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Curtly Ambrose

Sir Curtly Elconn Lynwall Ambrose KCN (born 21 September 1963) is an Antiguan former cricketer who played 98 Test matches for the West Indies. Widely acknowledged as one of the greatest fast bowlers of all time, he took 405 Test wickets at an average of 20.99 and topped the ICC Player Rankings for much of his career to be rated the best bowler in the world. His great height—he is 6 feet 7 inches (2.01 m) tall—allowed him to make the ball bounce unusually high after he delivered it; allied to his pace and accuracy, it made him a very difficult bowler for batsmen to face. A man of few words during his career, he was notoriously reluctant to speak to journalists. He was chosen as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1992; after he retired he was entered into the International Cricket Council Hall of Fame and selected as one of West Indies all-time XI by a panel of experts.

Curtly Ambrose
Personal information
Full name
Curtly Elconn Lynwall Ambrose
Born (1963-09-21) 21 September 1963 (age 59)
Swetes, Antigua and Barbuda
Height201 cm (6 ft 7 in)
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast
RoleBowler
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 192)2 April 1988 v Pakistan
Last Test31 August 2000 v England
ODI debut (cap 53)12 March 1988 v Pakistan
Last ODI23 April 2000 v Pakistan
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1985–2000Leeward Islands
1989–1996Northamptonshire
1998–1999Antigua and Barbuda
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 98 176 239 329
Runs scored 1,439 639 3,448 1,282
Batting average 12.40 10.65 13.95 11.98
100s/50s 0/1 0/0 0/4 0/0
Top score 53 31* 78 48
Balls bowled 22,103 9,353 48,798 17,143
Wickets 405 225 941 401
Bowling average 20.99 24.12 20.24 23.83
5 wickets in innings 22 4 50 4
10 wickets in match 3 0 8 0
Best bowling 8/45 5/17 8/45 5/17
Catches/stumpings 18/0 45/0 88/0 82/0
Source: Cricinfo, 24 October 2012

Born in Swetes, Antigua, Ambrose came to cricket at a relatively late age, having preferred basketball in his youth, but quickly made an impression as a fast bowler. Progressing through regional and national teams, he was first chosen for the West Indies in 1988. He was almost immediately successful and remained in the team until his retirement in 2000. On many occasions, his bowling spells were responsible for winning matches for West Indies which seemed lost, in association with Courtney Walsh. Against Australia in 1993, he bowled one of the greatest bowling spells of all time, when he took seven wickets while conceding a single run, hence taking figures of 7/1 for the first spell of the match. Similarly, in 1994 he was largely responsible for bowling England out for 46 runs, taking six wickets for 24 runs. He is regarded as one of the greatest match-winning bowlers of all time.

Ambrose's bowling method relied on accuracy and conceding few runs; several of his best performances came when he took wickets in quick succession to devastate the opposition. He was particularly successful against leading batsmen. From 1995, Ambrose was increasingly affected by injury, and several times critics claimed that he was no longer effective. However, he continued to take wickets regularly up until his retirement, although he was sometimes less effective in the early matches of a series. In his final years, the West Indies team was in decline and often relied heavily on Ambrose and Walsh; both men often bowled with little support from the other bowlers. Following his retirement, Ambrose has pursued a career in music as the bass guitarist in a reggae band.

Early life and career

Ambrose was born in Swetes, Antigua on 21 September 1963,[1] the fourth of seven children. His father was a carpenter from a village.[2] The family had no background in cricket,[2] but his mother was a fan,[3] and Ambrose played in his youth, primarily as a batsman. At school, he performed well academically, particularly in mathematics and French, and became an apprentice carpenter upon leaving at the age of 17.[2][3] He briefly considered emigrating to America.[4] At the time, his favourite sport was basketball, although he occasionally umpired cricket matches. Ambrose was not particularly tall until he reached his late teens, when he grew several inches to reach a height of 6 feet 7 inches (2.01 m). Around this time, his mother encouraged him to become more involved in cricket.[3] Success as a fast bowler in a softball cricket match persuaded Ambrose to play in some club matches at the age of 20. He quickly attracted the attention of coaches and progressed to the St John's cricket team.[2] Selected in the Leeward Islands competition, he took seven for 67 (seven wickets for 67 runs) for Antigua against St Kitts.[5] He made his first-class debut for the Leeward Islands in 1985–86 and took four wickets in the game,[4] but failed to retain his place the following year.

A Viv Richards scholarship provided funding for him to play club cricket in England for Chester Boughton Hall Cricket Club in the highly rated Liverpool Competition during 1986 where he took 84 wickets at an average of 9.80. The following year, he returned to England to play for Heywood Cricket Club in the Central Lancashire League, for whom he took 115 wickets in the season; these experiences helped to improve his bowling technique.[2]

Upon his return to Antigua, Ambrose practised intensely,[2] regained his place in the Leeward Islands team and, in the absence of leading bowlers Winston Benjamin and Eldine Baptiste with the West Indies team, became the main attacking bowler in the side.[2] He was no-balled for throwing in the first match, which Wisden Cricketers' Almanack later attributed to confusion caused by his attribute of flicking his wrist prior to releasing the ball to impart extra pace, and there were no subsequent doubts about the legality of his bowling action.[4] Retaining his place when the international bowlers returned, he took 35 wickets—including 12 in a match against Guyana, of which nine were bowled—in five matches in the competition.[2][5] Wisden's report on the West Indian season said his performance was "dominant", although few had heard of him previously. Identifying his yorker as his most effective delivery, it noted that he "never lost his pace, his accuracy, or his thirst for wickets".[6]

International bowler

Debut and first years

When Pakistan toured the West Indies in 1988, Ambrose played in the One Day International (ODI) series, taking the place of the recently retired Joel Garner.[5] He made his debut during the first match, on 12 March 1988 in Kingston, Jamaica, taking wickets with his third and ninth deliveries; he ended the innings with four for 39 from 10 overs. In the second match, he took four for 35 and followed with another two wickets in the third. West Indies won those first three matches to take the series, and Ambrose did not play in the fourth or fifth game.[7] In the Test series which followed, Ambrose was less effective. In the first Test, he took two for 121 as West Indies lost at home for the first time in 10 years.[8] Wisden noted that his debut was "unimpressive", but that he improved in the subsequent matches.[9] He finished the series with seven wickets at an average of over 50 runs per wicket.[5] Later that year, Ambrose was chosen to tour England. After appearing in early tour games, he was chosen for the first two ODIs, taking three wickets in total, but was omitted from the third.[10] In the Test series, he played in all five matches to take 22 wickets at an average of 20.22; his best figures of four for 58 came in the fourth Test, in which he took seven wickets and was named man of the match.[11] Writing in Wisden, commentator Tony Cozier described Ambrose as "a ready-made replacement for Garner"; the amount of bounce he generated after the ball pitched "made him a constant menace".[12]

