The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions
about (almost) any aspect of cricket
Steven Lynch10-Oct-2005The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions
about (almost) any aspect of cricket. Today it’s a World XI special:
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Australia’s Bob Massie trapped lbw by the World XI’s Tony Greig at Adelaide in 1971-72 … but it doesn’t count as a Test wicket
© The Cricketer
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I was taken to see the Rest of the World team in England in 1970, when I
was only eight, and remember someone taking a hat-trick – who was it?
asked Danny Caulfield from Harrogate
The hat-trick man was Eddie
Barlow, the combative South African allrounder. In the fourth match, at
Headingley, he took 7 for 64, including a hat-trick – which he extended
to four wickets on five balls – and took five more wickets in the second
innings as the World XI took an unbeatable 3-1 lead in the series (they
eventually won it 4-1). It was an unusual hat-trick in that it was finished
off by a close catch at short leg by Mike Denness, England’s 12th man who
was fielding as a substitute for the World XI. Barlow, who’s now 65, played
30 Tests for South Africa, scoring 2516 runs and taking 40 wickets. He later
captained Derbyshire and then coached Bangladesh, but has sadly been in poor
health recently following a stroke.Do these Super Series games count towards players’ official records?
asked David Thompson from Northampton
Yes, the ICC has decided that these matches count as official ODIs and
Tests, and the players’ records here on Cricinfo will reflect that. It does
make it a bit confusing, though, and it’s fair to say that a lot of
statisticians – and other interested parties – don’t agree with the ICC’s
ruling on this. The earlier Rest of the World matches (the 1970 series in
England, and the 1971-72 matches in Australia) did not count in the
official records.I heard that John Benaud, Richie’s brother, was out for 99 against the
World XI in 1971-72, and that cost him a tour of England – is that true?
asked Chris Norman from Melbourne
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John Benaud hooks on his way to 142 against Pakistan after being told he had been dropped
© The Cricketer
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Well, it’s true that John
Benaud made 99 for Australia in the fifth match of the 1971-72 series
against a World XI, at Adelaide, and it’s also true that he didn’t make the tour of England that followed shortly afterwards. I suppose you’d have to ask a
selector whether that near-miss really cost him a tour spot, but Keith Stackpole, the
Australian opener, certainly thought so. In his autobiography Not Just
For Openers, Stacky wrote: “The strangest omission [from the 1972
England tour] was Benaud, who made 99, smashing the bowling from one end of
the field to the other. When he was out everyone was disappointed for him.
Would one extra run mean the difference between his going to England and
staying at home? I think it did.” The following season Benaud had the
opposite experience: after the side for the third Test against Pakistan was
named in the middle of the second game at Melbourne, Benaud – who’d been dropped for the next match –
smashed 142. This time the selectors had little choice but to select Benaud
for the tour of West Indies that followed – and the practice of naming a
side for the next game before the previous one had finished was quietly
dropped.I recently had a quiz question I couldn’t answer: “Why did the first Test
of the 1970 Rest of the World series start on a Wednesday?” Can you
enlighten me? asked Richard Bradfield from Brighton
The first Test of the England-Rest of the World series
in 1970 started on a Wednesday (June 17) because there was a General
Election in the UK on the Thursday, which became a rest day in the match
(they had another day off on the Sunday). The match itself, at Lord’s, was dominated by the World XI’s captain, the incomparable Garry Sobers, who took 6 for 21 in 20 overs as England were shot out for 127, and then scored 183.
Not content with that, he bowled 31 overs in the second innings, taking 2
for 43 as England slid to a heavy defeat. That was also the match in which
Alan Jones, the prolific
Glamorgan opener, made his only international appearance: he made 5 and 0,
and was dropped for the next game.Where can I find the scorecard of the Rest of the World match in which
Sunil Gavaskar scored a hundred in his last first-class match? asked
Anil Bhatti from Mumbai
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Sunil Gavaskar on his way to 188
© Getty Images
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That was a special match played at Lord’s to celebrate the Bicentenary of MCC in 1987. In the World XI’s first innings Sunil Gavaskar made 188, and was
one of four centurions in the match: oddly, all their surnames began with G
(the others were Gooch, Gatting and Greenidge). After his innings, Gavaskar
– who had never scored a hundred at Lord’s before – announced his retirement
from first-class cricket, although he did play in the World Cup that followed
in India and Pakistan.Did any Pakistan players appear in the England-Rest of the World series
in 1970? asked Shabiuddin Ahmed from Karachi
There were two – Intikhab
Alam, the legspinner who had just taken over as Pakistan’s captain, and
Mushtaq Mohammad, the
wristy batsman (and wristy legspinner) who also captained Pakistan later on.
Intikhab appeared in all five of the games of that 1970 series, while
Mushtaq played in the last two. Majid Khan and Asif Iqbal were also playing
in English county cricket at the time, and must have been close to selection
for what was a very strong World XI side.For more information on the history of Rest of the World sides, click here
for Martin Williamson’s recent “Rewind To …” article.