Ok, I'll chip in with a few comments about Boycott as well. Like many others have already said you cannot fault his technique or his record, even if it wasn't great to watch at times. I only saw him play a couple of times. One that stands out was a flowing seventy odd scored at Headingley in a one day match. I was in that old seating area directly behind the wicket at what is now the end where the flashy new pavilion stands. It was a block of a dozen rows or so elevated as if you were sitting on the roof of something. Perfect view and it was a real pleasure to watch a master batsman at work. It confirms that he WAS capable of stroke playing/fast run scoring when he needed to. The rest of the time he was the anchor which teams these days have a lot of trouble in finding. Another, more amusing, incident was in a Sunday match played at the Huddersfield cricket ground (not played there for a long time). On a windy day Geoffrey lost a contact lens and spent a considerable amount of time, in the company of umpire Dickie Bird, on his knees trying to find it. I can't remember if he was batting at the time, or turning over a few overs with his rarely seen bowling action.
That was the winter shed stand and it was the roof - I think of the Indoor nets but am not completely sure. It was a great view from up there but a bit exposed in bad weather. I might have been at the game you mentioned as I remember being at a game where Boycot was waltzing down the pitch and hitting the spinners over the top. I think he even hit a "6" - I think it might have been against Kent but its so long ago I cant be sure - it would have been around 1979 give or take a year or so
Is this the same Tendulkar that hung on for a couple of years too long to get to 100 international 100s and so he could retire after his 200th test in a specially arranged test series with a weak Windies side at home so he could get some easy runs and have a fanfare send off? It was an embarrassment to the sport.
1979 sounds about right. I was stationed at Finningley then so would have easily got up to Headingley. He was certainly playing out of character
I took this photo of Geoff in 1977 (I think) in the nets before a tour match Yorkshire against Australia at Scarborough. He was quite entertaining as I recall and surrounded by quite a crowd. The rest of the Yorkshire team practiced some distance away.... This was a team which included Lumb, Hampshire, Old, Sharpe and Cope to name but a few. Whilst I agree that Boycott was a fantastic player, he did little to inspire any team spirit and made bad captaincy decisions based upon his own ambitions.
Aye, it was awful. They must have give. the West Indies Cricket Board plenty of money to agree to it.
One other thing I can't forgive Geoff for is that despite being a local lad he chose to go and watch Leeds United instead of The Reds when he wasn't playing cricket. Unforgivable.