have been bowled. Perhaps Bestwick was piqued that Mickleover did not declare after 30 overs with their total on 192.

There has been many a cricketer who has felt that the opposition should have declared earlier than they did. This is one reason limited-over cricket was introduced. The reason for the introduction of the declaration option by this league at this level of cricket is not clear. It is also unclear why the matches are not “win or lose,” in which the team scoring the highest number of runs in a fixed number of overs is the winner.

A combination of the declaration option, which varies the number of overs available to both teams and which allows the possibility of a drawn match, provided the context for Bestwick’s innings. His team was young and inexperienced and had just been subjected to a battering. They also had to face 45 overs, since the overs unused by Mickleover were carried over. Added to this, both teams were near the foot of the table and desperate for points. An attempt to deny Mickleover points would be a logical justification for slow batting.

Bestwick took this attempt seriously. He batted throughout the innings, faced 137 deliveries and scored zero runs. Remarkably, he was dismissed early in his innings, but the delivery was declared a no-ball by the umpire, who was his captain. After that Bestwick grew into his task. It seems that he refused to run when he could have done so, not only off his own batting but also as the non-striker. This behavior was deliberately and determinedly stubborn, not helpful to others, and must have been of immense irritation to the opposition. One wonders what sort of remarks they may have made during the course of the innings.

The upshot of his efforts was that his team’s total score after 45 overs was a paltry 21 for the loss of four wickets. Nine of those runs were extras and a further four were scored in a single shot by Bestwick’s son, Thomas, with whom he shared a partnership of 11 in 24 overs. If the original intention was to deny Mickleover points this was partly achieved. They gained 18 points in achieving a winning draw as opposed to 27 on offer for an outright win. However, Darley Abbey gained only three points for scoring so lowly in a losing draw and, with three matches remaining, the points difference between them, Mickleover and one other team is 42 points, a gap which may be too much to bridge.

Reports have suggested that the mood in Darley Abbey’s team after the match was euphoric. Bestwick’s extraordinary feat of defiance and concentration made headlines not just in Derbyshire, but also in the UK’s national media and other parts of the world. Inevitably, comparisons have been made with slow scoring innings and players in professional cricket. There are many examples. The most frequently quoted in terms of number of deliveries faced without scoring a run was by New Zealand’s Geoff Allott, who failed to score from 77 deliveries in 1999. This effort helped his team secure a draw.

Other players have been cast as slow scorers, not always fairly. One example is Geoffrey Boycott, who was once dropped by England after scoring 246 in 555 deliveries against India in 1967 in a match which England won. Boycott described his exclusion as “the deepest wound of his professional career.”

Chris Tavare is another who acquired a reputation as a blocker. In his younger days in county cricket Tavare was an elegant attacking batter. At that time, England required an opening batter and he was asked to adapt his game for the sake of the team, something he achieved with notoriety. Among his slowest innings was one of 35 runs scored in Madras in six-and-a-half hours in 1982. Among Indians, a slow innings is referred to as “doing a Tavare”.

It remains to be seen if “doing a Bestwick” becomes part of cricket’s lexicon. While constructing this column the name Bestwick began ringing other bells. Digging deeper, I discovered a Billy Bestwick and, to my surprise, he was born less than half a mile from my birthplace in Heanor, Derbyshire, but a long time earlier in 1875. He played 323 matches for Derbyshire between 1898 and 1925, claiming almost 1,500 wickets. These included the rare feat of all 10 in an innings, all of which were bowled.

Billy Bestwick’s record would have been more impressive but for a verdict of “justifiable homicide” brought against him in 1907 after a man was killed in an establishment which he frequented. He was fired by Derbyshire and moved to South Wales, rejoining Derbyshire in 1919. After retirement he became a Test match umpire in which role he acquired a reputation for cussedness, upsetting several famous names with decisions of which they did not approve. In conclusion, it should not be assumed from these cautionary Bestwickian tales that cussedness, cricket and products of Derbyshire mining communities are synonymous, although I can think of many other examples.


