Stabroek News Sunday

Hurricane King

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1979 Prudential World Cup Champions, the West Indies (1980 West Indies Cricket Annual photo)

Faced with a daunting task, Pakistan were soon in trouble, as Holding, delivering an opening spell of extreme pace and hostility, removed Sadiq Mohammed via a catch to wicketkeep­er Murray. Ten for one. Then doubts began to creep in, as Majid, sporting one of his father’s old straw hats, now in his true role, and the majestic stroke player, Zaheer Abbas, rose to the occasion and launched a counter attack. Two years earlier, in the second innings of the Third Test at Bourda, Georgetown, with Pakistan trailing by 254 runs on first innings, and Sadiq, retired hurt (felled by a Roberts’ bouncer) the pair batted Pakistan to safety whilst adding 159 runs. On this occasion, they were in even better control, as the total mounted to 176 for one in the 40th over, and a Pakistani victory seemed to be on the cards.

Lloyd responded to the threat by reintroduc­ing Croft from the Vauxhall end, with instructio­ns for a leg stump line, and Richards’ gentle off-spin from the Pavilion end. The 166-run partnershi­p off 36 overs was broken, when Zaheer touched a Croft delivery into Murray’s gloves. His 143-minute innings of 93 included eight fours and one six. Majid, 81, followed 11 runs later via a Kallicharr­an catch at slip, also off Croft, and the procession had begun. In the space of 11 balls Croft had removed the aggressive pair, and Javed Miandad, first ball via the LBW route. Despite Richards’ initial over costing 12 runs, Lloyd persisted with him, and was rewarded with the wickets of Iqbal, Mudassar Nazar and Imran Khan. When Richards caught the last off his own bowling, Pakistan had collapsed to 228 for 8, and the writing was on the wall. Pakistan were eventually dismissed for 250 off 56.2 overs, as the West Indies won by 43 runs. The question will always linger as to Pakistan’s decision to omit Wasim Hassan Raja (he was the substitute), who had plundered the West Indies fast bowlers in the 1977 Test series to the tune of 517 runs, inclusive of 14 sixes.

As John Woodcock of The Times, writing in the August 1979 issue of The Cricketer magazine observed, “If ever, in the whole history of the world, there was a morning for batting first, this was it, and when, very soon, their batsmen were in full cry, West Indies seemed in little danger of defeat.”

The Final, Lord’s, 23rd June

On a cloudy morning, in front of a packed house of 25,000 spectators Mike Brearley, the England Captain won the toss and invited the West Indies to have the first knock. His decision reaped early dividends, as the wonderful fielder, Derek Randall swooped in and plugged the wicket, finding the reliable Greenidge short of his ground at the bowler’s end. West Indies, 22 for one. England’s perfect start soon got better 18 minutes later, when Haynes followed, caught off Chris Old. Thirty-six for two. Kallicharr­an, who had only batted against New Zealand and Pakistan, never got going, and when he was bowled by Mike Hendrick, for four, West Indies had slumped to 55 for three.

No need for panic, West Indies fans thought, as Captain Clive Lloyd walked out to meet Viv Richards, who had replaced Greenidge. Deja vu. In the 1975 final, the West Indies were 50 for three,

when Lloyd entered the fray, joining Rohan Kanhai. The pair added 149, as the pendulum swung the West Indies way, on that occasion. Diligently applying themselves to the task at hand, Richards and Lloyd added 44, before the latter fell to a great catch by Old off his own bowling.

West Indies were in trouble, 99 for four, when King emerged: the last recognised batsman in the lineup, with only Murray, and the four fast bowlers, Roberts, Garner, Holding and Croft left. Close followers of the game would remember that Sir Garry Sobers and Lawrence Rowe had opted out of the 1975 World Cup squad, and their replacemen­ts had been Kanhai and King, respective­ly. In the final, the wily veteran Kanhai had played the valuable stabilisin­g supportive role whilst Lloyd had torn apart the Australian attack.

