Ben Fenton: Cricket salutes Compton, the batting cavalier (2 July 1997)
THE memorial service for Denis Compton, a crowd-puller to the end, was the most over-subscribed to be held at Westminster Abbey for more than 30 years, with rumours that there was even a black market in tickets for the event
02-Jul-1997
Wednesday 2 July 1997
Cricket salutes Compton, the batting cavalier
By Ben Fenton
THE memorial service for Denis Compton, a crowd-puller to the
end, was the most over-subscribed to be held at Westminster Abbey
for more than 30 years, with rumours that there was even a
black market in tickets for the event.
A throng of the great and good of cricket mingled yesterday
with politicians, show business celebrities and ordinary
cricket fans for a chance to bid a fond farewell to one of the
sport`s great batsmen and cavaliers.
"To watch Denis Compton bat on a good day was to know what joy
was," John Major said after the service. "He was a great enemy
and a great mate," said Keith Miller, the 77-year-old former Australian all-rounder and scourge of England`s post-war cricket.
More than 2,000 people crammed into every niche and aisle and
the number turned away after applying for tickets exceeded any
memorial service held there since that of the broadcaster
Richard Dimbleby in 1966.
It is believed that tickets for the event, free to those lucky
enough to be allocated them, were changing hands for -L50 outside
the Abbey. There had been 3,000 applications for tickets. Of the
successful applicants, 700 were people recommended by either
the family or Middlesex County Cricket Club, and the rest were
members of the public who got tickets on a first-come, firstserved basis.
Compton, who died on St George`s Day, aged 78, still holds the
record for the number of runs scored in an English season, 3,816
for Middlesex at an average of more than 90, in 1947.
He was also a football international, winning FA Cup and
league championship medals with Arsenal and 12 wartime caps for
England on the wing. His widow, Christine, his third wife, said
she had been "amazed" by the number of people who went to the
service. "I knew he was a big favourite to many people but I
didn`t know he was that big," she said.
Tributes to Compton were paid by both sports. Peter Hill-Wood,
the chairman of Arsenal, read a lesson - "Let us now praise famous men" - from Ecclesiaticus, and J J Warr, Compton`s county
captain and a former president of the MCC, gave the address.
Mr Warr said "Compo", as he was known to all his friends, had a
great natural talent for sport but was not the most industrious
of people off the pitch. "I remember when Ted Heath introduced the three-day week, I asked Compo how he was going to
cope and he said: `I am not going to work an extra day for anybody`," Mr Warr said to laughter around the Abbey.
"If he had been alive during the Civil War, I am sure he would
have been a cavalier. He certainly had a cavalier approach to
two things: money and honours. The ribbon to his CBE was last
seen acting as a temporary lead around the neck of Benjy, his
Old English sheepdog."
Lord Runcie, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, said prayers in
the cricketer`s memory. Richard Compton, his second son from his
second marriage, read a lesson from St Paul`s First Letter to the
Corinthians. After the service, Richard, 41, from Durban,
South Africa, said: "It is very moving to see all these people
who have come here to remember Dad and to know that so many more
were turned away."
Cricketing champions of the past included Lord Cowdrey, who
said Compton had displayed "wonderful mastery and no arrogance", and there was a strong representation of the current Middlesex team led by Mike Gatting and Mark Ramprakash, the former
and present captains.
One man from Edgware, north London, who did not want to be
named but described himself as "an ordinary ageing cricket supporter", said: "I came as a small way of saying thank you for the
way he lit up those gloomy post-war years with his cricket and
his character."
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)