Cricket federation aims to attract more Saudi children to the sport

Updated 30 August 2024
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Cricket federation aims to attract more Saudi children to the sport

  • We have been working with international schools, and now we are targeting Saudi boys and girls, says coach Kabir Khan

RIYADH: The popularity of cricket is growing among fans and players in the Kingdom, and this year the Saudi Arabian Cricket Federation launched its Schools Cricket program, the aim of which is to promote the sport to boys and girls across the Kingdom.

As part of the program, the SACF recently ran a summer camp at Al-Rowad International Schools that, according to the federation, saw around 100 children take part.

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, SACF head coach Kabir Khan said: “We started our schools program this year. But we have been working closely with all the international embassy schools — like those of Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh — for the past three years. And now we are targeting Saudi boys and girls.

“We are digging deep into the school system, and more schools are going to be contacted now,” he continued. “Several schools are already aligned, and we are planning go to all the others and engage with as many as we can. We all know, for any sport, if you don’t go deep into schools then you don’t have the junior system, and without a junior team it won’t be a productive and sustainable model. So, to make it more sustainable, and to get more boys and girls to play the game, we have to start from junior cricket and promote cricket at grassroots level.”

Khan said the number of children at the summer camp was “encouraging,” but added that the SACF “has to make an effort as well.”

He said: “It depends a lot on our efforts, so we are focused on how we introduce the game and how we involve them, the new cricketers.” He went on to explain that it was important to stress the fun side of the sport to get children interested, and then “slowly get them to a competitive level.”

One of the biggest challenges the federation has faced is cricket’s image among Saudis.
“There is a general perception that it’s a street game — and a dangerous one as well,” Khan said. “We need to change that perception. Cricket is a sport from England. It’s the national sport in the UK. It’s not a street sport. Basically, it was a game of gentlemen and gradually got famous in different parts of the world. Now, it’s the second biggest sport in the world.”

Cricket is hugely popular across the globe, second only to soccer as the most-watched sport. It has been played in Saudi Arabia for decades, but mainly by expatriate workers from the South Asian countries. Now Khan hopes Saudi children will take it up.

“We are providing proper playgrounds, academies, and a safe environment for all the kids who want to play — whether as a hobby or (with a view to making it) a career. It has got a lot of potential,” he said.

“Saudi schools are going to play a huge role in the future of Saudi Arabian cricket, for both males and females, as part of the vision of our chairman, Prince Saud bin Mishal Al-Saud, and our CEO, Tariq Ziad Sagga. This year, we are just contacting (schools) and creating events. We want all the boys and girls to play for fun and start slowly. Step by step we will make pathways for them so that they go to the national team,” he continued. “In 10 years, we hope there will be enough numbers for the senior male and female national teams to represent Saudi Arabia and make a name for the nation, for them, their families, and for us as well.

“I should say that we don’t want Saudis — whether male or female — in the junior or senior teams just because they are Saudis. We want to train them as hard as we can. And obviously we want people to see that they are talented, that they can perform, and that they are good enough to represent their country,” added Khan. “We don’t just want them to participate; we want them to perform and win as well. That might take a bit of time, but we want to have Saudis reach the highest level. We want them to be as good as anyone in the game.”


The delights of small-town cricket in southwest France

Updated 29 August 2024
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The delights of small-town cricket in southwest France

  • Catus CC, established in 2004 in a village with a population just under 1,000, is an example of a club set up by people who love the game

This week I am in southwest France, visiting friends who spend their summer in the valley of the Lot River. It flows westwards in a tortuous fashion for 485 km, joining the Garonne, which then flows northwest to the city of Bordeaux and on to the Atlantic Ocean.

It is my first visit to this region, which is famous for wine production. I am aware that cricket is played in France, having taken a team to play near Versailles for a number of years around the turn of the 21st century.

