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Ray Illingworth
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==Record== ===Player=== Illingworth played 787 first-class matches over nearly 33 years.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} ===County level=== Illingworth made his first-class debut at 19, was capped in 1955 and became a stalwart of the [[Yorkshire County Cricket Club|Yorkshire]] team thereafter. In 1957, he completed a seasonal "double", with more than 1,000 runs and 100 wickets, a feat he repeated five times over the next seven years.<ref>{{cite news |title=Obituary: Ray Illingworth |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/52021920 |access-date=26 December 2021 |work=BBC Sport |publisher=BBC Sport}}</ref> As captain his experience and knowledge of the game were widely believed to have helped Yorkshire to their [[County Championship]] victories in 1966, 1967 and 1968. In 1968 he joined [[Leicestershire County Cricket Club|Leicestershire]] after a contract dispute with Yorkshire, and was made captain.<ref name=Arnold/>{{rp|250}}<ref name=Swanton>[[E. W. Swanton|Swanton, E. W.]] (1986). ''The Barclay's World of Cricket''. Collins. {{ISBN|0002181932}}.</ref>{{rp|194β195}} ===Test level=== Illingworth made his Test dΓ©but for England in 1958 but struggled on his first tour, in the West Indies in 1959β60, taking just four wickets in five Test matches. After failing to make an impact in four Tests against South Africa he found himself struggling for a place. A good series against India in 1967 established him in the team.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} The selectors had long regarded [[Colin Cowdrey]] as England's natural cricket captain, but he ruptured an [[Achilles tendon]] early in the season and Illingworth was his replacement after only a month as county captain. Illingworth had been in and out of the national side for years, but had taken 20 wickets (13.30) against India in 1967 and 13 more (22.39) against Australia in 1968. He was originally chosen over his rivals like [[Brian Close]] as he was not a threat to Cowdrey's long-term captaincy due to his age and inability to establish a regular spot in the Test team.<ref name=Swanton/>{{rp|63β64}} In the Second Test against the [[West Indian cricket team in England in 1969|West Indies]] at Lord's in 1969, England collapsed to 61β5, but the new skipper made a forceful 113 out of the last 155 runs and became a hero. He defeated both the West Indies and New Zealand 2β0 and was confirmed as captain even when Cowdrey recovered.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} Illingworth captained England for five seasons (1969β1973) and this was a very successful period in English Cricket. Under Illingworth, England defeated the West Indies 2β0 in 1969, held a powerful Rest of the World side to 1-4 in 1970, won the Ashes in Australia in 1970β71, defeated Pakistan in 1971, somewhat surprisingly lost to India in 1971 but then regrouped and held on to the Ashes in a tight series in 1972 before eventually losing a series to a strong West Indies team in 1973.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} Illingworth's captaincy can perhaps be considered responsible for the victories in several of those tighter contests. For example, at Headingley in 1969 the West Indies were 219 β 3 chasing 303 when Illingworth's inspired bowling change had [[Basil Butcher]] caught behind and wickets fell with just about every bowling change he made that afternoon. Similarly at Sydney in the 7th Test of the 1970β71 series it was Illingworth, deprived of his star batsman Geoff Boycott and his star bowler John Snow, who somehow pressurised the Australian batsmen into capitulation.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} Those two matches will probably be remembered as Illingworth's finest moments as captain because they were the most famous. However it was for his brilliant tactics at Headingley in 1971 that he should receive most plaudits. With Pakistan needing only 231 to win - they were sailing toward victory with [[Sadiq Mohammad]] and [[Asif Iqbal (cricketer, born 1943)|Asif Iqbal]] in full command at 160β4. [[Alan Knott]] pulled off a miraculous stumping off [[Norman Gifford]] (Asif the batsman) and again Illingworth's bowling changes just as they had two years earlier resulted in wickets β including the key wicket of Sadiq β c&b by [[Basil D'Oliveira]].