In 1988–89, West Indies took part in an ODI tournament in Sharjah. Ambrose took 8 wickets,[13] and was man of the match with four for 29 when West Indies defeated Pakistan in the final.[14] From there, West Indies travelled to Australia for a series in which Ambrose was a dominant figure. The West Indies won the Test series 3–1, using controversial short-pitched bowling tactics. Ambrose's height made him difficult to play as he made the ball bounce more than other bowlers. Writing in Wisden, John Woodcock noted: "As in England, earlier in 1988, Ambrose's bowling was a telling factor ... [His] advance compensated for something of a decline in [Malcolm] Marshall's effectiveness".[15] In the first Test, he took seven wickets; in the second, he took five wickets in a Test innings for the first time with five for 72, and finished with eight in the game; and in the third, he took six wickets.[16] His performances earned him man of the match award in the first and third games,[17] and he ended the series with 26 wickets at an average of 21.46. He was West Indies' leading wicket-taker and headed the team bowling averages.[18] In the ODI tournament that took place during the tour, West Indies defeated Australia in the final;[15] Ambrose took 21 wickets in the series and twice took five wickets in an innings.[13]

Suffering from fatigue and illness,[19] Ambrose was less successful later in 1989 when India toured the West Indies: he took just five wickets in the four-Test series at an average of 54.60.[20]

County cricketer and success against England

Ambrose made his debut in the English County Championship for Northamptonshire County Cricket Club in 1989—the club signed him for the 1988 season but as he was playing in the West Indies touring team, he was unavailable that year.[21] He took a wicket with his first delivery for the club, but was not particularly successful in the first part of the season; he settled down later and took 28 first-class wickets at 28.39 for Northamptonshire in nine games.[22]

Early in 1990, England toured the West Indies and played four Tests—a fifth was abandoned owing to rain. The visiting team dominated the first part of the series but West Indies eventually won 2–1.[23] Ambrose was unfit for the first Test, which West Indies lost, and the first four ODIs, but returned to take four for 18 in an ODI organised to replace the rained-off second Test.[24] After a drawn third Test, West Indies won the fourth game. The home captain, Viv Richards, set England 356 to win, but after losing early wickets, the English batsmen entered the last hour of the game with five wickets still to fall.[25] Ambrose took the new ball and removed the last five batsmen for 18 runs in 46 deliveries,[26] four of them leg before wicket. He finished with figures of eight for 45, ten wickets in the match, and West Indies levelled the series with a 164-run win. Ambrose was man of the match.[25] He took six wickets in the final match,[16] to finish the series with 20 wickets at 15.35, finishing top of the West Indies' averages. Ambrose, along with the other home bowlers, was described by Alan Lee in Wisden as an "awesome handful in the latter part of the series", and described his match-winning spell in the fourth Test as "unforgettable".[23] Ambrose's other appearances for West Indies in 1989–90 were all in ODIs, although he did not take more than two wickets in any innings except in the match against England.[13][16] He also took 22 first-class wickets for the Leeward Islands,[27] and when he returned to England to play for Northamptonshire in 1990, took 58 first-class wickets to top the club's bowling averages.[28] In one-day cricket for the county, he took 13 wickets while conceding an average of just 2.53 runs per over.[29]

Leading bowler in the world

Series against Australia and England

West Indies toured Pakistan in late 1990, and Ambrose topped the team's bowling averages in a three-match series which was drawn 1–1. He took 14 wickets at 17.07,[30] but was overshadowed slightly by the performances of Ian Bishop.[31] He played the first two ODIs, but missed the third after Pakistan had already won the series, and his best figures in the Tests came in the final match when he took five for 35.[32] Then, when Australia toured West Indies from February 1991, Ambrose took 18 wickets in the five Tests at an average of 27.38. West Indies won the series 2–1, and Ambrose was fourth in the averages,[33] but Tony Cozier observed in Wisden that the whole West Indies attack was dependable.[34] Ambrose made an impression batting as part of a West Indian lower batting order which repeatedly added crucial runs during the series. He took part in two important partnerships to help his team recover from a difficult situation,[34] and in the third match, he scored his only half-century in Tests.[16] He also took 20 first-class wickets for Leeward Islands.[35]

West Indies' next matches were in England. The Test series was drawn 2–2 and Ambrose was the team's leading wicket-taker with 28 (averaging 20.00); he also came top of the bowling averages.[36] He had a particular impact on Graeme Hick, who was appearing in Test cricket for the first time, dismissing him six times in seven innings with short-pitched bowling. Accurate bowling was important in the series, played on a series of slow-paced pitches; according to Scyld Berry, writing in Wisden, "Since the 1988 tour, Ambrose had improved his control to the point where a batsman had to play almost every ball—and not with a scoring stroke, either".[37] Berry suggests that West Indies may have won the series had Viv Richards used a different tactical approach with Ambrose's bowling. The bowler was not fully fit in the final Test, which may have affected the outcome. Berry describes "Ambrose's rise to the status of a giant—with the mannerism of celebrating each wicket by whirling his arms upwards, like a flock of doves taking to the air."[37] Ambrose twice took five wickets in an innings—his best figures were six for 52 in the first Test, when he twice took wickets with consecutive deliveries.[16][38] Ambrose was named man-of the-match in the third Test and adjudged West Indies man-of-the-series.[39] For his performances, Ambrose was named one of Wisden's Cricketers of the Year. The citation remarked on his consistency and stated: "Ambrose has the ability to exert a debilitating psychological influence which so often precipitates a cluster of wickets after the initial breach has been made ... Moreover, he was arguably the essential difference between the two sides in what proved to be a zestful series."[4] The West Indies wicket-keeper, Jeff Dujon, said: "He is mature beyond his years, has pace, accuracy, heart and determination, plus, importantly, real pride in economical figures."[4]

Victory against South Africa

 
Courtney Walsh, Ambrose's bowling partner in many Test matches

During the 1991–92 season, West Indies played mainly one-day cricket, taking part in tournaments in Sharjah[40]—where Ambrose took seven wickets, including an analysis of five for 53[13]—and Australia,[41] and took part in the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. In this tournament, Ambrose took seven wickets in seven games at an average of 33.57 and was the seventh most economical bowler among those who played more than one game.[42] West Indies finished sixth in the qualifying table and failed to reach the semi-finals.[43] Ambrose returned home to play twice for the Leeward Islands in January 1992.[16]