On this basis, it seemed a reasonable assumption that cricket would be played in the southwest. A little research revealed the existence of an Association des Clubs de Cricket du Sud-Ouest, founded in 1992. It comprises 10 clubs: Bordeaux-Giscours, Catus, Damazan, Eymet, Saint Aulaye, Eyliac, two Toulouse clubs and, in 2024, Nimes and Montpellier rejoined. This means the ACCSO covers a large area, with attendant transport costs.

On a very well-organized website, committee members’ contact details are displayed. My introductory email was answered by the secretary, Hugues “Hui” Scheers, who informed me his club, Catus CC, would host a cup semifinal on Aug. 25. Catus was only a half-hour drive away from my base, and my traveling companions and hosts decided to join the adventure.

Catus is a small village with a population just short of 1,000. The cricket club was formed in 2004 and received a boost in 2007 when the mayor granted the use of an area of flat land near Lac Vert, along with financial support for a synthetic pitch.

On arrival, a picturesque scene unfolded. The ground is part of a sports and leisure complex, backed by a hill topped with imposing oak and chestnut trees. At the other end is a small river, which posed a problem because the ball was often hit into it until a local rule was introduced that stipulates bowling can only take place from the hill end.

Catus was facing Toulouse CC Wolves. Both teams contain many South Asian players, mainly Indians in the case of Toulouse. Catus has a more varied composition. Amongst its ranks are Afghanistan refugees, who were very welcoming and keen to talk cricket, about which they are passionate. This was evidenced by the fact they travelled over 3.5 hours from their base, close to the Spanish border.

The name of another team member, Sri Lankan Amal Saminda Silva, will be familiar to cricketing aficionados as his older namesake represented his country. This Amal Silva, who has French citizenship by virtue of marriage, is also an accomplished and elegant player, scoring 102 out of his team’s 302. This total is a record in the competition and the highest scored at Catus cricket club.

Two Afghans, Badshah Khan and Jamal Ziauddin scored 62 and 46, respectively. There was much raw talent on display. The top order of the Toulouse Wolves team made a spirited start in their pursuit of a formidable target but could not keep up the momentum, being dismissed for 159 in 27.2 overs.

The victory puts Catus CC in the final of the Blevins Franks Cup, so named after a sponsoring company which specializes in financial services for people moving to — and living in — France. Catus has also reached the final of the BF League.

This follows a stellar season in 2023 when they reached the finals of both cup competitions and topped the league. The cup competitions are in T20 and 35 overs format, the former being introduced in 2022. The Ligue is 40 overs but may be reduced to accommodate travel time.

As ever in club cricket, a handful of people manage clubs and leagues. At Catus, Scheers told me that he was mowing the outfield at 8 a.m. before setting up electrical connections to computers and the mounted camera which streams the match. Club funds are tight and there is a reliance on donations at both club and ACCSO levels.

As if match day preparations and management were not enough, cricket clubs in France were landed with a new situation in 2023. Association France Cricket, the governing body, was accused of simulating women’s matches to obtain financial aid from the International Cricket Council. It was also accused by players, clubs and recent FC members of lacking transparency about how those funds were used.

The scandal has led to the disbandment of the women’s national team — unfortunate timing given that cricket is to become an Olympic sport in 2028. This means the sport will receive “high level” status in France and the national governing body becomes eligible to apply for more public funding.

The scandal has also led to ACCSO members deciding not to affiliate with FC in 2024. In turn, this means competitions organized by ACCSO are open solely to clubs which have either affiliated to an “association sportive omnisports” or taken out insurance cover mandated by the French Code du Sport with a commercial insurer.

ACCSO members report that the on-going situation with FC is “fluid”. It must be galling for local clubs with limited funds to learn of the financial irregularities and phantom matches generated by their national governing body.

Amid the welter of franchise cricket now in existence and the riches which it has created for players, team owners, advertisers and other stakeholders, it is easy to forget that grass roots cricket is played and organized by people who love the game. They do not do it for money and they can be found in unexpected places. One such place is Catus, where a cricketing home has been provided for people whose life’s journey has, at times, been bleak.


