Richards made his
first-class debut in January 1972 when he was 19. He took part in a non-competition match, representing the Leeward Islands against the Windwards: Richards made 20 and 26. His competitive debut followed a few days later. Playing in the domestic West Indian
Shell Shield for the Combined Leeward and Windward Islands in
Kingston, Jamaica versus
Jamaica, he scored 15 and 32, top-scoring in the second innings in a heavy defeat for his team. By the time Richards was 22, he had played matches in the Antigua,
Leeward Islands and Combined Islands tournaments. In 1973, his abilities were noticed by Len Creed, Vice Chairman at
Somerset, who was in Antigua at the time as part of a
West Country touring team.
Lester Bird and
Danny Livingstone played an important part in persuading Creed to take Richards to Somerset. Surrey had earlier rejected both Richards and Andy Roberts at the Surrey Indoor Nets in late 1972. "They did not think we were good enough even to further our cricket education."
Move to England, 1973–1974 During 1973-74, Richards relocated to the United Kingdom, where Creed arranged for him to play league cricket for Lansdown C.C. in
Bath. He made his Lansdown debut, as part of the second XI, at Weston-super-Mare on 26 April 1973. Richards was also employed by the club as assistant groundsman to head groundsman John Heyward, which allowed him some financial independence until his career was established. After his debut he was promoted to the first team where he was introduced to the Lansdown all-rounder "Shandy" Perera from
Ceylon (now
Sri Lanka). Richards cites Perera as a major influence on his cricket development especially with regards to post-game analysis. He finished his first season at Lansdown top of the
batting averages and shortly afterwards was offered a two-year contract with county team Somerset.
Test debut to international stardom, 1975–1984 Richards made his
Test match debut for the
West Indian cricket team in 1974 against
India in
Bangalore. He made an unbeaten 192 in the second Test of the same series in
New Delhi. The West Indies saw him as a strong opener and he kept his profile up in the early years of his promising career. In 1975, Richards helped the West Indies win the
inaugural Cricket World Cup against Australia, a feat he later described as the most memorable of his career. He starred in the field, running out
Alan Turner,
Ian Chappell and
Greg Chappell. The West Indies were again able to win the following
World Cup in 1979, thanks to a Richards century in the
final at
Lord's. Richards believes that on both occasions, despite internal island divisions, the Caribbean came together. 1976 was perhaps Richards's finest year: he scored 1710 runs, at an astonishing average of 90.00, with seven centuries in 11 Tests. This achievement is all the more remarkable considering he missed the second Test at Lord's after contracting
glandular fever; yet he returned to score his career-best 291 at the
Oval later in the summer. This tally stood as the world record for most Test runs by a batsman in a single calendar year for 30 years until broken by
Mohammad Yousuf of
Pakistan on 30 November 2006. Richards had a long and successful career in the
County Championship in England, playing for many years for
Somerset. In 1983, the team won the
NatWest Trophy, with Richards and close friend
Ian Botham having a playful slugging match in the final few overs. Richards also starred in Somerset's victories in the finals of the
1979 Gillette Cup, and the
1981 Benson & Hedges Cup, making a century in both finals, also helping Somerset to win the
1979 John Player League and the
1982 Benson & Hedges Cup. Richards refused a "blank-cheque" offer to play for a
rebel West Indies squad in South Africa during the
Apartheid era in 1983, and again in 1984.
West Indies captain and domestic cricket, 1984–1991 Richards captained the West Indies in 50 Test matches from 1984 to 1991. He is the only
West Indies captain never to lose a Test series, and it is said that his fierce will to win contributed to this achievement. His captaincy was, however, not without controversy: one incident was his aggressive, "finger-flapping" appeal leading to the incorrect dismissal of England batsman
Rob Bailey in the Barbados Test in 1990, which was described by
Wisden as "at best undignified and unsightly. At worst, it was calculated gamesmanship". This behaviour would nowadays be penalised according to Section 2.5. of the Rules of Conduct of the
ICC Code of Conduct. During a match against
Zimbabwe during the
1983 Cricket World Cup, Richards returned to the crease after a stoppage for bad light and accidentally took strike at the wrong end, which remains a very rare occurrence. Richards continued to thrive in international cricket. He became the only man to score a century and take 5 wickets in the same one-day international when he played against New Zealand at
Dunedin in 1986–87 - a feat that wasn't broken until 2005. Moreover, in 1984, he rescued his team from a perilous position of 166/9 at
Old Trafford in a partnership with
Michael Holding for the 10th and final wicket, smashing 189 leading West Indies to a total of 272/9 and winning the game off his own bat. This is widely regarded as one of the greatest ODI innings of all time. For his domestic appearances, Richards had joined
Somerset in 1974. There, he made his highest
first-class score, 322, when they played
Warwickshire in 1985. However, despite his
totemic presence at Somerset, over time his performances declined as he devoted most of his time to international cricket. The county finished bottom of the
County Championship in 1985, and next to bottom in 1986. In 1988, the county was surrounded by controversy when Somerset's new captain
Peter Roebuck became an instrumental piece in the decision not to renew the contracts of Richards and his West Indies teammate
Joel Garner, whose runs and wickets had brought the county much success in the previous eight years. Somerset proposed to replace the pair with New Zealand batsman
Martin Crowe. Consequently, Ian Botham refused a new contract with Somerset in protest at the way his friends Richards and Garner had been treated and promptly joined
Worcestershire. After many years of bitterness over the event and the eventual removal of Roebuck from the club, Richards was eventually honoured with the naming of a set of entrance gates after him at the
County Ground, Taunton. In November 1988, while
on tour of Australia with the West Indies, Richards became the first West Indies player to reach 100
first-class centuries by scoring 101 against
New South Wales. Richards remains the only West Indies player to achieve this milestone, and among non-England qualified players only
Don Bradman (117) scored more first-class centuries than Richards's 114. Richards returned to county cricket for the 1990 season towards the end of his career to play for
Glamorgan, helping them to win the
AXA Sunday League in 1993. ==After cricket==