In April 1992, South Africa toured West Indies for the first time,[44] and played their first Test match for 22 years.[45] Ambrose played in all three ODIs, all of which were won by West Indies.[46] The Test match was the first time West Indies bowled under a new playing regulation which permitted only one bouncer per over; this seemed to affect the home bowlers,[47] but Ambrose took two for 47 from 36 overs.[16] South Africa began the final day of the match requiring 79 runs to win with just two batsmen out, but Ambrose and Courtney Walsh took the last eight wickets for 26 runs to bowl West Indies to a 52-run win.[47] On a difficult pitch for batting, the ball bounced unevenly, and both bowlers concentrated on accuracy.[45] Ambrose took six for 34 in the second innings, and was named joint man of the match; in just over 60 overs, he took eight for 81 in the match.[47]

Returning to play for Northamptonshire, he was less effective. Hampered by a knee injury, which necessitated surgery after the English season, and suffering from many dropped catches, he took 50 first-class wickets at an average of 26.14, but his performance compared unfavourably with other bowlers on the team. He was more effective in the NatWest Trophy, a one-day competition that Northamptonshire won that season, in which he conceded fewer than two runs per over across five games.[48]

Second tour of Australia

The West Indies toured Australia in 1992–93, recovering from losing the second Test to win the final two matches and take the series 2–1. The team also won the annual World Series Cup. In the first three Tests, Ambrose was hampered by pitches which did not suit his bowling and, according to Tony Cozier writing in Wisden, was often unlucky when he bowled,[49] although he took five for 66 in the first Test.[16] In the final two Tests, he took 19 wickets.[49] In the fourth he took ten wickets, including six for 74 in the first innings; in the second innings, he took three wickets in 19 deliveries and the West Indies won the match by one run. According to Cozier, the captains of both teams, Richie Richardson and Allan Border, "paid tribute to the man who made the result possible: Ambrose consolidated his reputation as the world's leading bowler".[50] On the first day of the decisive final Test, Ambrose took seven wickets at the cost of one run from 32 deliveries and finished with figures of seven for 25. Cozier described it as "one of Test cricket's most devastating spells".[51] West Indies won by an innings and Ambrose was named man of the series,[51] having taken 33 wickets to equal the record in an Australia-West Indies Test series. He topped the West Indian bowling averages with an average of 16.42.[49] Cozier described Ambrose's performance as "instrumental in winning [the series]" and his bowling as "flawless".[49]

In the one-day tournament, Ambrose took 18 wickets at 13.38.[13] He took eight wickets in the two-match final—both games were won by the West Indies.[49] In the first final, he took five for 32, driven to bowl with more hostility when the Australian batsman Dean Jones asked him to remove his white wristbands while bowling. He followed up with three for 26 in the second match to be named player of the finals.[52] After a one-day tournament in South Africa, West Indies returned home for Test and ODI series against Pakistan. The ODI series was drawn,[13][53] but the West Indies defeated Pakistan 2–0 in the Tests. Ambrose took nine wickets at 23.11 to be fifth in the team bowling averages. The Wisden report suggested that he was suffering from fatigue after his team's busy schedule, but although not at his best, he continued to take important wickets.[53] For Northamptonshire in 1993, Ambrose was second in the team first-class bowling averages with 59 wickets at 20.45.[54]

Having developed a slower ball, and using the yorker more sparingly,[55] Ambrose took five wickets in three games as West Indies won an ODI tournament in Sharjah in late October and November 1993.[13][56] The team competed in another tournament, this time in India, later that November. They finished as runners-up, and Ambrose took four wickets in five matches.[13][57] Immediately following this, West Indies toured Sri Lanka to play three ODIs and a Test, a rain-ruined match in which Ambrose took three wickets.[58]

More success against England

 
Ambrose took six for 24 to bowl England out for 46 at Queen's Park Oval, Trinidad.

When he returned to the West Indies, Ambrose took 19 first-class wickets for the Leeward Islands at an average of 11.68,[59] in his first appearances for the islands in two years,[16] but as England arrived to tour West Indies, he complained of fatigue and there were rumours he planned to retire.[60] He played in three times in the five-match ODI series, taking two wickets, and took a further two wickets in the first Test, which West Indies won.[13][61] In Wisden, Alan Lee described his performances at this time as "lethargic",[62] and in the Guardian, Paul Allott wrote that he bowled "like a shadow" owing to the effects of continuous cricket.[60] Ambrose was ineffective at the start of the second Test, but recovered,[60] ending the match with eight wickets;[16] according to Lee, he "struck the critical blows of the match" in the first innings.[61] In the third Test, played in Trinidad, he took five for 60 in England's first innings, but after the visiting team built a substantial lead, West Indies were bowled out to leave England needing 194 to win and an hour to bat on the fourth evening. Ambrose took six wickets to leave England 40 for eight at the close of play; the next morning, they were bowled out for 46 and Ambrose had figures of six for 24 in the innings and match figures of 11 for 84;[63] he was named man of the match. Lee described the collapse as "staggering", and judged Ambrose bowling to be "of the highest calibre". He continued: "He delivered one of the most devastating spells of even his career."[63] Allott called it "the definitive spell of fast bowling".[60]

Ambrose took four wickets in the fourth Test, but West Indies lost the match, their first defeat in Barbados for 59 years, and Ambrose was fined £1,000 by the match referee for knocking down his stumps in frustration when he was the last man out.[64] He took one more wicket in the drawn final Test to finish the series with 26 wickets and top the West Indian bowling averages.[16][65] Writing in Wisden, Lee summarised Ambrose's performances: "Ambrose was magnificent. He was deservedly named man of the series, not only for taking 26 wickets at an average of 19.96 apiece and winning the Trinidad Test single-handed, but for the more profound truth that West Indies now look to him whenever they need wickets ... [He] carried the attack alone".[66]

Ambrose returned to play for Northamptonshire in 1994, but arrived later than scheduled. Claiming to need a rest,[67] he missed his scheduled flight and arrived four days late.[68] His absence may have contributed to Northamptonshire's elimination in the preliminary stages of the Benson and Hedges Cup.[69] At the time, members of the county were unhappy with Ambrose's performances for the team;[67] the committee fined him, and he expressed contrition.[70] During the remainder of the season, he bowled extremely effectively to take 77 first-class wickets, the most for the club in 18 years, at an average of 14.45 to top the national bowling averages. According to Andrew Radd in Wisden, the club were mollified by his success, but he wrote: "Rarely in Northamptonshire's history have the performances and the personality of one cricketer dominated a season to the extent that Curtly Ambrose did in 1994."[68] Ambrose missed the final match of the season with a shoulder problem.[68]

