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Sir Everton Weekes: West Indies legend dies at 95

Abdullah719

T20I Captain
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Our hearts are heavy as we mourn the loss of an icon. A legend, our hero, Sir Everton Weekes. Our condolences go out to his family, friends and many fans around the world. May he rest in peace. 🙏🏽 <a href="https://t.co/RnwoJkhjPd">pic.twitter.com/RnwoJkhjPd</a></p>— Windies Cricket (@windiescricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/windiescricket/status/1278398683105701904?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 1, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
I literally was reading up about him and the 3 Ws the other day and thought to myself Everton Weekes can't have long to live - he was 95 years old and had a heart attack last year.

And it happens. RIP legend, the 3 Ws help put West Indies cricket on the map.
 
A fantastic player, one of the great Bajan W trio, who hit five centuries in five tests, and lived to 95 years.
 
Nice.

Never heard of him.
He was the greatest of all West Indies batsmen, even ahead of Sobers.

In the Pantheon of the Greatest Batsmen you have:

GOLD MEDAL
Sir Donald Bradman

SILVER MEDAL
Barry Richards
Sir Garfield Sobers
Victor Trumper
Sir Everton Weekes

BRONZE MEDAL
The likes of Walcott, Tendulkar, Lara, Pollock et al.

That’s how good Weekes was.

Put it this way: nobody can separate Tendulkar and Lara. They were the same level.

But we all know that Sobers was better than Richards, and Richards was better than Lara. And Weekes was ahead of Sobers as the greatest Barbadian batsman.

So following that trail of time and comparing batsmen of overlapping eras highlights the quality of him: think of Lara and Tendulkar, then understand that Weekes was better than both of them.
 
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Rest in peace, man. He lived a very eventful life, and left one of the strongest legacies of any cricketer ever. Incredibly sad to see him go.
 
RIP Legend!

One of the greatest batsmen of all-time.
 
TRIBUTE TO SIR EVERTON WEEKES

A Founding Father of West Indies Cricket Excellence

Wednesday, 1 July 2020 — Cricket West Indies (CWI) today paid tribute to Sir Everton Weekes, the legendary West Indies batsman and pioneer. Sir Everton was one of the most significant figures in the history of the sport – as a batsman of the highest quality, he played alongside other forefathers of West Indies cricket for a decade at the international level.

He was part of the famous Three Ws – alongside Sir Frank Worrell and Sir Clyde Walcott. He was also a highly respected coach, a knowledgeable analyst on the game for the regional and international media, as well as a former Team Manager, Match Referee for the International Cricket Council, and a member of the ICC Hall of Fame.

He passed away on Wednesday at the age of 95.

Ricky Skerritt, President of CWI said: “On behalf of CWI I want to publicly express our deepest sympathy to the family of this remarkable Iconic sportsman and gentleman, who passed away earlier today. I also send condolences to former CWI President Sir Wes Hall, and his family, who were all extremely close to Sir Everton. I never had the opportunity to see Sir Everton bat, but I had the opportunity to get to know him a little in his later years. I learned about his incredible career by reading about him and looking at old videos when I could. His performance stats were excellent as he set tremendously high standards for his time.

Sir Everton was therefore a most amazing pioneer in West Indies cricket; a gentleman and quite simply a wonderful human being. I got to spend a couple hours with him last year just sitting at his home and talking with him, at a time when he was recovering from a serious illness. I have never known a more humble and gentle human being. I grew to appreciate his sense of humour and his love of people, and witnessed the love and respect that so many held for him in Barbados and across the entire region. I am so privileged to have known this amazing West Indian Legend and gentleman. Sir Everton Weekes was truly one of the founding fathers of West Indies cricket excellence. May his soul rest in eternal peace.”

Born, Everton DeCourcey Weekes, he was a member of the famous Empire Club in Barbados, which was also home to several other legends of the game including Sir Frank Worrell, Sir Charlie Griffith and Sir Conrad Hunte.

He made his Test debut at age 22 against England at Kensington Oval in 1948 under the captaincy of George Headley. His final match was against Pakistan in Trinidad a decade later. In his career, Sir Everton played 48 Test matches and made 4455 runs at an average of 58.61 per innings. This included a world record five consecutive centuries in 1948 – scores of 141 against England in Jamaica, followed by scores of 128, 194, 162 and 101 in India. In his next innings, he made 90.

