As a cricketer, Frank Worrell mesmerised spectators with his stylish play, his elegance and
his classy strokes – an artist in a realm replete with talent. Apart from that finesse on the field, he epitomised the
sporting characteristics associated with the finer aspects of the game: the spirit of cricket. He relentlessly advocated for
more equitable playing conditions; rebuking the many discriminatory practices that still plague sport.
He was the first black man to be officially appointed West Indian captain for the famous 1960–61 tour of Australia,
but he had been regarded as its de facto leader throughout the 1950s. What set Worrell apart was his natural air of
authority. He did not need to be in a leadership position to manifest it, and this characteristic defined his life. By
the time his international playing days were over after his final Test in England in 1963, he had become an icon as
a West Indian leader, whose qualities of grace and wisdom framed him as the ideal representative of a society still
constructing its identity.
While this biography looks at his cricket, its primary focus is examining the nature of this enigmatic and charismatic
figure, whose personal journey altered many of the existing concepts of what it meant to be West Indian. For much of
his career he was plagued by insecurities and haunted by traumas, embittered by inequities within the social structures
that dominated regional life. Yet he was a natural mentor, who generously shared his wisdom and experience with
everyone who came into his sphere. If contemporary cricketers and administrators could have access to the kind of
unconventional coaching he provided, it would make a world of difference to the approach to development, especially
within the West Indies.
All around the Caribbean, monuments have been erected to celebrate him, yet given the amnesiac quality of memory,
it is likely that they stand in name only, without context, for a generation whose history has practically disappeared
without a trace of its legacy. This biography, a result of years of research, will shed some light on the life and legacy of
Sir Frank Mortimer Maglinne Worrell, and his impact on a world that needs heroes more than ever.