Charlie Breadfruit - Caribbean History
Sir Isaac Vivian Alexander Richards KNH, OBE is an Antiguan retired cricketer who led the West Indies Cricket team, and he is regarded as one of the greatest batsmen of all time. The name Viv Richards is often associated with his destructive batting style. Aggressive batting was not a very common sight in the 1970s and 80s, but the term aggression is an understatement when it comes to describing Viv’s batting. Devastating would be a better term. Richards was born to Malcolm and Gretel Richards in St. John's, Antigua, then part of the British Leeward Islands. He attended St. John's Boys Primary School and then Antigua Grammar Secondary School on a scholarship. Richards discovered cricket at a young age. His brothers, Mervyn and Donald, both played the game, representing Antigua as amateurs, and they encouraged him to play. The young Viv initially practised with his father and Pat Evanson, a neighbour and family friend, who had captained the Antigua side. Richards left school aged 18, and worked at D'Arcy's Bar and Restaurant in St. John's. He joined St. John's Cricket Club and the owner of the restaurant where he worked, D'Arcy Williams, provided him with a new uniform, gloves, pads and a bat. He never wore a helmet, just a cap. He would slowly walk into the crease accompanied by huge cheers from the crowd, who demanded nothing but entertainment from him, and entertain he did! The best bowlers from across the globe were reduced to mere bowling machines and the fielders to ball-boys who would run to the fence and fetch the ball. Richards made his Test match debut for the West Indian cricket team in 1974 against India in Bangalore. He made an unbeaten 192 in the second Test of the same series in New Delhi. The West Indies saw him as a strong opener, and he kept his profile up in the early years of his promising career. In 1975 Richards helped the West Indies to win the inaugural Cricket World Cup final, a feat he later described as the most memorable of his career. The West Indies were again able to win the following World Cup in 1979, thanks to a Richards century in the final at Lord's, and Richards believes that on both occasions, despite internal island divisions, the Caribbean came together. 1976 was perhaps Richards' finest year: he scored 1710 runs, with seven centuries in 11 Tests. This achievement is all the more remarkable considering he missed the second Test at Lord's after contracting glandular fever; yet he returned to score his career-best 291 at the Oval later in the summer. This tally stood as the world record for most Test runs by a batsman in a single calendar year for the next 30 years. The name Viv Richards is often associated with his destructive batting style (and rightly so), but not many remember him as one of the best captains for West Indies. In the period between 1984 and 1991, when he was the captain for 50 Tests, West Indies never lost even a single series. He was also widely respected for refusing a blank-cheque offer to play for the rebel West Indies tour to South Africa during the Apartheid period in 1983-84. Richards also played County cricket in England for the Somerset team. He is one of the 4 non-English batsmen to make 100 first class centuries. In 2000, he was named as one of the 5 Wisden Cricketers of the Century. Sources: Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viv_Richards], Cricket Buzz [https://www.cricbuzz.com/profiles/4163/sir-viv-richards#!#profile]
7 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Charlie Breadfruit - Caribbean History!