Sir Isaac Vivian Alexander Richards is
a former West Indian
cricketer.
Known as Viv, Richards was voted
one of the five Cricketers of the Century in 2000, by a 100-member panel of
experts, along with Sir Donald Bradman, Sir Garfield Sobers, Sir Jack
Hobbs and Shane Warne. In February 2002, he was judged by
Wisden
to have played the best One Day International (ODI) innings of all
time. In December 2002, he was chosen by Wisden as the greatest ODI batsman of
all time, as well as the third greatest Test
batsman of all time, after Sir Don
Bradman and Sachin Tendulkar.
His
strengths were on the front foot. So far forward could he get that he was able
to plant that left foot outside the line of off stump, at once eliminating lbw
and creating his own leg stump line from where he would flick bowlers
relentlessly through midwicket. Or he might send a similar ball skimming
through extra cover. Straighten the ball down the line of the stumps and the
bowler stood a chance, but he rarely missed and they ran a terrible risk.
Richards made his Test
match debut for the West Indian cricket team in 1974 against
India in Bangalore.
He made an unbeaten 192 in the second Test of the same series in New Delhi. The
West Indies saw him as a strong opener and he kept his profile up in the early
years of his promising career.
In his Test career,
he scored 8,540 runs in 121 Test matches at an average of 50.23 (including 24
centuries). Richards also scored 5 centuries in World Series Cricket in 1977–79. These are
not recognized by the ICC as "official" Test centuries, but the high
standard of cricket played in this series means that they can arguably be
ranked alongside his 24 Test centuries. Richards won 27 of 50 matches as a Test
captain, and lost only 8. He is also the scorer of the fastest-ever Test
century, from just 56 balls against England in Antigua during the 1986 tour. He hit 84
sixes in Test cricket. His highest innings of 291 is sixth on the list of West
Indies' highest individual scores.
Richards
had a long and successful career in the County Championship in England, playing for
many years for Somerset. In 1983, the team won the NatWest
Trophy, with Richards and close friend Ian Botham
having a playful slugging match in the final few over’s.
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