{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} The 1972 series was as good and tough an Ashes series as there has been (with the possible exception of 2005). The seasoned pros of England in Boycott, [[John Edrich|Edrich]], D'Oliveira, Illingworth himself, [[Derek Underwood|Underwood]] and Snow faced the upcoming young Australians ([[Ian Chappell|Ian]] and [[Greg Chappell]], [[Dennis Lillee]], [[Rod Marsh]], [[Doug Walters]]) who would dominate for the middle part of the decade. The series was drawn 2β2 but included tight games at Headingley and particularly the Oval, where the match lasted almost six days with Australia chasing 242 with only 5 wickets in hand.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} In 1973 Illingworth's tenure as captain of England ended, and it was rather a sad one in that an easy victory over a budding New Zealand team was followed by a heavy defeat by a highly efficient West Indies side. England had to win at Lord's to level the three-Test series. West Indies had first use of a quick but perfectly even batting wicket and made 650 at a rapid scoring rate as England's bowling attack of [[Bob Willis|Willis]], [[Geoff Arnold|Arnold]], [[Tony Greig|Greig]], Underwood and Illingworth were humiliated by [[Rohan Kanhai|Kanhai]], [[Garfield Sobers|Sobers]] and [[Bernard Julien]]. When England batted they had no answer to [[Lance Gibbs]] and lost by an innings. Wisden fairly described it as "a sad end to the Illingworth era".{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} ====England's unbeaten run==== When Illingworth became captain [[England national cricket team|England]] had lost only one of their previous 14 [[Test cricket|Test matches]], and none of their last 7.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} He continued this run to a record-breaking 27 Test Matches without defeat in 1968β71,{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} or one defeat in 40 Tests in 1966β71.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} This record was not recognised at the time as the games against the [[Rest of the World cricket team in England in 1970|Rest of the World XI]] were counted as [[Test cricket|Test matches]] and was subsequently equalled by [[Clive Lloyd]]'s West Indies in 1981β84.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} *1β1 (5 Tests) vs [[Australian cricket team in England in 1968|Australia in 1968]], Australia winning the First Test at [http://www.cricketarchive.co.uk/Archive/Scorecards/29/29449.html Old Trafford] by 159 runs. *0β0 (3 Tests) in [[English cricket team in Pakistan in 1968-69|Pakistan 1968β69]]. *2β0 (3 Tests) vs [[West Indian cricket team in England in 1969|the West Indies 1969]]. *2β0 (3 Tests) vs [[New Zealand cricket team in England in 1969|New Zealand 1969]]. *2β0 (7 Tests) in [[1970-71 Ashes series|Australia 1970β71]]. *1β0 (2 Tests) in [[History of cricket in New Zealand from 1970-71 to 2000|New Zealand 1970β71]]. *1β0 (3 Tests) vs [[Pakistani cricket team in England in 1971|Pakistan 1971]]. *0β1 (3 Tests) vs [[Indian cricket team in England in 1971|India 1971]], India winning the Third Test at [http://www.cricketarchive.co.uk/Archive/Scorecards/31/31968.html the Oval] by 4 wickets. ====Rest of the World XI==== There was no tour in 1969β70 and no tourists in 1970 as the series with South Africa was cancelled due to the [[International cricket in South Africa from 1971 to 1981|Basil d'Oliveira Affair]] and concerns over anti-apartheid demonstrations that had led to barbed wire at [[Lord's]]. Rather than send an unprepared team to Australia, a [[Rest of the World cricket team in England in 1970|Rest of the World XI]] was formed primarily from overseas players in the [[County Championship]], captained by [[Garfield Sobers]], and including the South Africans [[Graeme Pollock]], [[Mike Procter]], [[Barry Richards]] and [[Eddie Barlow]]. They could not be regarded as a national Test team and the matches were given the status of 'unofficial Tests', but the runs scored and wickets taken were added to official Test statistics until it was decided by the [[International Cricket Council|I.C.C.]] that they should not count.<ref name=Swanton/>{{rp|346β348}} England were defeated by a superior team, but this was not unexpected. The only surprise was that they managed to win one game and almost won two others against what was arguably the strongest Test team ever assembled.<ref>Firth, Colin (1987). ''Pageant of Cricket''. The Macmillan Company of Australia. p. 506.