Sports Commentary - Sir Garfield St. A Sobers: The Complete Cricketer, Part 2
The influence of Frank Worrell
By Dale Brown,
NEW YORK, NY. Tuesday, June 9, 2020 -- In the summer of 1958, Garfield
Sobers signed to play for Radcliffe in the Central Lancaster League. Frank Worrell, the first Black cricketer to
be appointed West Indies cricket captain for a series, a father figure, mentor
and a friend advised Sobers that while playing for Radcliffe, he should expand
his bowling skills by exploring left arm swing bowling. Sobers went a step further by also becoming
an exponent of left arm, wrist spin bowling to add to his normal finger spin
deliveries.
So, during the Worrell-led West Indies five-match tour of
Australia during the 1960-61 cricket season, Worrell confidently announced that
Sobers would be given a heavier bowling workload. He reasoned that he could
play an extra batsman by utilizing Sobers in this manner. Many experts were
troubled by Worrell’s plans for the acknowledged best batsman in the world. How
would this affect his batting?
Australia won the series 2-1. The 1st Test at Brisbane ended in a historic first
ever tied Test match. Thanks to the two
captains, Worrell and Benaud, for their enterprising captaincy, the Series is
rated as one of the most exciting and attractively played in the history of
Test cricket.
Sobers
contributed 430 runs (average 43) to finish behind Rohan Kanhai’s 503, and
Franz Alexander’s 484. Sobers also scored 2 centuries, took 15 wickets, bettered
by Wes Hall’s 21 and Lance Gibbs’ 19. He also led the team with 12 catches,
most of them simply astounding.
A remarkable display of Stamina
In the 5th
Test match, when Australia batted in their first inning, Worrell introduced Sobers
into the attack half an hour before tea on Saturday and had him operating unchanged
until the close of play. After the rest day on Sunday, Sobers opened the bowling
with the new ball on Monday and bowled throughout the morning session plus an
additional hour after lunch. He had bowled slow, then opened with the new ball
and then slow again as the situation demanded. His marathon spell lasted for 41,
eight ball overs. That’s 54.4 six-ball overs!
He took 5 wickets for 120 runs in the inning.
India 1961-62
The West
Indies then defeated the touring Indians 5-0.
Garfield Sobers scored 424 runs at an average of 70.67 (2 centuries), to
finish second to Kanhai’s 495 runs. He
also took 23 wickets, a total bested by only Hall (27) and Gibbs (24). Once
again, he took the most catches (11), for the West Indies in the series.
England 1963
Frank
Worrell then led the team on a tour to England in 1963, where they won the
series 3-1. Sobers was hampered by a
finger injury which affected his batting, but he still managed to score 322
runs (1 century - average 40.25), with Kanhai, Conrad Hunte, and Basil Butcher
finishing ahead of him. He took 20 wickets to finish 3rd in the
bowling behind Charlie Griffith 32 and Lance Gibbs 26 wickets. He again
took the most catches with 8.
Captaincy Australia 1964-65
Frank
Worrell retired after the tour to England and strongly recommended that Sobers
succeed him as captain. The free-
spirited, 28 yr. old Garfield Sobers did not want to be burdened with the
responsibilities of a captain.
Reluctantly,
out of respect to Worrell, he accepted the appointment and led the team to a
2-1 series win. He made 352 (average of
39.11) runs without scoring a century to again finish behind Hunte (550),
Kanhai (462) and Butcher (405). Sobers’
12 wickets were topped by Gibbs 18, Hall 16, and Griffith 15. Again, he pouched a team-high 8 catches.
Crowning Glory 1966
The next
assignment was another tour of England.
Garfield Sobers duly led the West Indies to a resounding 3-1 series
win. The West Indies were undisputed
if unofficial champions of Test cricket.
The series featured
one personal triumph after another for Sobers.
He led the team with 722 runs (average of 103.14) and 3 centuries. He
took 20 wickets, a number only surpassed by Gibbs’ 21, and he also led the team
in catches with 10.
The “Lion of
Cricket” was unleashed on the cricketing world. Sobers now stood unrivaled in
the annals of Test cricket history. During
the series he became the first West Indian to score 5,000 runs in Tests and the
first player in history to complete a 5,000 run and 100 wickets double. No
individual had ever shown the virtuosity and general command of the skills he
displayed. He was the 5 in 1 cricketer. Namely (1) champion batsman (2) exponent
of fast-medium, left arm swing bowling (3) purveyor of the difficult art of wrist spin bowling, including the “china-man” and googly deliveries
(4), an accurate and containing orthodox finger spinner and finally (5) an
extraordinarily brilliant fielder but especially breathtaking at 2nd
slip or backward short leg.
India 66-67
A short 3
Test tour of India during the 1966-67 season was the next series for the
Caribbean team. They triumphed 2-0. Sobers was the leading batsman with 342
runs (average 114). He took 14 wickets to support Gibbs’ 18 and held 7 catches
to lead the team in that category.
Sobers the bowler |
Sobers: The Master of Arts
The West
Indies played 28 Tests during this period from 1960-61 to 1966-67 seasons.
Garfield
Sobers scored 2,592 runs (average 60.27) with 8 centuries to lead the team in both categories.
Lance Gibbs with 126 wickets and Wesley Hall with 106, took more wickets
than Sobers’ 104, and finally, his 56 catches tripled the amount snared by any
other individuals (except wicketkeepers).
Numbers in
cricket can be accumulated without capturing the imagination of the spectators.
However, it is quite the opposite of Sobers. Fans
and critics were fascinated and enthralled by the feline grace and agility, the
astonishing reflexes and more than anything else, the absence of strain with
which he performed his unmatched skills.
Sobers dominated Test cricket throughout the world in a manner never
witnessed before.
To be Continued………………
Editor’s
note. Dale Brown
is a sports historian and co-host of SECOND BASE, a sports talk show
airing Tuesdays, 7 – 8 pm, on the Wee Radio Network at; www.weeradioonline .com.
Simply extraordinary. The total package. Poetry in motion
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