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A Garrison of tributes

by Julian Rogers

The day the scoreboard stopped with Sir Garry Sobers on 89, eleven years short of a century, writes veteran broadcaster Julian Rogers.

 There will be a garrison of tributes for days.

From Bridgetown to Bangalore… from Melbourne to Manchester… from Sabina Park to Lord’s… voices will rise to celebrate the life of The Right Honourable Sir Garfield Sobers, Barbados’ National Hero and, for many, the greatest all-round cricketer the game has ever known.

His records will be recited.

His 365 not out will be relived.

His six sixes in an over will once again enter cricketing folklore.

His genius with bat, ball and in the field will be celebrated across the cricketing world.

But my thoughts did not begin with the records.

They began with the man.

I was standing in a bank in Belize when I shared the news with another customer.

He paused for a moment before saying quietly: “Barbados is tops in so many things.”

Then, almost as if continuing the thought, he spoke of Prime Minister Mia Mottley, describing her as “the Prime Minister of the Caribbean”.

It struck me that Sir Garry belonged to that same remarkable Barbadian tradition of excellence, a tradition that has repeatedly shown the world that greatness is never measured by the size of the island from which it comes.

The quiet Colossus

The last time I met Sir Garry was at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre in Barbados.

I remember taking unusual care over my introduction. How do you introduce a man the world has already described in every superlative imaginable?

Before that, I met him at Queen’s Park Oval in Port of Spain during a special tribute, and later in Kingston, Jamaica, at another gathering honouring one of West Indies cricket’s distinguished sons.

Each meeting left me with exactly the same impression.

He was a quiet colossus.

The dictionary itself seemed to run dry trying to describe the way he played cricket.

Yet it was never just the batting.

Or the bowling.

Or the acrobatic catches in the slips.

It was the humility he wore like a perfectly tailored suit, never forced, never stained by fame, fitting him as naturally as the shirt with the collar turned up that became part of his legend.

The cricket we carry with us

Others will tell the cricket story better than I can.

They will speak of the late cuts that seemed to ignore the laws of geometry.

The majestic cover drives.

The effortless sixes.

The beguiling left-arm spin.

The deceptive pace that humbled the finest batsmen from every Test-playing nation.

They will remember that familiar walk to the crease, never hurried, almost leisurely, as if greatness had all the time in the world.

The gentle tap of the bat.

The adjustment of the gloves.

The expectation.

And then another innings that became part of cricket’s folklore.

Many of us still hear those moments through the voices that carried them across the Caribbean. John Arlott. Tony Cozier. The great commentators from Australia and India.

Later came television, carried across the region through Cable and Wireless links and earth stations that brought West Indies cricket into our homes. Those voices narrated more than cricket.

They narrated Caribbean possibility.

The Pride of Barbados

You will hear of his humble beginnings. You will hear of Bay Land. You will hear of the proud republic that claimed him as its National Hero.

Many will remember that unforgettable day at the Garrison Savannah when Queen Elizabeth II conferred the knighthood in a rare ceremony before thousands gathered to witness history.

It was more than a royal ceremony. It was the world acknowledging what Barbadians and West Indians had known all along.

Greatness had come from a small island.

In later years, Sir Garry devoted himself to restoring the pride of West Indies cricket.

Some conversations were public. Many remained private. Brian Lara sought his counsel. Young cricketers sought his encouragement.

He understood that the maroon cap belonged to no single generation.

He remained one of its quiet guardians.

We never needed confirmation

Many outside the Caribbean still quote Sir Donald Bradman’s declaration that Sobers was the greatest cricketer he had ever seen. It is a remarkable compliment.

But we never needed Bradman to tell us.

Our own calypsonians had already sung it.

The Mighty Sparrow captured the feeling of an entire region when he celebrated Sir Garry as a cricketer whose greatness stretched beyond ordinary boundaries, so extraordinary that even Earth and Mars had to recognise his brilliance.

That was not merely calypso exaggeration. It was Caribbean truth wrapped in humour, rhythm and pride.

But Sir Garfield Sobers was not only celebrated in the songs of calypsonians. He also occupied the imagination of one of the Caribbean’s greatest thinkers.

C.L.R. James understood that cricket was never just a game played between bat and ball. In Beyond a Boundary, he showed how the cricket field reflected the struggles, ambitions and identity of the Caribbean people.

When James reflected on Sobers, he saw more than a remarkable cricketer. He saw a symbol of a changing West Indies, a player whose genius represented the arrival of Caribbean cricket on the world stage.

Sparrow gave voice to the pride of the people. James gave language to the meaning behind that pride. Together, they captured why Sir Garfield Sobers mattered so deeply.

He was not simply a man who broke records.

He was a man who expanded the boundaries of what Caribbean people believed was possible. Long before statistics became fashionable, Caribbean people knew they were witnessing genius.

A garrison of tributes

Over the coming days, there will indeed be a garrison of tributes. Former teammates will tell stories. Opponents will remember battles they were privileged to lose. Statisticians will revisit the records. Historians will recount the milestones.

A grateful Barbados will mourn one of its greatest sons. And an appreciative Caribbean will mourn one of its own.

The newspaper headlines will eventually fade.

The television specials will end.

Another generation of cricketers will take guard.

But the garrison of tributes will ensure that his legacy never will.

But somewhere, on a patch of grass in Bridgetown, Georgetown, Kingston, Port of Spain, St John’s, Castries, Roseau or even here in Belize, a young boy or girl will pick up a bat, turn up the collar of a shirt, and dream impossible dreams.

That may be Sir Garfield Sobers’ greatest legacy.

He did more than score runs.

He gave a region permission to believe that excellence is never confined to small spaces.

Barbados has played many great innings before the world.

None was greater than Sir Garfield Sobers.

Today, the scoreboard stopped with Sir Garry Sobers on 89.

Eleven years short of a century.

But some innings can never be measured by the numbers on the board.

The post A Garrison of tributes appeared first on Barbados Today.

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