Test Cricket Tours - West Indies to
England 1966
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Tour of England 1966 Captain: Gary Sobers |
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Thirteenth West Indies Test tour Seventh Test-playing tour of England by West
Indies (May - September 1966)
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In the original planning the South
Africans were scheduled to tour England in 1966 but they were doubled up with
New Zealand in 1965 to allow the West Indians, so popular in 1963, to return
much sooner than they would have done (the
next West Indian tour after 1963 would have taken place in 1971).
Having such popular visitors back in England again prevented cricket
being entirely overshadowed by the
counter attraction of the football World Cup being hosted during the summer of
‘66. Twelve
of the seventeen players had toured England previously in 1963. Barbadians
made up no less than nine of the team and some might even have felt that Tony
White and Robin Bynoe deserved places on the tour,
too, unpopular though that might have been in the other territories in the
region. Barbados became independent
from the British Empire in November 1966 and was awarded a celebratory match
against the Rest of the World. Charlie
Griffith’s bowling action came under close scrutiny, and he delivered his yorker and bouncer less threateningly than in 1963. He
was not no-balled but during the Headingley Test he was warned by
the umpire for an illegal delivery. By
the end of the fourth Test at Leeds West Indies had retained the Wisden Trophy
convincingly with a stunning performance by Sobers (an innings of 174 and 8
wickets). England were thoroughly outplayed, as in 1963, by a side which had
claims to be West Indies' strongest to date. The
tour profit was less than in 1963, probably owing to rainy summer weather as
much as competition from the World Cup. |
Other West Indies tours Previous tour England 1963 India 1965-66cancelled Next tour To India 1966-67 Next tour of England 1969 |
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Members of the Test tour party (17) Opening batsmen: Joey Carew, Conrad Hunte,
Easton McMorris Middle-order batsmen:Basil Butcher, Seymour Nurse, Gary Sobers,Joe Solomon, Rohan Kanhai,
Peter Lashley. Wicket-keepers: David Allan, Jackie Hendriks. Spin bowlers:Rawle Brancker,
David Holford, Lance Gibbs Fast bowlers: Wes Hall, Charlie Griffith, Rudolph
Cohen. |
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Regional
representation : B
- Barbados (9) BG
- British Guiana (4) Ja -
Jamaica (3) T - Trinidad & Tobago (1) The
South American colony of British
Guiana gained its independence on 26 May 1966. Average age of team at time of first Test match (2
June 1966) : 30
yrs 1 month |
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Test Appearances made before the tour |
Sobers
52, Kanhai
43, Hunte
36, Hall 33, Solomon 27,
Gibbs 26, Butcher 20, Griffth 11, McMorris 11, Nurse 9,
Hendricks 5, Allan 3, Carew 2,
Lashley 2,
Brancker 0,
Cohan 0, Holford
0. |
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Tour Officials |
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Selectors |
Gerry
Gomez (chairman - Trinidad), Allan Rae (Jamaica), John Goddard (Barbados),
Frank Worrell, Berkeley Gaskin (Guyana), with Gary Sobers (captain) and Jeffrey Stollmeyer
(manager) present. |
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Selection |
In
December 1965 the selectors named eight of their professionals to tour: Sobers, Kanhai,
Griffith, King (who later withdrew), Hall, Hunte,
Butcher, Nurse, They were forced to make these early nominations in the team
because several West Indians played in the English Leagues. Unavailable: Deryck Murray
(place at Cambridge University). Tour
Party Announced :
9 March 1966 Withdrawal
: Lester
King (because of an operation on his knee cartilage). Cohen replaced him. Not
selected : Sobers
wrote how Stollmeyer was chairman with the casting
vote, and how McMorris was picked ahead of Bynoe, and Brancker ahead of
Lloyd through political manoevring. Trevor McDonald wrote ‘Sobers, who had seen
and applauded Lloyd’s century only days before the team for England was
chosen, was to comment that Lloyd’s omission from the 1966 touring party had
been one of the graver errors made by the West Indian Board.” (Lloyd’s 1985
biography) |
Time between selection and departure from West Indies 38 days (9 March - 16 April) |
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Travel Kingston / Port of Spain
QNew YorkQLondon Heathrow |
Manager
Jeff Stollmeyer flew out of Trinidad with Carew, Solomon
and Butcher on 16 April 1966. They proceeded to New York with the Barbadians
and assistant manager Hoyos. There they met up with
Gibbs. Cohen,
McMorris and Hendriks from Kingston, Jamaica, went
to London on a different flight. Kanhai was already in London. Hall had flown to England
from a winter's cricket with the Sydney grade club, Randwick. The
team arrived at Heathrow on 17 April and the press conference began with Gary
Sobers being presented with the new Wisden
Trophy which was created to mark their tour in 1963 coinciding with the
100th publication of the Wisden’s Cricketers' Almanack.
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Time spent in England 150 days (17 April - 14 September) |
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On-tour selection panel |
Gary
Sobers (captain), Conrad Hunte (vice-captain), Wes Hall,
Lance Gibbs
and Rohan Kanhai. |
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Reinforcements |
None. Hendriks missed the first two Test matches
through a hand injury |
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Fixtures/Results |
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“ not first-class Time spent in England
before First Test: 46 days (17
April - 2 June) Time from end of final
Test until departure from England 38
days (22 August - 14 September) |
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Test appearances on tour |
5
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Butcher, Gibbs, Griffith,
Hall, Holford, Hunte, Kanhai, Nurse,
Sobers. 3 -
Hendriks 2 -
Allan, Lashley,
McMorris 1
- Carew 0
- Cohan, Solomon. |
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Highlights |
- Gary Sobers was the outstanding player
with three huge centuries: 161 at Old Trafford, 163 not out at Lord’s and 174
at Headingley.
He ended the series with 722 runs, at an average of more than 100. - Sobers also took 20 wickets in the Test
matches, as well as most wickets on the tour (60). - In the Lord’s Test Sobers put on 274 for
the sixth wicket with his cousin David Holford
(105). - Gary Sobers (174) and Seymour Nurse (137)
shared a record 5th wicket partnership of 265 at Headingley - At Old Trafford Gibbs repeated his 1963
performance of ten in the match by taking 5-37 and 5-69 - Basil Butcher’s unbeaten 209 at Trent
Bridge included three consecutive century stands with his partners. - Lance Gibbs took 6 wickets for 39 as
England collapsed in the fourth Test at Headingley. - West Indies drew with Gloucestershire, the
scores being level on the last ball. |
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Tour Summary |
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∎ |
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Return to West Indies London Q
Seawell, Barbados |
The
team flew from London Airport on 14 September 1966. The manager,
assistant and eleven players went from Heathrow Airport to Seawell Airport but six of the team did not fly back with
them: Kanhai, Hall and Hunte
stayed in England and flew directly to the Indian tour. Solomon enrolled on a cricket coaching
course. Griffith went on a holiday to
Canada. McMorris
joined his family in the United States. |
Time away from West Indies 152 days (16 April to 15 September) |
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Finances |
The tour made a profit of £15 000, half
the amount earned in 1963. |
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Published accounts of the tour |
"Everything that's Cricket"
by John Clarke & Brian Scovell [Stanley
Paul, 1966) |
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Postscript |
‘There was an obvious anomaly in the
quantum of fees and allowances paid to our players’ Gary Sobers was receiving
the same amount of basic pay as, for example, Rudi Cohen, our reserve fast
bowler who played least on the tour and had failed to gain selection in a
Test match. This was palpably absurd.
Players were categorised in future on the number of Test matches
previously played.’ Jeffrey Stollmeyer Everything
Under the Sun (1983) |
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