Worrell
By (Author) Simon Lister
Simon & Schuster Ltd
Simon & Schuster Ltd
18th September 2024
6th June 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: sport
History of sport
796.358092
Hardback
416
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
It is the first week of May in 1967. The infant Caribbean nation of Barbados is not five months old, yet it is already having to mourn one of its fathers, at Westminster Abbey, no less. The first sportsperson afforded such an honour, Frank Worrell's memorial service is attended by over 1,000 mourners. As the abbey bells are rung, half-muffled, for the ideal cricketer, Frankies flag flies from the belfry. Blue for the sky. Gold for the sand. Blue for the ocean.
In 1960, Frank Worrell was appointed the first Black captain of the West Indies cricket team. Within three years he was knighted; within five, the West Indies were the champions of the world and would come to dominate cricket with their wicked bowling and electrifying play. Yet two years later, in 1967, Worrell died of leukaemia and cricket lost its 'ideal cricketer'.
But Worrell wasn't merely an extraordinarily talented and record-breaking sportsman. By the time he died he was a founder of the University of the West Indies and a Jamaican senator. The university and the cricket team were the two truly unifying elements across a fractious and diverse region - his achievements made him hugely significant in the development of Caribbean identity and he changed West Indies cricket forever.
InWorrell, Simon Lister, author of Fire in Babylon, brings Worrell's story up to date. He speaks to those who played with and against him and to those who knew him best, resulting in a timely reappraisal of Worrell's life, his importance to the Caribbean, and his cricketing legacy.
Simon Lister is a cricket writer and senior BBC news producer. His first book, Supercat: The Authorised Biography of Clive Lloyd, was shortlisted for the British Sports Book of the Year Award. His second book, Fire in Babylon, won the MCC/Cricket Society Book of the Year Award, and was shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award and the British Sports Book Awards Cricket Book of the Year Award. He has been a contributor to the Wisden Cricketers Almanack and has covered the county game for the Sunday Telegraph. For ten years, his magazine column, Eyewitness, appeared in the Wisden Cricketer and its successor, The Cricketer.