Apparent decline

Shoulder injury

Ambrose's shoulder injury, caused by his bowling workload,[71] caused him to miss the West Indies' tour of India in the last three months of 1994.[72] Although he returned to join the tour of New Zealand in early 1995, he did not reach his full bowling pace; he took one wicket in the ODI series and five in the two Test matches.[16][73] He remained in the team when Australia toured the Caribbean later in 1995; the West Indies lost the Test series 2–1, their first defeat in a Test series since 1980.[74] After taking two wickets in four ODIs,[75] Ambrose took 13 wickets at 19.84 in the four-Test series to lead the West Indian averages.[76] He took nine of these wickets in Trinidad during the third Test, when West Indies levelled the series having lost the first Test (the second was drawn).[77] Bowling on a pitch that was extremely difficult for batting, and which both teams considered to be unsatisfactory, Ambrose took nine for 65 in the match and was named man of the match. During the game, Ambrose had to be pulled away from a verbal confrontation with Steve Waugh by the captain, Richardson.[78] But outside of this match, the Australian team judged his bowling to have declined in pace following his shoulder injury, and that he lacked the variety to adapt to a different role.[79] The West Indies' cricket manager, former Test bowler Andy Roberts, publicly claimed during the series that several of his team possessed "attitude problems", and complained that the fast bowlers would not follow his advice.[80]

During the tour of England which followed, Ambrose did not take a wicket in the three-match ODI series; according to journalist Simon Barnes, both Ambrose and the team lacked confidence following their defeat by Australia; he lacked rhythm and displayed signs of frustration and unhappiness.[81] He was more effective in the Test series, and according to Tony Cozier in Wisden, "was always captable of a spell of incisive, quality bowling".[82] But he was affected by injury throughout the six-match series; he withdrew injured from the third Test having bowled fewer than eight overs and missed the fifth Test completely.[82] Other bowlers in the team overshadowed Ambrose, and it was not until the final Test that he reached his most effective form in taking five for 96 in the first innings and seven wickets in the match.[71][83] Waving to the crowd as he left the field on the final day with an injury, Ambrose seemed to indicate that he would not tour England again.[82][83] He ended the series third in the bowling averages with 21 wickets at 24.09.[84] But according to Cozier, the senior players in the team caused problems for the management, and when the players returned home, Ambrose and three other members of the team were fined 10 per cent of their tour fee—in Ambrose's case, the fine was for "general failings of behaviour and attitude",[85] and setting a bad example to younger team-mates.[86]

Along with other senior players, Ambrose was rested from West Indies' next tour, an ODI tournament in October 1995,[87] but he returned to play in a three-team ODI tournament in Australia in December and January.[88] However, affected by the refusal of Brian Lara to tour following after being fined for his behaviour during the tour of England, the team failed to qualify for the final.[89] Ambrose took ten wickets in the tournament, and took three wickets in consecutive innings; in the latter game, he was man of the match.[90] West Indies were more successful in the World Cup in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka which began in February. They reached the semi-finals, losing to Australia.[91] Ambrose was man of the match with three for 28 in his team's opening match,[91] and took ten wickets at 17.00 in the competition. He conceded an average of just three runs per over for the tournament, the second best among those who played in more than two games.[92] In March, Ambrose played in a home series against New Zealand. In the five match ODI series, 10 wickets at 17.60, including four for 36 in the opening game.[13][16] He took eight wickets in the two-Test series at an average of 20.50, leading the team averages,[93] and took five for 68 in the second match.[16] During the English cricket season, he returned to Northamptonshire and took 43 wickets in nine games to lead the national bowling averages, but he missed several matches with recurring injuries and his contract was not renewed for the following year. He was replaced by the much younger Mohammad Akram as overseas player.[94]

Team in decline

Following Australia's victory in 1994–95, when West Indies toured Australia in 1996–97 the series was heavily publicised as a re-match. However, the visiting team were often ineffective, continuing a trend of decline, and depended heavily on their senior players, one of whom was Ambrose. He began the series poorly, continuing a pattern established in several preceding series, and critics suggested that he was no longer effective.[95] After taking only three wickets in the first two Tests, both of which were lost by West Indies,[16] Ambrose told his team-mates that he would take ten wickets in the third. On a difficult pitch for batting, he managed to take nine in the match, including three in the first hour of the game, despite struggling with a hamstring injury. West Indies won, and Ambrose was named man of the match,[96] but he missed the fourth Test with an injury. Writing in Wisden, Greg Baum suggested that Ambrose absence possibly affected the outcome of the series; Australia won easily to ensure they won the series.[95] Ambrose returned for the final match, and on another difficult batting pitch, took five for 43 on the first day. West Indies won and Ambrose was again man of the match.[97] He led the West Indies bowling averages with 19 wickets at 23.36,[98] but had been the driving factor in West Indies' two wins.[95] Ambrose also played in an ODI tournament during the tour of Australia, taking nine wickets at 27.33.[13] Later in the season, between March and May 1997, India toured West Indies; Ambrose took ten wickets at 30.10 in the Test series, including five for 87 in the second Test, but was no longer the home team's most effective bowler.[16][99] Then in June, Sri Lanka played a two-Test series, won 1–0 by West Indies. In the first, Ambrose took five for 37 in the first innings, and eight wickets in the game, to be named man of the match. This included his 300th wicket in Test matches; he was the 12th bowler, and fourth West Indian, to reach this landmark.[100] Ambrose also played five ODIs during the West Indies home season, taking nine wickets.[13]

West Indies' loss of form continued in late 1997 when they lost every international match during their tour of Pakistan.[101] Ambrose played in two out of West Indies' three matches in an ODI tournament, taking one wicket,[13] but his performance in taking one wicket in the two Test matches he played—he missed the third match with injury—prompted Fazeer Mohammed, writing in Wisden, to describe Ambrose as "a shadow of his former self".[101] Any danger that Ambrose might have retired after this series was forestalled when Brian Lara was appointed West Indies captain and immediately spoke to Ambrose and Walsh to ask them to continue in the team.[102] When England toured the West Indies between January and April 1998,[16] he took 30 wickets at 14.26 to top the bowling averages for the series.[note 1][104] Many of the pitches during the tour were poor for batting, but Ambrose was very effective, particularly in the second, third and fourth Tests. In addition, he dismissed Mike Atherton, the England captain, six times in the series. Scyld Berry wrote in Wisden that Ambrose was "back to something near his peak form ... [He] defied every prediction that he was finished after his tour of Pakistan."[103] In the second Test, Ambrose took eight wickets; he conceded only 23 runs from 26 overs in the first innings and bowled a spell of five wickets for 16 runs from 47 deliveries in the second to complete figures of five for 52.[105] Having won the second match, West Indies lost the third, but according to Matthew Engel, "Ambrose's abiding power was the most constant feature of a fluctuating match".[106] His eight wickets in the game, including five for 25 in the first innings, took him past fifty Test wickets in Trinidad.[106] He followed up with six wickets in West Indies victory in the fourth Test, taking four for 38 in the final innings. Tony Cozier wrote that Ambrose "thundered in, arms and knees pumping like pistons, to generate all of his old pace."[107] Following the Test series, which West Indies won 3–1, Ambrose played in the first three matches of the ODI series,[108] and took three wickets.[13]

