Available Formats
Clyde Walcott: Statesman of West Indies Cricket
By (Author) Peter Mason
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
2nd January 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Cricket
Colonialism and imperialism
Hardback
208
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
The first biography of a cricketing great, exploring his achievements as a player, manager and political activist.
Clyde Walcott was one of the most important cricketers of all time. As a batsman he was part of the legendary three Ws with Everton Weekes and Frank Worrell that helped give West Indies cricket a new identity distinct from its colonial past. After test cricket he became a prominent administrator and advocate of Black consciousness, managing the great West Indies teams that dominated the sport in the 1980s. A vocal supporter of using cricket to apply pressure to the South African apartheid regime, in 1992 he became chairman of the International Cricket Council the first Black man in that influential role.
Shining a light on Walcotts largely ignored part in effecting change through the vehicle of cricket, this book also shows how he contributed to dramatic social transformation in Guyana as cricket and social organiser for the countrys sugar estates from 1954 to 1970, bringing about improvements in the living conditions and self-esteem of plantation workers while promoting the emergence of several world-class cricketers from a previously neglected corner of the Caribbean.
'A lucid, accessible and necessary work on a towering personality not only in West Indies cricket but in the sport universally.'
Clem Seecharan, author of Joe Solomon and the Spirit of Port Mourant
Peter Mason is a journalist and author who writes for the Guardian newspaper in the UK. His books include Bacchanal!: The Carnival Culture of Trinidad, Jamaica in Focus and a biography of the Trinidadian cricketer and statesman Learie Constantine.