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Those rebel tours of South Africa....

shivfan

Banned
I read an interesting interview with former Guyana and England batsman Monte Lynch in the Sunday Times recently....

'The other worst moment was going to South Africa with a West Indies rebel team in 1983. I did not enjoy the tour one bit. A lot of us did not realise the severity of apartheid. We were ignorant about the real South Africa until we got there, and then it was too late. I was banned for four years and regret denying myself the opportunity to play at the highest level, which I believe I might have achieved. From a cricketing point of view, I learnt a lot out there about batting from Lawrence Rowe, Collis King and Alvin Kallicharran and came back a different, more confident player, scoring more than 1,000 runs each season for the next four years.'

Best & Worst: Monte Lynch - Times Online

Was Lynch naive to take part in a tour of apartheid South Africa, bearing in mind that the team was composed of blacks and Asians, who were treated like second-class citizens in that country at the time? Lynch was only 25 at the time, but such was the backlash in the Caribbean to their tour, which was seen especially in Jamaica and Guyana as a betrayal, quite a few of them felt they had to migrate from the Caribbean. Lawrence Rowe and Colin Croft ended their cricketing careers, and moved to Florida, while Alvin Kallicharran, Franklyn Stephenson and Lynch himself moved to England where they played county cricket.

But others were not so lucky....

Jamaicans Richard Austin and Everton Mattis went mad, while Barbadian David Murray became a drug addict. They just couldn't handle the fact that they were no longer revered in the Caribbean, but were treated as pariahs.
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I was at Lords for one of Monte's three ODI's for England against the WIndies in 1988 - the abuse he got from the West Indian supporters in the crowd was way over the top - every time he came near them he got a barrage of it - I would think that afternoon must rank high on his list of worst memories
 

shivfan

Banned
I was at Lords for one of Monte's three ODI's for England against the WIndies in 1988 - the abuse he got from the West Indian supporters in the crowd was way over the top - every time he came near them he got a barrage of it - I would think that afternoon must rank high on his list of worst memories
It might have been over the top, but it was understandable, considering how betrayed the Caribbean people felt about the tour....

The Caribbean independent countries were some of the staunchest supporters of the anti-apartheid movement.
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
It might have been over the top, but it was understandable, considering how betrayed the Caribbean people felt about the tour....

The Caribbean independent countries were some of the staunchest supporters of the anti-apartheid movement.
Indeed - the supporters concerned were sat next to the group I was with and were excellent company all day - they took the trouble to discuss the issues with us and it was only as a result of that that I began to fully understand just how abhorrent apartheid was - I thought some of the abuse was unnecessarily personal (and one or two of them did as well) but I understood afterwards why Monte had brought it on himself - there is an interesting book in the shops - "The Rebel Tours" by Peter May
 

LongHopCassidy

International Captain
Market forces are market forces. You underpay your players long-term, they're going to register their dissent somehow.

That said, the bannings were warranted. The administrators lost a lot of good players doing it, though, and it was ultimately their own fault.

That said, sporting boycotts weren't the reason South Africa banned apartheid, however ethical they were.
 

Jarquis

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Was just about to post that link, I basically have no idea what happened other then the very basic understanding of what the rebel tours were.
So after reading your opening post I cricinfo-ed each of the players you mentioned and it lead me to that article.
Is fascinating stuff really.
 

wpdavid

Hall of Fame Member
tbh I find it hard to believe that they didn't know about the realities of Apartheid. Maybe I'm being unfair, but I suspect they simply had no idea how strong the reaction would be in the Caribbean, and that's what they 'regret'.
 

Matt79

Global Moderator
Nah, I reckon like a lot of young men, they were probably pretty happily ignorant of anything that had, to that point, not directly impinged on their life/world. Have to say, sportsmen seem to be particularly bad in that regard. Talking in generalities of course, there are exceptions, but a lot of elite athletes seem to have a fairly blinkered and self-obsessed view of the world. Then again, that phenomeon is probably an unavoidable side-effect of the levels of commitment and focus needed to achieve elite results in their field - if you spend too much time doing anything other than working your ass off to be the best cricketer/footballer/cyclist whatever, you're probably never going to make it as a professional.
 

social

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Yes, they were naive to think that they could join this tour and escape unscathed

But the reaction to these guys was disgraceful and particularly in light of the fact that at least one of the guys in the "official" WI side was a shocking racist
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
They certainly should have had an inkling of what they were letting themselves in for - a few years earlier in 1977 when Michael Holding was offered a AUS$25,000 a year contract by Kerry Packer - prior to that he'd been on EC$200 per test - despite those riches he still wouldn't sign up until the Jamaican PM, Michael Manley, said it was OK - his worry was that Packer had signed a few South Africans for his world XI - If Mikey, at 23, saw the potential for problems in that it must have been blindingly obvious to those on the rebel tours that trouble would follow
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
I think with the benefit of hindsight we might look upon their ignorance rather more harshly than we should. In England, Apartheid was a much more controversial issue at the time than it is now. Margaret Thatcher, for example, was quite notably sympathetic to the regime, vetoing UN economic sanctions against it and repeatedly condemning anti-Apartheid protests. While it looks like rank idiocy now, at the time it was seen as a legitimate political viewpoint.