Final years of career

Ambrose and Walsh missed the Mini World Cup ODI tournament in October 1998,[109] in Ambrose's case following damage to his house caused by Hurricane Georges.[110] They returned to the team for West Indies' first ever tour of South Africa, and Ambrose took 13 wickets in the series at an average of 23.76, but West Indies lost every game of the five-match series.[111] In the first Test match, Ambrose and Walsh bowled effectively but lacked support from the other members of the attack.[112] In the second Test, the pair again lacked support, but bowled well. The visiting team generally bowled too many bouncers to be effective, but Ambrose took eight wickets in the game, including six for 51 in the second innings.[113] He was ineffective in the third Test,[114] and despite bowling what Geoffrey Dean in Wisden called a "superb opening spell", could not prevent South Africa building up a large total against an attack lacking two other main bowlers.[115] Ambrose pulled out of the attack himself later in the innings with a back injury,[116] and did not bowl in the second innings.[115] He missed the final Test with a hamstring injury.[117] He was fit to play in the first six games of a seven-match ODI series, won 6–1 by South Africa, and took six wickets.[13][118] In March 1999,[16] West Indies then faced Australia in a home series, and contrary to expectations, West Indies drew the series 2–2. The outcome of the series was decided by a small group of players, including Ambrose, whom Mike Coward described in Wisden as "five of the most distinguished cricketers of all time".[119] Ambrose took 19 wickets at 22.26, second to Walsh in the averages.[120] His best figures came in the fourth and final Test, when he took five for 94 in the first innings and eight wickets in the match,[121] but in the third match, although he only took four wickets in total, Coward described Ambrose as "rampant" and wrote that Steve Waugh, who scored 199, had to survive "some extraordinary pace bowling from Ambrose".[122] He played four of the ODIs which followed in April, taking three wickets.[13] The following month, Ambrose took part in the 1999 World Cup in England, and he was the second most economical bowler in the tournament in conceding an average 2.35 runs per over while taking seven wickets at 13.42.[123] West Indies went out in the group stages, and Matthew Engel suggested that the bowlers were tired and judged the team "outright failures".[124]

Following the World Cup, the West Indian selectors chose to rest Ambrose, along with Walsh, from alternate ODI tournaments. Ambrose consequently missed two ODI series, but in October 1999 he played two ODIs in a series against Bangladesh in Dhaka and three in a tournament in Sharjah.[13][125] In the latter competition, Ambrose conceded five runs from ten overs against Sri Lanka, the second most economical bowling figures from a full allocation of 10 overs in all ODIs.[126] However, in all five matches, he took just one wicket,[13] and he injured his elbow in Sharjah which forced him to miss West Indies' tour of New Zealand which began in December.[127] Ambrose recovered in time to play for the Leeward Island in domestic cricket, taking 31 wickets at 12.03 in seven first-class games.[128] When Zimbabwe toured the West Indies, he returned to the West Indies team to be named man of the match in the first Test—Zimbabwe were bowled out for 63 when chasing 99 runs to win.[129] He took a wicket in the second and final Test,[16] and four wickets in six matches during a three-way ODI series also involving Zimbabwe and Pakistan.[13] These were his final ODIs; in 176 matches, he took 225 wickets at an average of 24.12 and conceding 3.48 runs per over.[1] Pakistan subsequently played a three-Test series against West Indies; in his last home series, Ambrose took 11 wickets at 19.90 to head the West Indian bowling averages.[130]

Before his next series, a five-match series in England, Ambrose announced that he would retire after the final Test,[131] although the president of the West Indies Cricket Board unavailingly tried to persuade him to continue for a little longer.[132] West Indies lost the series 3–1, Tony Cozier, reviewing the series, suggested that only Ambrose and Walsh of the West Indian team emerged from the series with any credit. The other bowlers were ineffective, and Ambrose publicly commented during the series on the lack of support that he and Walsh received.[133] He was second in the averages to Walsh with 17 wickets at 18.64.[134] After taking just one wicket in the first Test, although Martin Johnson, in Wisden, suggested he bowled very well,[135] Ambrose took five wickets in the second Test but was again unlucky as the batsmen were beaten by many deliveries that he bowled.[136] After this match, Ambrose returned to the West Indies having been rested from an ODI tournament involving England and Zimbabwe.[137][138] He took four wickets in the first innings of both the third and fourth Tests,[16] passing 400 wickets in the latter match.[139] After he took three wickets in his final Test match, the crowd gave him a standing ovation and the England players formed a guard-of-honour when he came out to bat.[140][141] In 98 Test matches, he took 405 wickets at an average of 20.99;[1] according to Mike Selvey, in Swetes, his mother rang a bell each time he took a Test wicket.[142]

Having retired from cricket, Ambrose has concentrated on music, playing with several bands.[1][143] He played bass guitar with the reggae band Big Bad Dread and the Baldhead; one fellow band member was his former team-mate Richie Richardson.[144] Ambrose was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Nation (KCN) by the Antiguan Barbudan government on 28 February 2014, alongside Richardson and Andy Roberts.[145]

Style and technique

Mike Selvey wrote in The Guardian in 1991 that Ambrose had "the sort of easy, repetitive, no-sweat action which is the key to unyielding accuracy. There is no respite and all his other qualities are byproducts."[146] At his peak, Ambrose did not rely on pronounced swing or seam movement of the ball. Instead, he repeatedly bowled into the same areas of the pitch and the height from which he delivered the ball made him extremely difficult to face. The ball bounced sharply after pitching, sometimes deviating slightly from a straight line after pitching on the seam, and frequently took the edge of the batsman's bat to be caught behind the wicket.[142] His 1992 citation as Wisden Cricketer of the Year states that he had "outright pace and he generates a disconcerting, steepling bounce from fuller-length deliveries ... His height and a slender, sinewy wrist contribute greatly to the final velocity [of the ball], the wrist snapping forward at the instant of release to impart extra thrust".[4] Writing in 2001 following Ambrose's retirement, Michael Atherton, whom Ambrose dismissed more often than any other batsman, said: "At his best, there is no doubt that [Ambrose] moved beyond the fine line that separates the great from the very good. Quality bowlers essentially need two of three things: pace, movement and accuracy. Ambrose had all three."[147]