India’s Jay Shah to be cricket world body chairman: ICC

Updated 27 August 2024
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India’s Jay Shah to be cricket world body chairman: ICC

  • Shah will take over the role from December, after current Chair Greg Barclay decided not to seek a third term
  • Jay Shah: ‘I am committed to working closely with the ICC team and our member nations to further globalize cricket’

NEW DELHI: India’s cricket chief Jay Shah has been elected unopposed as chairman of the sport’s world body, the International Cricket Council, it said Tuesday.
Shah will take over the role from December, after current Chair Greg Barclay decided not to seek a third term.
“I am committed to working closely with the ICC team and our member nations to further globalize cricket,” Shah said, adding he was “humbled” by the appointment.
“Our goal is to make cricket more inclusive and popular than ever before.”
From being the chief of the world’s richest cricket board to leading the ICC, the 35-year-old’s meteoric rise illustrates India’s domination of the sport’s global administration.
In a country where the sport and politics go hand in glove, Shah is best known for being the son of home minister Amit Shah, the right-hand man of Hindu-nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Shah, the powerful Secretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India since 2019, becomes the youngest ICC chairman.
Top cricketers in India enjoy superstardom with millions of die-hard fans, most lucrative playing contracts, and endorsement deals not seen anywhere else in global cricket.
By some counts, Indian cricket on average generates more revenue than Bollywood.
More than 90 percent of the sport’s billion-plus worldwide fans are in the Indian subcontinent, according to a 2018 ICC study.
The ICC is the global governing body for cricket, with more than 100 members, and is responsible for staging global events such as the World Cup.
Shah said he wanted to “embrace fresh thinking and innovation to elevate the love for cricket worldwide.”


England’s Smith glad of Bell guidance after scoring maiden Test century

Updated 23 August 2024
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England’s Smith glad of Bell guidance after scoring maiden Test century

MANCHESTER, UK:  Jamie Smith paid tribute to Ian Bell’s influence on his career after scoring his first Test century even though the former England batsman is now working with Sri Lanka.
Smith’s 111 on Friday’s third day of the first Test at Old Trafford propelled England into a first-innings lead of 122 runs.
And by stumps Sri Lanka were 204-6 in their second innings, a lead of just 82 runs, with England pressing hard for their fourth successive red-ball win of the season following a 3-0 series rout of the West Indies.
Bell, a five-times Ashes winner during his playing career, is currently employed by Sri Lanka as a batting consultant.
But he worked alongside Smith during their time together in the recent edition of English domestic cricket’s Hundred competition.
The 24-year-old Smith, who on Friday broke a record that had stood since 1930 to become the youngest England wicketkeeper to score a Test century, also benefitted from Bell’s knowledge while representing the second-string England Lions.
“Belly has been a great help for me both in the Lions and with Birmingham Phoenix for the last couple of years,” Smith told reporters.
“The knowledge that he passed on and his willingness to throw balls at me before games when I had an eye on the Test series is something I’m really grateful for.”
The Surrey rising star added: “It’s great when people are willing to be in your corner, I guess, and help you out even though they’re in the opposition side. So I was grateful for his help.
“It felt really good to come away with that milestone today. I felt very relaxed. I felt comfortable to go out there and just play.”
Bell, for his part, was proud of Smith’s display after Smith just missed out on a Test hundred when making 95 against the West Indies at Edgbaston last month.
“He’s going to be a world-class player for England over a long period of time,” said Bell.
The 42-year-old, who scored 22 hundreds in 118 Tests for England, added: “There’s a small part that I suppose I played in his development but I’ve watched a guy who’s worked extremely hard. He’s taken to international cricket with ease.”
There was nothing flamboyant about Smith’s celebrations when he reached his century as he made do with a restrained raising of his bat after going to three figures in just 136 balls, including seven fours and a six.
“I probably didn’t show it, but inwardly I was obviously very happy with that milestone,” said Smith.