As for the West Indians, I think it's easy for those of us in the UK to condemn money-based motivation because we're not at risk of entering the edge of subsistence. Lifelong economic security is an entirely different proposition to someone who grew up in rural Jamaica in the 1970s, whether they were fully aware of the social consequences or not.

But even given those qualifications, they really don't come out looking too classy.
 

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
Here's an interesting article on the WI rebels....

The unforgiven | Specials | Cricinfo Magazine | Cricinfo.com

I've seen Richard Austin on the streets as well, and he's a sorry sight. Michael Manley had a very good section in his 'History of West Indies Cricket' about the rebel tours.
As the article says, if they had been born in Cape Town - what would have happened to their ability?

Most of them were poor, and it was a lot of money, and I'm not in any position to be holier than thou hate them personally - I hope I'd have the courage to refuse the money, but that's just talk and hindsight. I've never faced that situation.

But I understand why so many people could only see betrayal.
 

Goughy

Hall of Fame Member
tbh I find it hard to believe that they didn't know about the realities of Apartheid. Maybe I'm being unfair, but I suspect they simply had no idea how strong the reaction would be in the Caribbean, and that's what they 'regret'.
Absolutely. All the reports were that they were treated amazingly well and a number went back to SA. It seems the main issue and complaint was how the were treated at home and the bans they received.
 

shivfan

Banned
They certainly should have had an inkling of what they were letting themselves in for - a few years earlier in 1977 when Michael Holding was offered a AUS$25,000 a year contract by Kerry Packer - prior to that he'd been on EC$200 per test - despite those riches he still wouldn't sign up until the Jamaican PM, Michael Manley, said it was OK - his worry was that Packer had signed a few South Africans for his world XI - If Mikey, at 23, saw the potential for problems in that it must have been blindingly obvious to those on the rebel tours that trouble would follow
Players like Holding, Richards and Lloyd were very politically aware, and were strong critics of the apartheid regime before the rebel tours, so I also find it hard to believe that the players who went can claim ignorance. You just needed to share a dressing room with this trio to know how they felt about apartheid!
:cool:
However, I think the cricinfo article misses a crucial point. How many of the players really benefitted from the rebel tour? The really poor fringe players who probably 'needed' the money only got small sums, i.e. Murray, Austin, Chang, Mattis, Wynter. Two of them went mad and ended up roaming the streets, another became a drug addict, and the other two migrated to the US.

As for Moseley being a waiter, well, so were many other potential WI cricketers at the time. If Moseley had been patient, he could've ended up in the WI side. After his ban was ended, he made it, didn't he? Imagine what his career would've been like if he hadn't gone to South Africa....

Clarke and Croft had WI careers, and threw them away for what I can only say is greed. They didn't need the money. The following players didn't need the money because they could've earned it on the county circuit: Kallicharran, Lynch, Stephenson. Rowe had a decent career as a WI batsman, so as far as I can see, these players accepted the money out of greed, not need.

Players like Julien should've expected the reaction they got when they returned to the Caribbean. Did he really think he was going to get a job after that betrayal? Players like Padmore, King and Alvin Greenidge was practically at the end of their careers....

As for being treated well, on one of the rebel tours, two of the players boarded a train and went straight for the first-class department. They were comfortably seated there when an outraged ticket inspector came and roughly and loudly told those 'K*ffirs' to get the hell out of the compartment and go to the section where they belonged. They were so humiliated!
:laugh:
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
As for being treated well, on one of the rebel tours, two of the players boarded a train and went straight for the first-class department. They were comfortably seated there when an outraged ticket inspector came and roughly and loudly told those 'K*ffirs' to get the hell out of the compartment and go to the section where they belonged. They were so humiliated!
Yeah, but that incident turned into a massive scandal amongst the players and a bunch of Saffa politicians and cricket administrators bent over backwards in an effort to apologise for it. It's an anecdote that's completely unrepresentative of the experiences stated by every player on the tour. Saying they were treated well is just stating the truth, it's by no means a defence of Apartheid.
 

shivfan

Banned
Maybe it's an anecdote that was representative of the reality in apartheid South Africa, and not the window-dressing the WI rebels received on their tours....
:cool:
 

lemontree

Banned
Sorry, correction!

Lynch was only 25 at the time, but such was the backlash in the Caribbean to their tour, which was seen especially in Jamaica and Guyana as a betrayal, quite a few of them felt they had to migrate from the Caribbean. Lawrence Rowe and Colin Croft ended their cricketing careers, and moved to Florida, while Alvin Kallicharran, Franklyn Stephenson and Lynch himself moved to England where they played county cricket.



Monte did NOT move to England at 25 following the rebel tour of South Africa, he moved to England as a schoolboy, way before he played cricket professionally, so please get your facts straight.
 

shivfan

Banned
But the reaction to these guys was disgraceful and particularly in light of the fact that at least one of the guys in the "official" WI side was a shocking racist
Yeah, who's that supposed to be?
:dry:
on the contrary, considering how strong the anti-apartheid protests were in the Caribbean, I don't think the reaction to the guys was disgraceful at all. They were naive to have expected to be welcomed back into the fold....

And as for Lynch 'moving' to England as a child, it didn't stop him playing for Guyana, did it? He played for Guyana until the rebel tour, and only then did he cut his ties with the region. That was what I was talking about, so you get off your high horse, lemontree....
8-)
 

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