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  • lawrence rowe on lawrence rowe

    Lawrence Rowe
    'There was no shot I couldn't play' Jamaica's favourite son made among the most storied of cricket starts, and was spoken of in the same breath as the greatest of the great West Indians of the 1970s. The Lord of Sabina Park looks back
    Dileep Premachandran


    'When I played my first ball in Test cricket off the middle of my bat, I knew I belonged there' Dileep Premachandran

    Although some say I was a celebrity, I remained the same from the time I was a nobody to the time I reached the pinnacle.
    I didn't have a clear run of at least three years after a fantastic debut. That's what I regret most.
    Sabina Park is an incredibly special place. I scored centuries against New Zealand, Australia, and England.
    I was a better soccer player than cricketer when I was young. I didn't really get into cricket till I was 15.
    There was no one I really looked up to. There was [Garry] Sobers, you could say, and he was left-handed. People told me that I reminded them most of Sir Frank Worrell. After my debut series in 1972, they were comparing me to [George] Headley and [Don] Bradman, but injuries robbed me of a chance at greatness.
    People like myself, Viv [Richards], and Alvin [Kallicharran] could play off both front and back foot, and we picked the length of the ball much earlier than most.
    I first noticed that I had a problem with my eyes when we were on our way to India in 1974. At a restaurant in London, Gerry Alexander noticed that I was holding the menu very close to my face. With my left eye I could only read the first two lines of the optician's chart. The right eye was 20/20.
    When I played my first ball in Test cricket off the middle of the bat, I knew I belonged there.
    During a warm-up match in Pune, I hooked a bouncer from Karsan Ghavri for six, but slipped and hit the wicket. The fellows were all laughing at me.
    I think I was one of the success stories of the Packer years. People still talk of the 175 I made at the MCG. There was no shot I couldn't play. Even 30 years later, people tell me it was the best batting they've ever seen.
    I dislocated my right shoulder in England. I didn't know it then, but that was the end of my Test career.
    When I made my debut at Sabina Park, Sobers won the toss and told me I'd be batting at No. 3. I was sitting in the old pavilion, on the benches outside, and the crowd was so enthusiastic that they kept chatting to me. Sobers finally had to tell them to stop so that I could concentrate.
    The 302 against England at Bridgetown [in 1974] was the best I ever played, for the quality of the innings. I can't remember giving a chance.

    I was more naturally talented than Viv, but he accomplished a lot more





    To be named one of Jamaica's five Cricketers of the Century was immensely special. It was nearly 20 years after I stopped playing when the voting went to the public. Young people knew I had played in South Africa, but I was still included in the list, the only batsman apart from Headley.
    I always wanted to go to South Africa to see what it was like. I initially refused to go [on the rebel tour of 1982-83] because my family was here. But they made me captain, and made it clear that the tour wouldn't come off if I didn't go. Some went for financial reasons, some just to get out of the West Indies. I just knew that the decision I made wouldn't have made life any more difficult for black people there. I still think the rebel tour did some good - it allowed black folk there to see that it wasn't only white men who could play the game and excel at it. But I leave it to history to judge us.
    When we came back, I left for Miami straightaway. The minister of sport had said that he couldn't guarantee our safety. They were intent on setting the public against us.
    I was more naturally talented than Viv, but he accomplished a lot more. He had a full career. The 291 at the Oval [in 1976] was the best that he ever played. I was privileged to bat with him then. Viv and I spoke about the rebel tour. He had his take on things, but our friendship remained.
    I remember hearing Ivan Lendl [the tennis player] talk about his grass allergy. But when I had said I had the same problem, people had laughed at me. Some ridiculed me for being soft. I don't believe anyone was tougher.
    I was always a cool person. That was my style. It was often held against me.

    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

  • #2
    Nice. I always used to ask my father bout him and heard the never quite was consistent answer but I didn't realise he had all those big innings.

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    • #3
      oh yes..rowe's first three innings involved a century a double century and a triple century....

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Gamma View Post
        oh yes..rowe's first three innings involved a century a double century and a triple century....
        Wrong! wrong!
        I know he started with a Double (1st innings) & an even 100 Not Out against New Zealand at Sabina Park.

        I think in that same series he made another 100!

        His 300 came in a series against England (I think) but I know it was in Barbados. The first day of the 300 innings...he ended on 48 Not Out. It was called the cleanest piece of hitting ever seen!
        "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

        Comment


        • #5
          I was fortunate to be at Sabina to see "Yagga's" debut performance. Saw both innings! and will never forget the experience.

          He didn't make many more runs that series. He didn't make another century til the England (the M.C.C as they were referred to in that series) in 1974 when he demolished the opposition making three centuries including the triple in Bridgetown. He also scored a century in Kingston.

          Great bat. A awful pity circumstances worked against him. I believe he used to work for Berger Paints (or some such company) and had to beg time off to play test cricket.

          How times have changed.

          pr

          pr
          Peter R

          Comment


          • #6
            i think you're right karl...thanks for the correction

            Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

            Comment


            • #7
              i suppose i am fortunate as well to witness the great lawrence rowe debut at sabina park... greatest classical stroke player ever... i used to have the booklet, 'lawrence rowe, a touch of class'...

              no one to this day play as true and effortless as lawrence rowe... i was in jamaica last september and met up with some guyanese who could recall every lawrence rowe batting performance... they told me they witnessed the 302 in barbados and it is still the best batting performance they've witnessed by any batsman...
              'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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              • #8
                rowe STILL has a fan club in B'dos.

                they say he whistled while he was batting. these days the aussies would probably complain!!!!

                never got a chance to see him at his best.

                Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Peter R View Post
                  I was fortunate to be at Sabina to see "Yagga's" debut performance. Saw both innings! and will never forget the experience.

                  He didn't make many more runs that series. He didn't make another century til the England (the M.C.C as they were referred to in that series) in 1974 when he demolished the opposition making three centuries including the triple in Bridgetown. He also scored a century in Kingston.

                  Great bat. A awful pity circumstances worked against him. I believe he used to work for Berger Paints (or some such company) and had to beg time off to play test cricket.

                  How times have changed.

                  pr

                  pr
                  Thanks for the correction.
                  ...and, you are possible right about "begging time off" in his early years.

                  Along with Basil Walliams he ran a stationary company. Lindel Wright used to visit often...but, somehow I do not think Lindel was a part of the company. If I rememder - remember I am in Shady Pines - let me be careful about that, I think, it was on Balmoral Avenue.
                  Last edited by Karl; February 9, 2008, 03:20 PM.
                  "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Gamma View Post
                    i think you're right karl...thanks for the correction
                    I was right on the double and the even 100 not out ...and, as Peter R said, I was wrong about Rowe scoring a 3rd century in that series!
                    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                    Comment

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