In January, during the second game of the best five Internatio­nal Cup Grand Finals in the second World Series Cricket season at Melbourne, with the West Indies chasing an Australian score of 189, King had smashed 28. A succession of boundaries, including two off consecutiv­e Dennis Lillee deliveries, guided the WSC West Indies to a four-wicket win with six balls remaining, to level the series, which they eventually won 3 -1. During the WSC Tour of the Caribbean, King had hammered a century in the drawn Fourth SuperTest, in which he added 126 for the sixth wicket with Murray. In his only innings in that season’s Shell Shield, two months prior, King had plundered the fabled Trinidadia­n spin attack for 156 at Kensington Oval, Barbados. Now, it was King’s moment on the centre stage of the cricketing world.

With the lunch break approachin­g, Viv advised his new partner to take it easy as they had plenty of time. King was having none of it. He had clearly planned to go after England’s Achilles heel, the lack of a fifth bowler. With Bob Willis unfit, they had opted for a seventh batsman, and proposed to fill the fifth bowler’s quota of 12 overs between Boycott, Wayne Larkins, and Graham Gooch. Boycott had been England’s secret weapon thus far in the World Cup, grabbing a pair of wickets against both Australia and Pakistan, and a crucial wicket in the semi-final, all the while bowling at a remarkably economical rate.

King cut his first ball from Ian Botham for four, signalling his intention to counteratt­ack. Gooch’s first delivery was viciously swiped to the backward square leg boundary. At lunch, the West Indies were 125 for 4, King was on 19. After lunch, Richards tried calming King down, and then abandoned that altogether. A Caribbean ‘hurricane’ had descended on Lord’s. King, with neither hat, helmet nor crown, went ballistic against the English attack, sparing no bowler.

The 28-year-old allrounder was now in his element. His fellow Barbadians listening back home on the radio were keenly aware having been privy to his exploits in local club cricket, where he had a reputation for swashbuckl­ing innings. He swung his SP blade, swotting everything in sight. The Cambridge educated England Captain Brearley, would later admit in a column in the August 1979 issue of The Cricketer, “King was inspired and when he and

Richards were in full flow I felt helpless. I knew there was nothing more we could do.”

Richards, the Master Blaster, reduced to a bystander, recalled the spectacle, “I worked around him while the fire raged.” Richards was in the 90s before King reached 50. King launched Larkins into the Mound Stand to bring up his 50, whilst another Larkins’ delivery was deposited over long on. Boycott was whipped off his toes for six. The West Indian fans were ecstatic, dancing and jumping. Joel Garner recalled in an interview that the team forgot about the match for the moment and were savouring the Collis King Show just as everyone else was doing. With three figures beckoning, King held out to Randall in front of the mound off Phil Edmonds. The ‘hurricane’ lasted for all of 77 minutes. King’s carnage cost England 86 runs from 66 deliveries, inclusive of three sixes and ten boundaries. His partnershi­p with Richards added 139 to the score. King departed to a standing ovation from the entire ground. They had witnessed a delicate situation suggesting caution and consolidat­ion, met with the crisp violent strokes of a counteratt­ack, the likes of which they would never see again.

Richards, still in the 90s when King departed, duly retook control, scoring all the additional runs off the bat, save five, including depositing the last ball into the Tavern for six. The West Indies posted 286 for nine off 60 overs, with Richards 138 not out. Apart from Richards and King, only Haynes 20, and Lloyd, 13, managed to reach double figures.

The Boycott and Brearley opening partnershi­p produced 129 runs, but consumed 38 overs, leaving England the improbable task of scoring 158 from 22 overs, despite having nine wickets. Under the mounting pressure, England collapsed during Garner’s second spell (5 for 38), finishing on 194 off 51 overs, as the West Indies won by 92 runs to retain the Prudential World Cup.

The West Indies received £10,000 for their victory, whilst England collected £4,000 as runners-up. Richards won the Man of the Match Award for his 138* and delivering 10 overs for 35 runs.

Collis King, ‘Kingdom’ to his teammates, had influenced the course of a World Cup Final with an innings of rare spectacle.

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 ?? ?? Collis King on the go (1980 West Indies Cricket Annual photo)
Aftermath
Collis King on the go (1980 West Indies Cricket Annual photo) Aftermath

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