West Indies legend Sir Garfield Sobers dies at 89, cricket loses its greatest all-rounder

Sir Garfield Sobers, a celebrated West Indies cricket captain, has passed away. He was 89 years old and just days from his 90th birthday. Sobers played 93 Test matches, scoring 8,032 runs and taking 235 wickets. He was also the first to hit six si...

Cricket legend Garfield Sobers, champion West Indies all-rounder, dies at 89
Sir Garfield Sobers, the West Indies icon hailed as the greatest all-rounder in cricket history, died on Friday at the age of 89, bringing the curtain down on one of the sport's most extraordinary careers. West Indies Cricket confirmed his death. No cause was disclosed.

Sobers, who was just 10 days short of his 90th birthday, revolutionised the game with a rare combination of elegant batting, incisive pace and spin bowling, and exceptional fielding.

His death prompted tributes from across the cricketing world, with BCCL writing on X: "The game has lost one of its greatest icons. Sir Garfield Sobers' legacy will continue to inspire generations of cricketers. Rest in peace, Sir Garry."


Also read: Remembering Sir Garfield 'Garry' Sobers, a giant of the cricket world

The benchmark for every all-rounder

Across a glittering 20-year Test career between 1954 and 1974, Sobers played 93 Tests, scoring 8,032 runs at an average of 57.78 with 26 centuries and 30 fifties, while claiming 235 wickets with his left-arm bowling. He also represented the West Indies in one One-Day International.

Born Garfield St Aubrun Sobers in Barbados on July 28, 1936, he emerged from humble beginnings to become one of cricket's defining figures. He made his first-class debut for Barbados at just 16 before earning his Test cap two years later.

At the age of 21, Sobers announced himself on the world stage with an unbeaten 365 against Pakistan — then the highest individual score in Test cricket. The innings also made him the youngest triple-centurion in Test history, a distinction he still holds.
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His influence extended well beyond statistics. Wisden named him one of the five greatest cricketers of the 20th century, while Australian great Sir Donald Bradman famously declared in 1988: "I've got no hesitation at all in saying that Garry Sobers is the greatest all-round cricketer I ever saw."

Despite universal acclaim, Sobers consistently credited hard work over natural ability. "People call me a genius. I don't know much about geniuses," he said later in life.

"But I do believe that what I achieved was not just because of the ability that I was born with but also because I worked hard."

The first man to clear every ball

Sobers' most celebrated feat came in 1968 while playing county cricket for Nottinghamshire, when he became the first batter in first-class cricket to hit six sixes in a single over against Glamorgan's Malcolm Nash.
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Though the achievement became one of cricket's most iconic moments, Sobers remained characteristically modest about it.

"Six sixes are not good cricket," he said afterwards. "It was an occasion where we were looking for quick runs. The idea was to try and get as many runs as possible."
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"Records must not be the focus and that's the most important thing. It mustn't come at the cost of the team."

Across 383 first-class matches, Sobers amassed more than 28,000 runs and claimed over 1,000 wickets, underlining the extraordinary breadth of his talent.

Knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1975 for services to cricket, Sobers was later named one of Barbados' National Heroes, cementing a legacy that transcended generations. From a boy who famously removed two extra fingers himself during childhood to a cricketer revered as the sport's complete package, Sir Garfield Sobers leaves behind a standard that every all-rounder since has been measured against.
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