</ref> ====Australia==== ''(See Main Article [[English cricket team in Australia in 1970β71]])'' Illingworth led England to a 2β0 Ashes victory in [[English cricket team in Australia in 1970β71|1970β71]], the only time a touring team has played a full Test series in Australia without defeat. The future Australian captain, [[Greg Chappell]], later wrote: <blockquote>Ray Illingworth's England side in 1970β71 were mentally the toughest English side I played against, and the experience of playing against them first up in my Test career reinforced what I had learnt in the backyard. Test cricket was not for the faint of heart. Illingworth subjected us to a mental intimidation by aggressive field placings, and physical intimidation by constant use of his pace attack, ably led by one of the best fast bowlers of my experience, [[John Snow (cricketer)|John Snow]]. Winning to Illingworth was something he expected of himself and demanded of his team.<ref>[[Greg Chappell|Chappell, Greg]] (1986) ''Old Hands Showed The Way'', Test Series Official Book 1986β87, The Clashes for the Ashes, Australia vs England, Playbill Sport Publication.</ref> </blockquote> ====Trouble with the M.C.C.==== The M.C.C. tour manager was [[David Clark (cricketer)|D. G. Clark]]. Bernard Thomas of [[Warwickshire County Cricket Club|Warwickshire]] was the assistant manager and physiotherapist,<ref name=Snow/>{{rp|189}} and G. C. A. Saulez the scorer. Clark had been the amateur captain of [[Kent County Cricket Club|Kent]] in 1949β51 and was described by Illingworth as "an amiable, but somewhat ineffectual man",<ref>Criss, Freddi (1996). ''The Guinness Book of Cricket Blunders.'' Guinness Publishing. p. 147. {{ISBN|0851126243}}.</ref> and there were soon divisions between him and the players. After the Second Test Clark criticised both captains for cautious play, England for their short-pitched bowling and indicated that he would prefer to see Australia win 3β1 than see four more draws. Illingworth only discovered this when he was asked for a comment by a journalist in the morning and the rest of the team when they read the newspapers at the airport.<ref name=Snow/>{{rp|88}} As a result, Illingworth effectively took over the running of the tour with the support of the players and Clark's influence declined.<ref name=Snow/>{{rp|94β95}} Unlike his predecessors, Illingworth insisted on good hotel accommodation, decent sporting facilities, better travel arrangements, higher allowances and pay, and fought hard to get them, which was greatly appreciated by the players.<ref name=Snow/>{{rp|81}} In the final Sydney Test Clark tried to push Illingworth back on to the field when he took the team off because of the crowd throwing beer cans after the Snow-Jenner incident. A furious Illingworth said he would not return until the playing area had been cleared and the crowd had calmed down and objected to Clark constantly siding with the Australians against his own team. When the team returned to England, Illingworth said that "all hell would break loose" if anyone was denied his good conduct bonus (as with [[Fred Trueman]] in the West Indies in 1953β54),<ref>[[Fred Trueman|Trueman, Fred]] (2004). ''As It Was''. Pan Books. p. 171. {{ISBN|140504148X}}.</ref> but this did not happen. ====Later captaincy==== Series wins over New Zealand and Pakistan followed and a despite a loss against India in 1971 he scored his second Test century and enjoyed bowling success. He revealed, in an interview with Shyam Bhatia, 30 years after the loss, that he regretted not bowling [[Brian Luckhurst]]'s occasional left arm spin against the Indians on a sluggish pitch which had blunted Derek Underwood. He retained the Ashes at home in 1972 against Ian Chappell's powerful young side with an exciting 2β2 series draw. In 1972β73 he declined to tour India, [[Tony Lewis]] leading the team instead, and when he took back the reins in 1973 he beat New Zealand 2β0, but lost 2β0 to the West Indies and Illingworth was dropped as England captain in the middle of the final test at Lord's.<ref name=Swanton/>{{rp|323}}<ref name=Snow/>{{rp|135β138}} ===Return from retirement=== [[Leicestershire County Cricket Club|Leicestershire]] benefited from his return, winning four one day trophies and the [[County Championship]] in 1975. After announcing his retirement from the first-class game in 1978 he returned to [[Headingley Cricket Ground|Headingley]] to manage the Yorkshire team, despite his testy relationship with [[Geoff Boycott]]. In 1982, faced with an under-performing team on the field, he made a return to the playing arena and replaced [[Chris Old]] as captain. The side won the Sunday League in his final season in 1983 but failed in the championship, finishing bottom for the first time ever. The title of the book he wrote about this era was ''The Tempestuous Years''.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}}
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