His average of 58.61 runs means Sir Everton is one of two West Indies greats, along with George Headley, in the top 10 Test averages of all time. This average has been bettered by only four players in history to have scored more than 4000 runs. In all first-class cricket he played 152 matches and scored 12010 runs at an average of 55.34 with a top score of 304 not out.

https://cricket-west-indies.prezly.com/tribute-to-sir-everton-weekes
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Can't believe the legendary Sir Everton Weekes is no more. Thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends. One of the greatest cricketers from the country. A true icon.<br><br>Rest In Peace, legend! <a href="https://t.co/GuZLPcUiHe">pic.twitter.com/GuZLPcUiHe</a></p>— Sir Vivian Richards (@ivivianrichards) <a href="https://twitter.com/ivivianrichards/status/1278559541177835521?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 2, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Our hearts are heavy as we mourn the loss of an icon. A legend, our hero, Sir Everton Weekes. Our condolences go out to his family, friends and many fans around the world. May he rest in peace. &#55357;&#56911;&#55356;&#57341; <a href="https://t.co/RnwoJkhjPd">pic.twitter.com/RnwoJkhjPd</a></p>— Windies Cricket (@windiescricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/windiescricket/status/1278398683105701904?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 1, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Can't believe the legendary Sir Everton Weekes is no more. Thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends. One of the greatest cricketers from the country. A true icon.<br><br>Rest In Peace, legend! <a href="https://t.co/GuZLPcUiHe">pic.twitter.com/GuZLPcUiHe</a></p>— Sir Vivian Richards (@ivivianrichards) <a href="https://twitter.com/ivivianrichards/status/1278559541177835521?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 2, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
This is fascinating.

The West Indies were a pre-Independence
Country during Weekes’ career but have become independent nation states: Sir Viv is from Antigua and Sir Everton was from Barbados.

The loss of a West Indian identity in my opinion is the main reason for their cricket’s decline. But clearly Sir Viv still believes in the West Indies as a country, and considers himself to be a compatriot of Sir Everton Weekes.

Which is doubly complicated: aside from his official family Sir Everton fathered the wicketkeeper David Murray, who replaced Deryck Murray in Clive Lloyd’s team. But Murray sold himself to Apartheid South Africa, which ended his friendship with Sir Viv, and like Richard Austin and Herbert Chang he sank into poverty and drug abuse and was last seen selling drugs to tourists in Barbados.
 
Om Shanti Sir Everton Weekes, one of the greatest batsmen ever.

Cricket has lost another hero but legends never die. He will always be remembered by true fans of the game
 
He was the greatest of all West Indies batsmen, even ahead of Sobers.

In the Pantheon of the Greatest Batsmen you have:

GOLD MEDAL
Sir Donald Bradman

SILVER MEDAL
Barry Richards
Sir Garfield Sobers
Victor Trumper
Sir Everton Weekes

BRONZE MEDAL
The likes of Walcott, Tendulkar, Lara, Pollock et al.

That’s how good Weekes was.

Put it this way: nobody can separate Tendulkar and Lara. They were the same level.

But we all know that Sobers was better than Richards, and Richards was better than Lara. And Weekes was ahead of Sobers as the greatest Barbadian batsman.

So following that trail of time and comparing batsmen of overlapping eras highlights the quality of him: think of Lara and Tendulkar, then understand that Weekes was better than both of them.

Bro, I'm not sure if it is a great idea to discuss someone's ranking as a cricketer in obituaries thread.

Out of respect for the deceased, I personally would not challenge this post and I hope neither do others.
 
Pertinent that Don Bradman and Gary Sobers rate him the best West Indies batsmen ever. Some feel he batted more like Don Bradman more than anybody.

Weekes took domination of bowling or pugnacity to merciless levels .He made opposing bowlers look like cattle walking to a slaughterhouse making a cricket bat resemble a lawn mower..Unorthodox and principally a back foot player who would step away from the crease as none could and punish deliveries.He cut,pulled and hooked in manner none did in his time and to many critiques he played more like Bradman than anyone.With Clyde Walcott and Frank Worrel he constituted the 3 W's.a trio whose class ws unmatched in the history of the game.In total contrast to Worrell Weekes was brutal and savage ,but still very clinical.No batsmen in his time looked as much as a cricketing machine in enforcing a demolition job.In full flow more than any batsmen he resembled flour or powder being grinded in a mill more than anyone,with his clinical execution of strokes.



To me the most memorable innings of Weekes was his 90 at Lords where he revealed batting prowess at regions of the sublime.


Above all he radiated the spirit of the game above everything and gave back all to the game it had given him as a coach and manger.He never engaged in politiking like so many of the recent past.

His grave should be preserved as a monument of his memory.Even if physically dead and buried his memories will shimmer in our minds forever like an inextinguishable light flashing.Few more beholding sights in sport than see Everton Weekes in full flow out in the middle,as though God had sent him to bat.
 
Weeks was often compared to the Don in terms of his batting style, one of the more worthy comparisons for sure and just further elevates his stature, we in the UK mourn him with a heavy heart, a personified great
 
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