Ambrose's height, and the accuracy with which he bowled, made it difficult for batsmen to play forward to the ball; instead they were forced to play with their weight going back. His accuracy meant that he was effective if the pitch favoured batsmen.[146] He bowled an effective yorker,[4] and unlike other fast bowlers, used short-pitched deliveries sparingly,[148] although he could bowl a hostile bouncer,[4] and concentrated on bowling a full-length aimed at the wickets.[148] Ambrose rarely engaged in verbal sparring with batsmen, although in later years he occasionally inspected the pitch in an area close to the batsman before an innings began and rubbed his hands to suggest that he would enjoy bowling there.[149] He always aimed to concede as few runs as possible when bowling, and frequently berated himself when he offered an easy delivery from which to score.[4][149] Following his dismissal of a batsman, Ambrose often celebrated by pumping the air with his fists.[148][149] With Courtney Walsh, Ambrose developed a reputation for performing at his best when his team seemed likely to lose,[149] and he often took wickets in clusters which devastated the opposition.[142] In addition, he was often most effective against the leading batsmen on a team; he was also capable of exploiting vulnerabilities in the techniques of other batsmen.[150]

As of 2020, Ambrose's 405 Test wickets place him 15th on the list of leading Test wicket-takers.[151] Of those who have taken over 200 Test wickets, Ambrose has the third best bowling average behind Malcolm Marshall and Joel Garner,[142][152] and has the eighth best economy rate; he rises to third if only those who have taken over 250 wickets are included.[142][153] For much of his career, Ambrose was rated the world's best bowler in the ICC player rankings, first reaching the top in 1991; he rarely dropped below second and was ranked in the top 10 from 1989 until the end of his career.[154] His highest rating of 912 in the rankings, which he achieved in 1994, is the equal sixth best rating of all time.[155] In 2010, Ambrose was chosen by a panel of writers and experts as a member of ESPNcricinfo's "All-Time XI" for West Indies.[156] The following year, he was inducted into the International Cricket Council Hall of Fame.[157] During his playing days, Ambrose had a reputation for reticence,[4] and rarely spoke to journalists or the opposition.[140] His response to a request for an interview in 1991—"Curtly talks to no-one"—[note 2][158] became associated with him throughout his career,[140] but he was more willing to talk to journalists after he retired.[150]

Coaching career

In January 2022, Ambrose was appointed as bowling coach of Jamaica Tallawahs for CPL 2022 edition.[159]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The first Test was abandoned owing to dangerous playing conditions—the pitch was judged unfit for cricket.[103]
  2. ^ A journalist had asked Viv Richards about Ambrose, who was walking past. Interrupting the conversation, Ambrose said "If you want to know about Curtly, you ask Curtly". When the journalist complied, Ambrose responded "Curtly talks to no-one".[158]

References

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  3. ^ a b c Sundaresan, Bharat (13 June 2011). "Curtly Ambrose, a reluctant cricketer who became a legend". The Indian Express. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
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  • Cozier, Tony (1989). "The West Indians in England, 1988". In Wright, Graeme (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-13-8.
  • Cozier, Tony (1992). "The Australians in the West Indies, 1990–91". In Wright, Graeme (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-18-9.
  • Cozier, Tony (1992). "The West Indians in Australia, 1992–93". In Wright, Graeme (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-22-7.
  • Cozier, Tony (1996). "The West Indians in England, 1995". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-31-6.
  • Cozier, Tony (1998). "The Indians in the West Indies, 1996–97". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-44-8.
  • Cozier, Tony (2001). "The West Indians in England, 2000". In Wright, Graeme (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-63-4.
  • Cozier, Tony (2000). "Cricket in the West Indies, 1998–99". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-57-X.
  • Craddock, Robert (1996). "The Australians in the West Indies, 1994–95". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-31-6.
  • Dean, Geoffrey (1993). "The South Africans in the West Indies, 1991–92". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-20-0.
  • Dean, Geoffrey (2000). "The West Indians in South Africa, 1998–99". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-57-X.
  • Lawrence, Bridgette; Goble, Ray (1991). The Complete Record of West Indian Test Cricketers. Leicester: ACL and Polar Publishing (UK) Ltd. ISBN 0-9514862-2-5.
  • Lee, Alan (1991). "England in the West Indies, 1989–90". In Wright, Graeme (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-16-2.
  • Lee, Alan (1995). "England in the West Indies, 1993–94". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-24-3.
  • Lee, Alan (1997). "The World Cup, 1996". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-38-3.
  • Mohammed, Fazeer (1999). "The West Indians in Pakistan, 1997–98". In Engel, Matthew (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-50-2.
  • Woodcock, John (1990). "The West Indians in Australia, 1988–89". In Wright, Graeme (ed.). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. ISBN 0-947766-15-4.

