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Sir Garfield 'Garry' Sobers, who turns 81 on 28 July, is feeble but still alert and articulate.
A stylish but powerful batsman, a bowler with a repertoire stretching from beguiling spin – two kinds – to sheer pace and a lithe, impassable fielder in any position, Sobers was not only the greatest all-rounder ever or one who could do everything on the cricket field except umpire, but an accomplished sportsman beyond cricket.
There was, however, a tragic reason behind his prowess, one that showcased his moral strength.
He made his Test debut in 1954 – in only his third first class appearance.
Sobers, who was driving, says in his candid autobiography Twenty Years at the Top (1988, 2003), that he was severely traumatised and "began drinking more" to the point that alcohol failed to have any effect on him. "Sometimes I would drink from one day to the next without even sleeping," he recalls.
What pulled him back from this self-destructive path was a sobering thought.
It certainly helped. Sobers played 93 Tests for West Indies between 1954 and 1974, scoring 8,032 runs at an average of 57.78 with 26 centuries (highest score of 365*), took 235 wickets at an average of 34.03, including a half-a-dozen haul of five wickets or more (best 6/73) and 109 catches/stumpings.
While the various Test records he set including the highest individual score and the maximum total runs, as well as the first ever six sixes in one over in first-class cricket have been equalled or bettered, it was not easy.
But what statistics may not convey is the effortless grace that Sobers brought to his playing in any department of the game. As the West Indies captain 1964-1972, he notched up some significant victories, initiated the process that would make the team world beaters and showed sportsmanship at his best.
Of this, two examples that are the best was his sporting decision to declare in a Test during an England tour of West Indies in 1967-68, which enabled them to win the match and the series and willingness to concede the toss in a crucial match against India in 1970-71, when opposite skipper Ajit Wadekar insisted he had won.
And then, he is the only man to captain an international cricket team in two series – leading Rest of the World XI against England in 1970 and then Australia in 1971-72 to compensate for the cancelled tours of South Africa, which had been suspended for its apartheid policies.
Born in Bridgetown (Barbados) on 28 July 1936, Garfield St Aubrun Sobers was the fifth of six children. He lost his father, a merchant seaman, during the World War II. He showed his independent streak by removing, during childhood, an extra finger on each hand "with the aid of catgut and a sharp knife".
When he was going to be the 12th man for Barbados in January 1953 in a match against the visiting Indian team, he suddenly got a chance to play after a player dropped out. It took him a year to make his second appearance in a first-class match – against the MCC.
His third appearance was in the Test squad – as a bowler – and since then there was no looking back.
(This article has been published in a special arrangement with IANS. Vikas Datta can be contacted at vikas.d@ians.in)
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