Cricket Death Local News Opinion Ambassador David Commissiong salutes Sir Garry’s legacy Barbados Today18/07/2026089 views Barbados’ Ambassador to CARICOM David Comissiong. (FP) In 1958, Garfield Sobers, the Barbadian and West Indies all-round cricketer, batted for 10 hours against the Pakistani Test team at Sabina Park in Jamaica and broke the world Test cricket batting record with a scintillating 365 not out that confirmed his total mastery of the game of cricket. Sobers was 21 years old at the time. What is particularly remarkable about this achievement is the ‘precociousness’ of it all. By any measure, the accomplishment of Sobers bore the mark of genius, but to achieve that remarkable feat at such a young age placed him in a most elevated category of genius. And, of course, this was just the beginning! In the years that followed, Garfield Sobers went on to demonstrate a spell-binding mastery of every single component of the complex and sophisticated game of cricket. Not only was he the master batsman, but also the explosive fast bowler, the expert swing bowler, the crafty spinner, the electrifying fielder, and the insightful and inspirational captain who knew virtually everything there was to know about the game. He was, quite simply, “the greatest cricketer on Earth or Mars!” But in order to get a true appreciation of the magnificence of Sir Gary’s achievement, it must be emphasised that he had to master a sporting discipline that had its roots in a nation very different from ours, and one that had been created by a people other than ourselves. And yet, in spite of this, he was able, in his own native environment, to develop new insights into the game and to craft novel techniques that permitted him to express our own unique Barbadian and Caribbean creativity within the foreign medium, thereby adding something new to the medium. Indeed, I wish to draw special attention to the fact that this outstanding native son was born, bred, and nurtured in the unique geographical, historical, cultural, and social environment of what many of us see as “little” Barbados. Sir Garfield Sobers emerged from the small urban village of the Bay Land, the working class’ Barbados Cricket League (BCL), and the people-based nationalist sentiments that came to the fore in the Barbados of the 1950s. Yet, in spite of the seeming parochialism and narrow Bajan-ness of his upbringing and socialisation, this ‘international precedent-setter’ was able to master the international medium in which he chose to express himself—the game of cricket—and to add to that technical mastery, uniquely Barbadian and Caribbean insights, essences and instincts that arose out of our local environment. Sir Garfield Sobers was, therefore, that very special National Hero who made us aware that we are a people of great capacity and that our small, but fertile and creative, nation is capable of the very greatest international achievements. Put simply, Sir Gary gave us a solid and indisputable basis for personal and national sentiments of self-confidence and self-respect. He was the international achiever who came from the bowels of our society and demonstrated to us our true mettle. I extend my deepest condolences to the Sobers family. May he and his imperishable example remain in our hearts and minds forever.