External links

  • Official website

curtly, ambrose, given, name, curtley, given, name, curtly, elconn, lynwall, ambrose, born, september, 1963, antiguan, former, cricketer, played, test, matches, west, indies, widely, acknowledged, greatest, fast, bowlers, time, took, test, wickets, average, to. For the given name see Curtley given name Sir Curtly Elconn Lynwall Ambrose KCN born 21 September 1963 is an Antiguan former cricketer who played 98 Test matches for the West Indies Widely acknowledged as one of the greatest fast bowlers of all time he took 405 Test wickets at an average of 20 99 and topped the ICC Player Rankings for much of his career to be rated the best bowler in the world His great height he is 6 feet 7 inches 2 01 m tall allowed him to make the ball bounce unusually high after he delivered it allied to his pace and accuracy it made him a very difficult bowler for batsmen to face A man of few words during his career he was notoriously reluctant to speak to journalists He was chosen as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1992 after he retired he was entered into the International Cricket Council Hall of Fame and selected as one of West Indies all time XI by a panel of experts Curtly AmbrosePersonal informationFull nameCurtly Elconn Lynwall AmbroseBorn 1963 09 21 21 September 1963 age 59 Swetes Antigua and BarbudaHeight201 cm 6 ft 7 in BattingLeft handedBowlingRight arm fastRoleBowlerInternational informationNational sideWest Indies 1988 2000 Test debut cap 192 2 April 1988 v PakistanLast Test31 August 2000 v EnglandODI debut cap 53 12 March 1988 v PakistanLast ODI23 April 2000 v PakistanDomestic team informationYearsTeam1985 2000Leeward Islands1989 1996Northamptonshire1998 1999Antigua and BarbudaCareer statisticsCompetition Test ODI FC LAMatches 98 176 239 329Runs scored 1 439 639 3 448 1 282Batting average 12 40 10 65 13 95 11 98100s 50s 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0Top score 53 31 78 48Balls bowled 22 103 9 353 48 798 17 143Wickets 405 225 941 401Bowling average 20 99 24 12 20 24 23 835 wickets in innings 22 4 50 410 wickets in match 3 0 8 0Best bowling 8 45 5 17 8 45 5 17Catches stumpings 18 0 45 0 88 0 82 0Source Cricinfo 24 October 2012Born in Swetes Antigua Ambrose came to cricket at a relatively late age having preferred basketball in his youth but quickly made an impression as a fast bowler Progressing through regional and national teams he was first chosen for the West Indies in 1988 He was almost immediately successful and remained in the team until his retirement in 2000 On many occasions his bowling spells were responsible for winning matches for West Indies which seemed lost in association with Courtney Walsh Against Australia in 1993 he bowled one of the greatest bowling spells of all time when he took seven wickets while conceding a single run hence taking figures of 7 1 for the first spell of the match Similarly in 1994 he was largely responsible for bowling England out for 46 runs taking six wickets for 24 runs He is regarded as one of the greatest match winning bowlers of all time Ambrose s bowling method relied on accuracy and conceding few runs several of his best performances came when he took wickets in quick succession to devastate the opposition He was particularly successful against leading batsmen From 1995 Ambrose was increasingly affected by injury and several times critics claimed that he was no longer effective However he continued to take wickets regularly up until his retirement although he was sometimes less effective in the early matches of a series In his final years the West Indies team was in decline and often relied heavily on Ambrose and Walsh both men often bowled with little support from the other bowlers Following his retirement Ambrose has pursued a career in music as the bass guitarist in a reggae band Contents 1 Early life and career 2 International bowler 2 1 Debut and first years 2 2 County cricketer and success against England 3 Leading bowler in the world 3 1 Series against Australia and England 3 2 Victory against South Africa 3 3 Second tour of Australia 3 4 More success against England 4 Apparent decline 4 1 Shoulder injury 4 2 Team in decline 5 Final years of career 6 Style and technique 7 Coaching career 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life and career EditAmbrose was born in Swetes Antigua on 21 September 1963 1 the fourth of seven children His father was a carpenter from a village 2 The family had no background in cricket 2 but his mother was a fan 3 and Ambrose played in his youth primarily as a batsman At school he performed well academically particularly in mathematics and French and became an apprentice carpenter upon leaving at the age of 17 2 3 He briefly considered emigrating to America 4 At the time his favourite sport was basketball although he occasionally umpired cricket matches Ambrose was not particularly tall until he reached his late teens when he grew several inches to reach a height of 6 feet 7 inches 2 01 m Around this time his mother encouraged him to become more involved in cricket 3 Success as a fast bowler in a softball cricket match persuaded Ambrose to play in some club matches at the age of 20 He quickly attracted the attention of coaches and progressed to the St John s cricket team 2 Selected in the Leeward Islands competition he took seven for 67 seven wickets for 67 runs for Antigua against St Kitts 5 He made his first class debut for the Leeward Islands in 1985 86 and took four wickets in the game 4 but failed to retain his place the following year A Viv Richards scholarship provided funding for him to play club cricket in England for Chester Boughton Hall Cricket Club in the highly rated Liverpool Competition during 1986 where he took 84 wickets at an average of 9 80 The following year he returned to England to play for Heywood Cricket Club in the Central Lancashire League for whom he took 115 wickets in the season these experiences helped to improve his bowling technique 2 Upon his return to Antigua Ambrose practised intensely 2 regained his place in the Leeward Islands team and in the absence of leading bowlers Winston Benjamin and Eldine Baptiste with the West Indies team became the main attacking bowler in the side 2 He was no balled for throwing in the first match which Wisden Cricketers Almanack later attributed to confusion caused by his attribute of flicking his wrist prior to releasing the ball to impart extra pace and there were no subsequent doubts about the legality of his bowling action 4 Retaining his place when the international bowlers returned he took 35 wickets including 12 in a match against Guyana of which nine were bowled in five matches in the competition 2 5 Wisden s report on the West Indian season said his performance was dominant although few had heard of him previously Identifying his yorker as his most effective delivery it noted that he never lost his pace his accuracy or his thirst for wickets 6 International bowler EditDebut and first years Edit When Pakistan toured the West Indies in 1988 Ambrose played in the One Day International ODI series taking the place of the recently retired Joel Garner 5 He made his debut during the first match on 12 March 1988 in Kingston Jamaica taking wickets with his third and ninth deliveries he ended the innings with four for 39 from 10 overs In the second match he took four for 35 and followed with another two wickets in the third West Indies won those first three matches to take the series and Ambrose did not play in the fourth or fifth game 7 In the Test series which followed Ambrose was less effective In the first Test he took two for 121 as West Indies lost at home for the first time in 10 years 8 Wisden noted that his debut was unimpressive but that he improved in the subsequent matches 9 He finished the series with seven wickets at an average of over 50 runs per wicket 5 Later that year Ambrose was chosen to tour England After appearing in early tour games he was chosen for the first two ODIs taking three wickets in total but was omitted from the third 10 In the Test series he played in all five matches to take 22 wickets at an average of 20 22 his best figures of four for 58 came in the fourth Test in which he took seven wickets and was named man of the match 11 Writing in Wisden commentator Tony Cozier described Ambrose as a ready made replacement for Garner the amount of bounce he generated after the ball pitched made him a constant menace 12 In 1988 89 West Indies took part in an ODI tournament in Sharjah Ambrose took 8 wickets 13 and was man of the match with four for 29 when West Indies defeated Pakistan in the final 14 From there West Indies travelled to Australia for a series in which Ambrose was a dominant figure The West Indies won the Test series 3 1 using controversial short pitched bowling tactics Ambrose s height made him difficult to play as he made the ball bounce more than other bowlers Writing in Wisden John Woodcock noted As in England earlier in 1988 Ambrose s bowling was a telling factor His advance compensated for something of a decline in Malcolm Marshall s effectiveness 15 