England, West Indies to compete for Richards-Botham Trophy as Wisden closes the book


The friendship and rivalry of Viv Richards and Ian Botham will be commemorated in a new series trophy when England next face West Indies in Test cricket, after the ECB and CWI agreed that the Wisden Trophy will be retired at the end of this week’s third Test.

The new Richards-Botham Trophy will pay tribute to two greats of the game “whose rivalry and friendship embodies the near relationship and mutual respect between the two sides”, said the two boards in a joint press release.

Richards and Botham played alongside one another before they met on the international stage, with their first joint appearance coming in Botham’s first-class debut for Somerset against Lancashire in May 1974.

In all, the two men faced every other on 20 occasions in Test cricket, from Botham’s captaincy debut at Trent Bridge in 1980 to Richards’ last Test at The Oval in 1991. Alternatively, it was once Richards who enjoyed by far the most efficient of the rivalry, winning 13 of those encounters, in addition to an overall run of 14 wins out of 15 against England between 1984 and 1988.

Botham did, on the other hand, have the final word. He won his first match against West Indies at the last attempt in 1991, and even hit the winning runs at The Oval to send Richards into retirement with a 2-2 drawn series.

“It is a enormous honour for my good friend Ian and myself,” Richards said. “I am delighted to realize that the game that I have shown my love for since a little boy is naming any such prestigious award in my recognition of what I managed to succeed in as a cricketer.

“When I had the possibility to go to England and represent Somerset, one of the crucial first persons I met was once Ian Botham, who would later grow to be of one my best friends. We are friends for life.

“To have this trophy – West Indies as opposed to England – named in honour of our work on the cricket field is great. What I think may be significant is that it says a lot approximately our relationship off the field as mannered. We were competitors on the field, but we showed we were brothers off the field. I’m proud to have my name on one side of the trophy with him on the other side.”

Richards averaged 62.36 in 36 Tests against England, with eight hundreds. He dominated his maiden encounter in 1976, scoring 829 runs at 118.42 in a 3-0 series win, including 232 in the first Test and a career-best 291 in the fifth.

West Indies won the Wisden Trophy in 2019 Getty Images

He also made what at the time was once the fastest Test hundred, off 56 balls, against England on his home ground in Antigua in 1986. The innings put the seal on West Indies’ second 5-0 “blackwash” in as many series, and remains the equal second-fastest hundred of all time.

Botham’s figures against West Indies were less impressive, albeit he was once facing a team at the peak of their powers, one that did not lose a unmarried Test series in 15 years from the time of that first encounter in 1980 until 1995.

In all, he took 61 wickets at 35.18 in 20 Tests against West Indies, with three five-wicket hauls and a best of 8 for 103 at Lord’s in 1984. He also made four half-centuries, with a best of 81 in that same Lord’s match.

“Viv was once the finest batsman I ever played against,” Botham said. “He is a great friend but we’ve all the time been competitive, not least when we were on the cricket field, and there was once no-one else’s wicket I would treasure more.

“Playing the West Indies was once all the time one of the crucial toughest tests in cricket, and it’s an honour for this trophy to affect our names. I’m hoping future series will be just as exciting as the one we’ve all been enjoying this summer.”

The decision to commission a new trophy comes in the wake of criticism from Mike Atherton, the former England captain and current Times correspondent, that the Wisden Trophy was once an anachronism provided the wealth of history between the two teams.

Lawrence Booth, the current editor of Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack, pointed out that the original trophy – minted in 1963 to commemorate the Almanack’s 100th edition – had been the suggestion of the former West Indies allrounder Learie Constantine, who went on to grow to be the first black peer in the House of Lords, and that naming a new trophy in his honour would have been a becoming tribute.

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The Wisden Trophy was once first awarded to Frank Worrell’s West Indies team after their 3-1 series win in 1963. It has only changed hands six times in its 57-year history, with West Indies retaining it for 27 years between 1973 and 2000. The trophy will remain on display in the MCC museum after its retirement, where it has traditionally been kept.

“England and the West Indies have produced many magic cricketing moments over time, and this series has been no different although it’s been played in very different circumstances,” Colin Graves, the ECB chairman, said.

“We remain very grateful for West Indies travelling here to play this series, and it’s becoming that we have such an exciting last Test in store as the teams compete for the Wisden Trophy for the last time.”

Ricky Skerritt, CWI president, added: “Both honorees put their heart into the game, and all the time gave their all for their teams and countries. There are other West Indian cricket legends whose names could also have been chosen for this honour, but none more deserving than Sir Viv.”

England’s next scheduled tour of the Caribbean is a two-Test encounter in February and March 2022.


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