Never before has there been an all-rounder such as Garry Sobers, and never again is it likely that one will appear.
Never before has there been an all-rounder such as Garry Sobers, and never again is it likely that one will appear.

PNP Spokesman Wavell Hinds leads Jamaica’s tribute to the man who taught him to bat — and taught a region to believe in itself

KINGSTON, Jamaica |  Friday, July 17, 2026—By Calvin G. Brown  |  The greatest innings in the history of cricket has come to an end. The Right Excellent Sir Garfield St Aubrun Sobers, NH, AO, OCC — National Hero of Barbados, king of the all-rounders, and for two generations the living proof that Caribbean genius could stand astride the world — died peacefully at his home in Barbados on Friday. He was 89, eleven days short of his 90th birthday.

In Jamaica, where a 21-year-old Sobers announced himself to history with his world-record 365 not out against Pakistan at Sabina Park in 1958, the tributes were immediate and heartfelt. Among the first came from Opposition Spokesperson on Labour and Sport, Wavell Hinds, MP — himself a former West Indies batsman — who described Sir Garfield as one of the greatest sporting figures the Caribbean has ever produced and a man whose legacy transcends generations.

“Sir Garfield Sobers was more than a cricketing legend; he was the embodiment of Caribbean excellence. At a time when our region was forging its identity on the international stage, he showed the world the talent, resilience and brilliance that define Caribbean people.”Wavell Hinds, MP, Opposition Spokesperson on Labour and Sport

A Colossus in Numbers — and Beyond Them

The statistics alone place Sobers in a category of one. Across 93 Tests for the West Indies between 1954 and 1974, he amassed 8,032 runs at a staggering average of 57.78 and claimed 235 wickets, bowling everything from left-arm pace to wrist spin. His 365 not out stood as the highest individual Test score for 36 years, until Brian Lara — another son of the Caribbean — surpassed it in 1994, with Sobers on hand to embrace him. In 1968, he became the first man in first-class history to strike six sixes in a single over. He was knighted in 1975, named one of Barbados’s National Heroes by act of Parliament in 1998, and crowned one of Wisden’s five Cricketers of the Century in 2000.

But the numbers, formidable as they are, tell only half the story. Sobers rose from a one-storey wooden house in Bridgetown — a boy who lost his merchant seaman father to a German U-boat at age five and learned the game on the beach with bats fashioned from palm leaves — to become the most complete cricketer the world has ever seen. At the precise moment the English-speaking Caribbean was shrugging off colonial rule and demanding its place among nations, Sobers at the crease was an argument for independence more eloquent than any speech from any podium.

‘He Took the Time’: Hinds Recalls a Personal Debt

For Hinds, the loss is deeply personal. He first encountered the great man in 1994, when Sir Garfield addressed the Jamaica Under-19 team during the West Indies Under-19 Tournament in Barbados. But it was a later meeting that changed the course of his career.

“My most memorable interaction with him came in 2005, during a West Indies training camp ahead of our Test series against South Africa in Barbados,” Hinds recalled. “He took the time to speak with me personally and offered invaluable advice on my batting. I carried those lessons with me and, shortly afterwards, went on to record my highest score in the first Test against South Africa at Bourda in Guyana.”

“That is the kind of impact Sir Garfield had,” Hinds continued, “not only on the game itself, but on the lives and careers of those fortunate enough to learn from him. His example set the standard for excellence, professionalism and pride in representing the Caribbean, and his legacy will continue to inspire every young cricketer who dreams of wearing those colours.”

A Region in Mourning

Cricket West Indies confirmed the passing on Friday, declaring simply that “a great innings has come to an end”, while its president, Dr Kishore Shallow, called Sir Garfield “the greatest cricketer the world has ever seen”. From Bridgetown to Kingston, from Georgetown to the diaspora capitals of London, Toronto and New York, the Caribbean paused on Friday to honour the man who carried its flag with unmatched grace.

The People’s National Party extended its deepest condolences to the Sobers family, the Government and people of Barbados, Cricket West Indies, and cricket lovers throughout the Caribbean and across the world — mourning, in the party’s words, “a sporting giant whose impact will continue to be felt for generations to come.”

Sir Garfield inspired millions through a career defined by extraordinary skill, humility and an unwavering commitment to excellence. He was born in Bridgetown on July 28, 1936. He leaves a region forever in his debt — and a record of genius that, like the man himself, may never be matched.

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