The Citizen (KZN)

‘Proc’ loved gee-gees

PASSIONS: BIG RACING FAN (AND HANDY CRICKETER)

- MIKE

Procter was a brand ambassador for Hollywoodb­ets.

Michael John Procter was a one-in-a-million cricketer but he had one major failing: he was mad for horse racing. Amid all the dazzling bowling and batting statistics trotted out in innumerabl­e tributes and obituaries, there is little mention of the great man’s other passion.

I remember talking to “Proc” at Greyville racecourse in the ’60s and ’70s, where he was a familiar figure, intently studying his form guide and happy to chat to fellow racegoers about what might win the next race – though not so much about the form of teammates in the Natal cricket team.

He owned racehorses at various times, often in partnershi­ps, with the 2012 Grade 2 Post Merchants winner Mike’s Choice, trained by Muis Roberts, probably his most successful runner.

He grew up in a racing-keen family in Durban and his older brother Anton – also a first-class cricketer in his youth – went on to become a bookmaker and then a successful thoroughbr­ed breeder in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands.

Anton, who died two years ago, worked at the championsh­ip-winning Summerhill Stud of Mickey Goss and other establishm­ents, including in Zimbabwe. He eventually ran his own boutique stud, Burwell, near Howick. He was instrument­al in importing to South Africa the successful stallion Rakeen – one of the last sons of the legendary Northern Dancer.

My first encounter with Mike Procter was on the verdant sports fields of Hilton College, where he was schooled (though not I). We weren’t on the same cricket field, but on adjacent ones. He was hitting sixes from the main pitch onto our field with such regularity it was putting our teenage lives in danger. A spotter was put in place to alert us “lighties” to cover our heads as another red leather bomb descended from the sky.

In 2020, along with former champion jockey Anthony Delpech, Procter was made a “brand ambassador” for Hollywoodb­ets, the rags-to-riches Durban bookmaking firm. The company’s myriad brand sponsorshi­ps cover the KZN racecourse­s, women’s soccer, men’s rugby and several stadiums – including Kingsmead on Durban’s Old Fort Road, the stage for many of Proc’s mighty cricketing deeds.

Hollywoodb­ets and the Mike Procter Foundation have been working in sports coaching in deprived areas of KZN. During the pandemic, they delivered tons of food to needy people. Mike beamed with joy when he talked of these things.

When he first had heart trouble the media pictured him recovering in hospital with the latest Winning Form racing guides in hand. Sadly, another round of heart surgery was not successful and the great man died aged 77 at the weekend.

He will be remembered as a magnificen­t cricketer – among the handful of best all-rounders to have played the game – but also as a good-natured, easy-going guy, proud but modest – and sick for the gee-gees.

Wisden Cricketers’ Almanac mentions the following: Only 11 men in the history of first-class cricket have scored a century and got a hat-trick in the same match. Only one has done it twice.

MJP took four hat-tricks in his career; he took 1 417 firstclass wickets at 19.53; took 10 wickets in a match 15 times and five in a match 70 times; took 344 one-day wickets at 18,76; and scored 21 936 first-class runs at 36.01, with 48 hundreds and a highest score of 254.

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