Eddie Barlow
15-Apr-2006
BARLOW, EDGAR JOHN, died on December 30, 2005, aged 65. Though not the most gifted or elegant of his outstanding, and largely lost, South African generation, Eddie Barlow was the most combative. Barlow came into Test cricket as a 21-year-old in December 1961, and was able to play 30 times before South Africa's exclusion in 1970. In Tests, he nearly always opened, but he was also an effective outswing bowler, brilliant slip and dynamic personality who invested each game with such energy that one felt he could bat, bowl, field and organise the teas simultaneously. "He rolled up his sleeves high above his elbows, flexed his muscles and bounced on to the field like a prize fighter," wrote Rodney Hartman.
Known as "Bunter" because he was short and stout at school in Pretoria,
Barlow turned into a superb sportsman, playing centre for Transvaal against both
the Lions and the All-Blacks. He made the Transvaal cricket team in 1960, while
reading geography at Wits University. But his early plans to become a teacher
were overtaken by events: he made 72 on his debut for Transvaal B as a 19-yearold
and rocketed into the national team and, in Australia in 1963-64, to stardom.
He scored 603 runs in the series, 1,523 first-class runs in Australia (he had
threatened to overhaul Bradman's 35-year-old seasonal record of 1,690) and 1,900
on the whole tour including New Zealand. "Those 1,900 runs were worth twice
their face value in inspiration," wrote R. S. Whitington. Along with Graeme
Pollock, Barlow destroyed South Africa's old reputation for dour competence. He scored hundreds in three of his first four Tests against the Aussies: the first, at
Brisbane, watchful; the second, at the MCG, defiant in defeat; the third, at Adelaide,
a joyous outburst that represented the first real flowering of a team that might
have become the greatest in history. Barlow and Pollock put on 341, with Barlow
scoring 201 through a mixture of luck, joy and glorious bloody-mindedness. He
clinched victory by coming on for his first bowl of the game and producing a
golden-arm spell of 5-2-6-3. "I'd like half his lottery ticket," grumbled one
onlooker. But he had determination too: Whitington wrote of him protecting his
stumps "like a female bulldog defending her brood".
Barlow made another hundred against England at Cape Town a year later, but
without any applause from the fielders, convinced he had been caught on 41.
Though he had a poor home series against Australia in 1966-67, he was still
entrenched and growing in seniority, with the captaincy beckoning. But it beckoned
another man too: his contemporary at Wits, Dr Ali Bacher, the cool and calculating
antithesis to the Tiggerish Barlow. As a university magazine put it: "Quiet Ali you
never heard, but bouncing Barlow was everywhere." Barlow left Transvaal - first
for Eastern Province, then Western Province - to gain leadership experience and,
when Peter van der Merwe retired as South African captain, their rivalry became
a national talking-point. The press and public wanted Barlow to take over; the
players apparently favoured Bacher, and he won, inheriting a team that was now
so brilliant that it hardly mattered who led them. They stormed the 1969-70 series
against Australia 4-0. Barlow briefly dropped down the order to accommodate
the young Barry Richards, made two more centuries and stayed loyal - although
at Kingsmead when Australia were fighting back after following on (465 behind),
Barlow sent Bacher a telegram: "PLEASE, DOC, GIVE ME A BOWL!" He did:
Barlow took three for four.
Barlow's zest for the game never wavered during the two Testless decades that
followed: he was dynamic for the Rest of the World team in England in 1970,
taking a memorable hat-trick at Headingley. And he played on until he was 42, in
1983, taking over a pig farm north of Cape Town, and having fun as father-figure
of the infant Boland team. From 1976 to 1978 he also led Derbyshire, where he
galvanised a perennially weary club. But Gerald Mortimer, Wisden's Derbyshire
correspondent, noted in his autobiography that Barlow left little legacy at Derby
or at Gloucestershire, where he had a spell as coach: "Young players... were fine
while he was there but later appeared to wonder what they were doing in firstclass
cricket. It is possible that Barlow was too powerful a character, with a faith
in his own ability that made it hard for him to understand more fragile egos."
Back home, he was more politically committed than other cricketers and came
close to winning a parliamentary seat for the anti-apartheid Progressive Federal
Party. But his rivalry with Bacher was not finished and, after retirement, he was
persuaded to go to London as South Africa's sporting ambassador, arguing for an
end to the boycott even though apartheid was not yet abolished. This isolated him
politically from the liberals who admired him, and geographically from
developments back home. Some of Barlow's friends saw this as a skilful manoeuvre
on Bacher's part. He went back and bought a vineyard in the Free State without
ever losing his restless ambition and enthusiasms: he came up with a "Three Plus
Plan" in the early 1990s, advocating that South African teams should score at
more than three an over. In 1994 he was beaten to the national coaching job by
Bob Woolmer. Five years later, he got the consolation prize of Bangladesh, and
was just getting down to business when he suffered the first of several strokes
and was confined to a wheelchair. Barlow moved to North Wales with his third
wife, continued coaching youngsters and retained a friendly smile for everyone.
Mike Procter said Barlow "changed the face of South African cricket... Eddie
was just so super-confident that it rubbed off on them." And when Bacher named
his all-time South African XI for his biographer, he made Barlow captain.
BATES, DONALD LAWSON, died on May 29, 2005, aged 72. Don Bates was
a constant presence on the Sussex staff for two decades from 1950, finishing in
1971 with 880 wickets at 25.87. He was a deceptively gentle medium-paced bowler,
who could extract unexpected movement off the pitch, especially at Hove. Alan
Oakman, a long-time colleague, noted: "He could do things with the ball on a
difficult wicket that nobody else could." Bates's most productive seasons came
between 1960 and 1962 - the first three years of Ted Dexter's captaincy - with
more than 100 wickets in each. He was part of the side that won the first two
Gillette Cups in 1963 and 1964, and the Brighton and Hove Albion team (at righthalf)
that became the last winners of the old Third Division South in 1957-58.
When he walked back to bowl, Bates constantly had his shoelaces undone and
kept being reminded to tie them up.