Lost
to Test cricket
Roy Marshall of Hampshire
August
21, 1963. At The Oval England and the
West Indies
assembled the day before the final Test, and the talk in both teams was of
frailty at the top of the order. West Indies were trying a third partner for
Conrad Hunte while a desperate
England
toyed with the unlikely idea of sending Fred Titmus in first.
Meanwhile,
on a wet wicket at
Southampton
, the Hampshire opener Roy Marshall was blazing his fifth century of the summer,
with six sixes and 16 fours. A sugar planter’s son from
Barbados
, he had settled in
England
ten years earlier, and he had become county cricket’s most prolific
run-scorer, the only batsman to hit more than 14,000 county runs over the last
seven summers.
But,
though he had been sounded out by both Walter Robins,
England
’s Chairman of Selectors, and Frank Worrell,
West Indies
captain, he could not play for either side at The Oval. His four Tests for West
Indies in 1951/52 made him ineligible for
England
, and a
West Indies
appearance would end his qualification for Hampshire.
“He
could have played 60 Tests,” Jimmy Gray, his Hampshire opening partner,
reckons. “He wasn’t up with Worrell and Weekes, they were very special, but
he was as good as Walcott. He was certainly way above the
England
openers of that time.”
He
batted bare-headed, with thick glasses, a slim figure who stood upright and used
his strong wrists to hit the ball hard. He drove through the covers, he lofted
over the bowler’s head, and so powerful was his flashing cut that he even hit
sixes with it.
“We
played
Somerset
,” Jimmy Gray remembers, “and Bill Alley and he were drinking in the
evening. ‘I’ll get you out, Marshall,’ Bill said, and the next day he
bowled with a gully, two more gullies half way back and one right on the
boundary.
Roy
still whacked it through them. He was a beautiful striker of the ball. If he
got it right, the ball just whistled.”
Jimmy
Gray was a good enough bat to top 2,000 runs three times but, when he and Roy
Marshall put on 120 in 66 minutes against
Kent
in 1957, his share was 15.
“I
had a problem in my first year with
Roy
. I used to bat according to the scoreboard. When we’d got to 50 or 60, I’d
start to open up. But
Roy
would go off so fast that I’d be playing loose when I’d only got about 10,
before I’d got myself in.”
Marshall
and Gray. John Arlott called them Galloper and Squire.
“Most
teams would have batted
Roy
at number four,” Jimmy says, “but he could never wait, he had to go in
first. And it was a great success for us. After the first year, you had
experienced bowlers, taking the new ball, who really didn’t want to bowl at
him. It was lovely to watch the fast bowlers going back and the captains walking
over. ‘Keep going. Just keep it there.’ I remember Fred Trueman once at
Bradford
. At first the ball pinged, it was going up the arm. And suddenly it didn’t
ping. ‘I’m not going to waste my f---ing energy on you two buggers,’ he
said. ‘I’ve got five wickets to take.’”
Roy
Marshall was not an orthodox thinker. “County cricket was a routine and, when
he first came, he queried everything. ‘Why have we got that man there? … Why
isn’t he bowling round the wicket?’ He made us rethink our cricket. Then
Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie came into the side, and he absorbed all his ideas. I
think it’s an excellent idea to have one overseas player.”
In
1961 Ingleby-Mackenzie led them to the county’s first championship, famously
quipping that he liked his team in bed by breakfast.
“We
were playing at The Oval,” Jimmy Gray recalls, “and there was a party on the
second night. I got in about half past three, and
Roy
, I don’t think he ever did come in. But one of his great abilities was to
have a lot to drink and never be drunk. My powers of recovery were terrible, but
he’d sit down in the morning and eat egg and bacon.”
Surrey
set them 308 to win, and Gray was soon back in the
pavilion. “But
Roy
, he smashed them all over the field, and we won with an hour to spare.”
In
an age of uncovered pitches
Marshall
scored 35,725 runs, with 68 centuries. “But you can’t measure him in
figures. He won so many matches. And I suspect that he got more runs against the
better bowlers. He could be a bit sloppy against the ones he didn’t rate. Then
he’d sit in the dressing room. ‘Fancy getting out to him,’ he’d say.”
He
was a West Indian; he had grown up in a hot climate. “I played squash with
him, and he wasn’t keen on too much movement. He just stood there with those
rapier wrists and made me do all the running. And if you batted with
Roy
, you were never sprinting ones. He went on a Cavaliers tour to
Jamaica
with Peter Richardson. Peter was all application and push and, with
Roy
at the other end, he couldn’t get any runs. So they got into an argument.
‘I’m not rushing up and down with you,’
Roy
said. ‘You want to learn to hit the ball.’”
Jimmy
Gray hit 22,650 runs, with 30 centuries. But how many more runs could he have
scored with a more athletic partner?
“I
don’t look at it like that,” he says. “
Roy
was a lovely batsman to watch, and I had the best seat in the ground. It was
such a waste that he didn’t play more Test cricket.”
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