Comfort blanket with a silver lining
Stephen Fay on Cyril Washbrook, a Lancastrian icon who bridged the north-south divide
Stephen Fay
03-Nov-2006
Stephen Fay on a Lancastrian icon who bridged the north-south divide
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Cyril Washbrook is best
remembered for a remarkable
comeback, aged 41. He was
a grand old man, a selector
already, and his fellow selectors
asked him to leave the room so
they could decently pick him for
the third Test at Leeds in 1956.
These decisions can turn sour
for both parties but Washbrook
did not let his colleagues down.
England were in dire straits at 17
for 3 when he came in to bat but
he put on 187 with Peter May,
who was barely a twinkle in the
selectors' eyes when Washbrook
had last played for England at
Christchurch in 1950-51. At
Headingley he was lbw, two
short of a seventh Test hundred,
and kept his place, playing in
the Laker Test at Old Trafford, 19
years after his Test debut in 1937.
In a moment of exquisite agony
for his fans Washbrook was out for
98. I was watching on television
and I think it was probably the
only time I saw him bat. As an
eager nine-year-old I had been
slipped into the press-box annex
under the Grand Stand at the
Lord's for the 1948 Test and I saw
Don Bradman flickering to and
fro for 89 and Sid Barnes hit the
ball on to the old clock tower on
his way to 141 but I did not see
Washbrook bat. I must have seen
him in the covers and I knew
he was the best cover fielder in
England. Everyone knew that.
When I was sneaked into The
Oval later in the summer England
were 42 for 6 but Washbrook
was injured - a pity since he had
scored 143 and 65 in the previous
Test at Headingley to no effect.
Australia's winning second-
innings total of 404 for 3 was the
record for 27 years.
But you do not have to watch
a cricketer in the flesh to adopt
him as a hero. I was in love with
the idea of Cyril Washbrook. He
was from Lancashire and, at the
time I became aware of him, so
was I. When our family moved to
London in 1947, I needed to bring
with me comfort blankets from a
Lancashire childhood and Cyril
Washbrook was my principal
and prize icon. With Len Hutton
he put on 359 at Johannesburg
in 1948-49, which is still the
fifth-highest opening partnership
in Test history. Londoners were
besotted by Denis Compton,
all southern flash and dash,
unlike Washbrook's northern
application to his work. I basked
in Washbrook.
Neville Cardus accurately
described the Washbrook I choose
to remember: "The chin, always
square and thrust out a little, the
square shoulders, the pouting
chest, the cock of cricket cap,
his easy loose movement, his
wonderful swoop at cover and
the deadly velocity of his throw
in." Photographs normally show
an unsmiling face, though it
occasionally lapsed into a smirk.
He was a fierce square cutter and
a brutal puller and hooker, strong
off his legs. (He was not so good at
playing spin, it is said.)
Going to school in London,
I felt especially proud that
Washbrook's benefit in 1948
made him £14,000; that is
£188,000 today - not enough for
a Vaughan, a Flintoff or even
a Ramprakash but at the time
the biggest benefit by a large
margin. (Even Compton raised
only £12,200 in 1949.) It proved
to me that Lancashire people
appreciated quality and were
generous with their money.
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In fact, he had two remarkable
strokes of luck. Lancashire gave
him a fixture against the 1948
tourists as his benefit match
and, when Bradman could have
polished the game off in two
days, he declined to do so and
stayed around long enough on
the third day to score a hundred
in front of a full house.
I was reminded of this
recently when I looked at
Washbrook's autobiography,
Cricket: The Silver Lining, which
I originally acquired when it
came out in 1950, perhaps after
a visit to the dentist. My mother
rewarded inadequate attempts to
hide my naked fear with cricket
biographies. It disappeared
along the way but, when I saw
the cover of Washbrook's book
on the shelves of MCC's library,
I remembered immediately the
garish shades of green and red.
I had thought of him in
various shades of blue, from
purple to pale, in his great season
in 1946 when he scored 1,021
runs between June 26 and July 17,
while travelling 1,500 miles by
slow coach and wandering train.
One of my favourite cricket books
is an account of Lancashire's
1946 season, Second Innings by
Terence Prittie and John Kay. In
it they write: "He should have
been crippled by cramp, backache
and indigestion. [But] Washbrook
is hard boiled physically, tough
mentally, full of Lancashire
vigour and hardihood."
It seemed entirely proper that
he should become Lancashire's
first professional captain in 1954
and keep the job until 1959 when
he was 45. He was the dominant
figure and a dominating one.
As captain he expected to be
addressed respectfully and his
team to be as neatly dressed as
himself (his sleeves were folded
"regimentally"). A barracker at
Old Trafford tried to embarrass
him by calling out "Come on,
Mister Washbrook". But Mr
Washbrook did not soften.
Apparently he became a dour
disciplinarian, impatient
with cocky young men. But
I understood that heroes are
permitted to have feet of clay.
He died in 1999 and on
August 8 during the Old Trafford
Test match against New Zealand
- the nadir of English cricket
post-war - a minute's silence
was observed before start of
play, with the players lining up
outside the pavilion's wicket
gate, to honour a man they had
probably hardly heard of.
It was a grey morning. Not
many spectators turned up and I
think I was the only person to
make the short journey from the
press box to the pavilion. In an
odd way it was the closest I ever
got to Cyril Washbrook.
Stephen Fay is a former editor of Wisden Cricket Monthly and the author of Tom Graveney at Lord's - a Year at the Home of Cricket