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12 Mar 2014 09:20 - 12 Mar 2014 09:54 #182310
by bagaloo
remember this chap...
It is difficult to believe that a batsman as graceful yet impeccable as Michael Robin Bynoe had played only four Tests for West Indies. Picked as a teenage prodigy in the late 1950s, his career amounted to only four Tests over a span of eight years despite his talent.
It was not that Bynoe was an ordinary batsman by any standards. He was good enough to make it to the Barbados team that  armed with the Ws (Clyde Walcott, Frank Worrell and Everton Weekes), Garry Sobers and Conrad Hunte  could have given most Test sides a run for their money. He also bowled sporadic left-arm mixed-bag and was a fine fielder.
His First-Class career (that spanned 15 years) involved only 56 matches, which demonstrates lack of organisation of West Indian cricket of the era. He scored 3,572 runs at 41.05 with six hundreds and held 45 catches; from four Tests he scored 111 at 18.50 with a highest score of 48.
Early days
Born in Alleynedale, Black Rock, St Michael, Bynoe took to cricket at a very early age. He was the grandson of Henry Austin, a Barbadian batsman who played at the turn of the 20th century. Bynoe’s cousin Michael
It is difficult to believe that a batsman as graceful yet impeccable as Michael Robin Bynoe had played only four Tests for West Indies. Picked as a teenage prodigy in the late 1950s, his career amounted to only four Tests over a span of eight years despite his talent.
It was not that Bynoe was an ordinary batsman by any standards. He was good enough to make it to the Barbados team that  armed with the Ws (Clyde Walcott, Frank Worrell and Everton Weekes), Garry Sobers and Conrad Hunte  could have given most Test sides a run for their money. He also bowled sporadic left-arm mixed-bag and was a fine fielder.
His First-Class career (that spanned 15 years) involved only 56 matches, which demonstrates lack of organisation of West Indian cricket of the era. He scored 3,572 runs at 41.05 with six hundreds and held 45 catches; from four Tests he scored 111 at 18.50 with a highest score of 48.
Last edit: 12 Mar 2014 09:54 by
bagaloo.
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12 Mar 2014 10:02 - 12 Mar 2014 10:10 #182322
by mapoui
well because I don't know that that was the general high impression held of Bynoe by the authorities of his day. I dont think they thought of him as very good at all
if they did he would have made the side in a blink. after all he is white and that really counted in those days.
and more than any other factor west indies needed an opener to go with Hunte. for that reason alone he would have made the side were he good enough
instead of Bynoe deh tried Kanhai, J K Holt, Carew, McMorris, Nurse, Willie Rodriguez..all between 1958 and 1967 when Bynoe was sent to India to open with Hunte. Bynoe emerged in the late 19-fifties and by 1967 he was just 26, at the peak of his life and career.
his greatest chance to make the west indies team, coincided with his best years and he was not selected. west indies were in desperate need for what he did..open bat.. and he still did not make. something does not compute..between reality and that write-up
Last edit: 12 Mar 2014 10:10 by mapoui.
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12 Mar 2014 11:19 #182327
by ketchim
Bynoe gave Guyana a real hard time in the Shell Shield era !
I recall he was part of the Bs ....a whole heap in the XI
Boyce , Brancker et al
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12 Mar 2014 11:20 #182328
by ketchim
Burton , though born in Barbados migrated to British Guiana because of Racism... to get selected in the W.I. XI
Tommie Burton .
www.espncricinfo.com/westindies/content/player/51417.html
William Burton, a fast bowler, struggled to make his mark as he was pf mixed race and lacked the background to gain entry to Barbados's only non-white club. He worked as a practice bowler for Pickwick CC and was used in practice matches to sharpen up white batsmen chosen to represent the island
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12 Mar 2014 11:34 #182329
by mapoui
Burton reads like a man after my own heart.
if I get lucky I will make a pantheon of such west indians..the fighters, those who rather risk social ignominy in standing up for right, for integrity, for self..refusal to take the shiiite.
I intend to make a glory of such people for all to see and celebrate
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12 Mar 2014 11:40 #182331
by ketchim
In 1899 he emigrated to Demerara
which had far less strict rules on colour :
other promising coloured players took the same route ~
And today , dem have a deportation bench for my Country ...ungrateful >
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12 Mar 2014 11:51 #182335
by mapoui
that bench must be the same Bajan fellas who make Desmond Haynes line up for hours outside Kensington to get into to see the cricket
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12 Mar 2014 11:53 #182336
by ketchim
hahahahaha...bajans rale chupid !
I see Dessie threaten to remove he name from de Stand ! :-[
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