Ray Illingworth played 61 tests for England between 1958 and 1973.© Twitter
Former England captain Ray Illingworth has died at the age of 89, his county of Yorkshire announced on Saturday. “We are deeply saddened to learn that Ray Illingworth has passed away,” the county wrote on its Twitter account. He had undergone radiotherapy for esophageal cancer. Illingworth played 61 Tests for England between 1958 and 1973 and captained the country 31 times, winning 12 games and an Ashes series in Australia in 1970-1. He was an all-rounder who scored 1,836 test runs at an average of 23.24 and claimed 122 wickets with his offspin bowling at 31.20. He was chairman of the England selectors between 1993 and 1996 and coached the team in 1995-1996.
We are deeply saddened to learn that Ray Illingworth has passed away.
Our thoughts are with Ray’s family and the wider Yorkshire family whom Ray held so dear in their hearts #OneRose pic.twitter.com/nvQa2f7RMz
— Yorkshire CCC (@YorkshireCCC) December 25, 2021
Illingworth’s wife, Shirley, died earlier this year after battling cancer and Illingworth had supported changes in the death assistance law.
“I don’t want to have the last 12 months my wife had,” he said. “She had a terrible time going from hospital to hospital and was in pain.”
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Illingworth made his debut for his native country in 1955 and played for them until 1968 before concluding his career with Leicestershire. He was captain of both provinces.
“Illingworth’s greatest gift as captain was to create the illusion that he had 14 or 15 players on the field: he so skillfully blocked a batsman’s favorable scoring shots,” according to specialist website Cricinfo.
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