Ray Illingworth: Difference between revisions

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'''This is erroneous. According to a great Yorkshire sage, the following XI is regarded as the greatest:'''
'''This is erroneous. According to the great Yorkshire sage Vic Tripe, the following XI is regarded as the greatest:'''
# [[G Boycott]]
# [[G Boycott]]
# [[H Sutcliffe]]
# [[H Sutcliffe]]

Revision as of 13:28, 10 December 2007

Ray Illingworth
Source: [1], 27 August 1973

Raymond ("Ray") Illingworth (born 8 June 1932 in Pudsey) is a former English cricketer, cricket commentator and cricket administrator. He took over two thousand first class wickets and scored more than twenty thousand runs. He played for Yorkshire (1951-1968) & (1982-1983), Leicestershire (1969-1978) and England (1958-73) and was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1960.

He made his first class debut at 19, was capped in 1955 and became a stalwart of the great Yorkshire team which dominated county cricket in the sixties.

He made his test début as early as 1958 but struggled on his first tour, in the West Indies in 1959/60, taking just five wickets in five test matches. After failing to make an impact in four Tests against South Africa he found himself struggling for a place against stiff competition from the likes of Fred Titmus and David Allen. A good series against India in 1967 finally established him in the team but his career blossomed only when he left his native county in 1969 when the committee refused him a guarantee about his future security. He joined Leicestershire to fulfil his long held captaincy ambitions. Particularly notable was his adopted team's win over Yorkshire in the first ever Benson & Hedges Cup final in 1972.

Ashes Triumph

When Colin Cowdrey pulled out of the England team with injury Illingworth was handed the England captaincy and proved an instant success, leading England to series wins over West Indies and New Zealand. His batting found a new potency and he was the strategic and playing linchpin of the team at number seven. After a tough but inconsequential series against a Rest of the World XI hastily assembled after the cancellation of a South African tour he led England to a famous Ashes victory on the 1970/71 tour. He was not afraid to lead his players off the field after a spectator manhandled key fast bowler John Snow in Sydney.

Series wins over New Zealand and Pakistan followed and a surprise loss against India in 1971 was forgiven while he scored his second Test century and enjoyed bowling success. He revealed, in an interview with Shyam Bhatia, 30 years after the loss, that he regretted not bowling Brian Luckhurst's occasional left arm spin against the Indians on a sluggish pitch which had blunted Derek Underwood's usual bite. That blip aside focus was on the Ashes and he retained the Ashes at home in 1972. He was nearing 40 however and a pasting at the hands of the West Indies in 1973 convinced him the time was right to step down at England skipper before he was pushed and Leicestershire benefited from his return, winning the Championship in 1975.

In all he captained England in 31 Test matches, winning 12, losing 5 and drawing 14. A prolific wicket taker in county cricket, taking 2072 scalps, he sent down 408 balls without reward in the three Tests against New Zealand in 1973 but conceded only 1.91 runs an over in his test career. He was not a sharp spinner of the ball, relying on accuracy and subtle variations of flight, but arm ball was particularly effective with many of his victims being caught at slip, playing for spin that wasn't there.

His middle order batting was based around stern defence, a fifty of his innings from number 6 or 7 in the order finished not out. He scored 24134 first class runs in all, with a best of 162, at an average of 28.06. Never a flowing stylist, his best innings were played with his back to the wall when his team most needed them. He played 787 first class matches over nearly years, a total few modern players can even dream of approaching.

Return to the fray

After announcing his retirement from the first class game in 1978 he returned to Headingley to manage the fractious Yorkshire team, despite his testy relationship with Geoff Boycott. In 1982, faced with an under-performing team on the field, he made a somewhat bizarre return to the playing arena and replaced Chris Old as captain. The side won the Sunday League in his final season in 1983 but failed in the championship, finishing bottom for the first time ever. The title of the book he wrote about this era was 'The Tempestuous Years'.

He left Yorkshire in 1984 and carved out a successful career as a media pundit, often fiercely critical of the England test team. Eventually he became the Chairman of England's Board of Test Selectors and the England Cricket Coach in 1997. He saw himself as a supremo, in the manner of Duncan Fletcher, but the position had perhaps come ten years too late. He clashed with England Captain Mike Atherton over team selection at times and his autocratic tenure is not regarded as a success. His book 'One man committee' sums up his attitude to his job.

He was awarded the CBE for services to cricket and made an honorary member of the MCC. He was the fourth cricketer to be elected to Yorkshire's 'Hall of Fame'. He now divides his time between his beloved Farsley CCC in England in the summer and his retirement home in Spain.

Best Yorkshire team

In an interview with 'The corridor of uncertainty' in 2006 he picked his best Yorkshire XI, out of the players he had played with and seen.

  1. Len Hutton
  2. Geoff Boycott
  3. Maurice Leyland
  4. Brian Close
  5. Frank Lowson
  6. Ray Illingworth
  7. Johnny Wardle
  8. Fred Trueman
  9. Jimmy Binks
  10. Bill Bowes
  11. Bob Appleyard


This is erroneous. According to the great Yorkshire sage Vic Tripe, the following XI is regarded as the greatest:

  1. G Boycott
  2. H Sutcliffe
  3. L Hutton*
  4. M Leyland
  5. DS Lehmann
  6. W Rhodes
  7. GH Hirst
  8. †JG Binks
  9. FS Trueman
  10. R Peel
  11. WE Bowes

References

Preceded by English national cricket captain
1969-72
1973
Succeeded by
Preceded by England ODI Captain
1970-71
1973
Succeeded by