In the first Test he took seven wickets in the second he took five wickets in a Test innings for the first time with five for 72 and finished with eight in the game and in the third he took six wickets 16 His performances earned him man of the match award in the first and third games 17 and he ended the series with 26 wickets at an average of 21 46 He was West Indies leading wicket taker and headed the team bowling averages 18 In the ODI tournament that took place during the tour West Indies defeated Australia in the final 15 Ambrose took 21 wickets in the series and twice took five wickets in an innings 13 Suffering from fatigue and illness 19 Ambrose was less successful later in 1989 when India toured the West Indies he took just five wickets in the four Test series at an average of 54 60 20 County cricketer and success against England Edit Ambrose made his debut in the English County Championship for Northamptonshire County Cricket Club in 1989 the club signed him for the 1988 season but as he was playing in the West Indies touring team he was unavailable that year 21 He took a wicket with his first delivery for the club but was not particularly successful in the first part of the season he settled down later and took 28 first class wickets at 28 39 for Northamptonshire in nine games 22 Early in 1990 England toured the West Indies and played four Tests a fifth was abandoned owing to rain The visiting team dominated the first part of the series but West Indies eventually won 2 1 23 Ambrose was unfit for the first Test which West Indies lost and the first four ODIs but returned to take four for 18 in an ODI organised to replace the rained off second Test 24 After a drawn third Test West Indies won the fourth game The home captain Viv Richards set England 356 to win but after losing early wickets the English batsmen entered the last hour of the game with five wickets still to fall 25 Ambrose took the new ball and removed the last five batsmen for 18 runs in 46 deliveries 26 four of them leg before wicket He finished with figures of eight for 45 ten wickets in the match and West Indies levelled the series with a 164 run win Ambrose was man of the match 25 He took six wickets in the final match 16 to finish the series with 20 wickets at 15 35 finishing top of the West Indies averages Ambrose along with the other home bowlers was described by Alan Lee in Wisden as an awesome handful in the latter part of the series and described his match winning spell in the fourth Test as unforgettable 23 Ambrose s other appearances for West Indies in 1989 90 were all in ODIs although he did not take more than two wickets in any innings except in the match against England 13 16 He also took 22 first class wickets for the Leeward Islands 27 and when he returned to England to play for Northamptonshire in 1990 took 58 first class wickets to top the club s bowling averages 28 In one day cricket for the county he took 13 wickets while conceding an average of just 2 53 runs per over 29 Leading bowler in the world EditSeries against Australia and England Edit West Indies toured Pakistan in late 1990 and Ambrose topped the team s bowling averages in a three match series which was drawn 1 1 He took 14 wickets at 17 07 30 but was overshadowed slightly by the performances of Ian Bishop 31 He played the first two ODIs but missed the third after Pakistan had already won the series and his best figures in the Tests came in the final match when he took five for 35 32 Then when Australia toured West Indies from February 1991 Ambrose took 18 wickets in the five Tests at an average of 27 38 West Indies won the series 2 1 and Ambrose was fourth in the averages 33 but Tony Cozier observed in Wisden that the whole West Indies attack was dependable 34 Ambrose made an impression batting as part of a West Indian lower batting order which repeatedly added crucial runs during the series He took part in two important partnerships to help his team recover from a difficult situation 34 and in the third match he scored his only half century in Tests 16 He also took 20 first class wickets for Leeward Islands 35 West Indies next matches were in England The Test series was drawn 2 2 and Ambrose was the team s leading wicket taker with 28 averaging 20 00 he also came top of the bowling averages 36 He had a particular impact on Graeme Hick who was appearing in Test cricket for the first time dismissing him six times in seven innings with short pitched bowling Accurate bowling was important in the series played on a series of slow paced pitches according to Scyld Berry writing in Wisden Since the 1988 tour Ambrose had improved his control to the point where a batsman had to play almost every ball and not with a scoring stroke either 37 Berry suggests that West Indies may have won the series had Viv Richards used a different tactical approach with Ambrose s bowling The bowler was not fully fit in the final Test which may have affected the outcome Berry describes Ambrose s rise to the status of a giant with the mannerism of celebrating each wicket by whirling his arms upwards like a flock of doves taking to the air 37 Ambrose twice took five wickets in an innings his best figures were six for 52 in the first Test when he twice took wickets with consecutive deliveries 16 38 Ambrose was named man of the match in the third Test and adjudged West Indies man of the series 39 For his performances Ambrose was named one of Wisden s Cricketers of the Year The citation remarked on his consistency and stated Ambrose has the ability to exert a debilitating psychological influence which so often precipitates a cluster of wickets after the initial breach has been made Moreover he was arguably the essential difference between the two sides in what proved to be a zestful series 4 The West Indies wicket keeper Jeff Dujon said He is mature beyond his years has pace accuracy heart and determination plus importantly real pride in economical figures 4 Victory against South Africa Edit Courtney Walsh Ambrose s bowling partner in many Test matches During the 1991 92 season West Indies played mainly one day cricket taking part in tournaments in Sharjah 40 where Ambrose took seven wickets including an analysis of five for 53 13 and Australia 41 and took part in the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand In this tournament Ambrose took seven wickets in seven games at an average of 33 57 and was the seventh most economical bowler among those who played more than one game 42 West Indies finished sixth in the qualifying table and failed to reach the semi finals 43 Ambrose returned home to play twice for the Leeward Islands in January 1992 16 In April 1992 South Africa toured West Indies for the first time 44 and played their first Test match for 22 years 45 Ambrose played in all three ODIs all of which were won by West Indies 46 The Test match was the first time West Indies bowled under a new playing regulation which permitted only one bouncer per over this seemed to affect the home bowlers 47 but Ambrose took two for 47 from 36 overs 16 South Africa began the final day of the match requiring 79 runs to win with just two batsmen out but Ambrose and Courtney Walsh took the last eight wickets for 26 runs to bowl West Indies to a 52 run win 47 On a difficult pitch for batting the ball bounced unevenly and both bowlers concentrated on accuracy 45 Ambrose took six for 34 in the second innings and was named joint man of the match in just over 60 overs he took eight for 81 in the match 47 Returning to play for Northamptonshire he was less effective Hampered by a knee injury which necessitated surgery after the English season and suffering from many dropped catches he took 50 first class wickets at an average of 26 14 but his performance compared unfavourably with other bowlers on the team He was more effective in the NatWest Trophy a one day competition that Northamptonshire won that season in which he conceded fewer than two runs per over across five games 48 Second tour of Australia Edit The West Indies toured Australia in 1992 93 recovering from losing the second Test to win the final two matches and take the series 2 1 The team also won the annual World Series Cup In the first three Tests Ambrose was hampered by pitches which did not suit his bowling and according to Tony Cozier writing in Wisden was often unlucky when he bowled 49 although he took five for 66 in the first Test 16 In the final two Tests he took 19 wickets 49 In the fourth he took ten wickets including six for 74 in the first innings in the second innings he took three wickets in 19 deliveries and the West Indies won the match by one run According to Cozier the captains of both teams Richie Richardson and Allan Border paid tribute to the man who made the result possible Ambrose consolidated his reputation as the world s leading bowler 50 On the first day of the decisive final Test Ambrose took seven wickets at the cost of one run from 32 deliveries and finished with figures of seven for 25 Cozier described it as one of Test cricket s most devastating spells 51 West Indies won by an innings and Ambrose was named man of the series 51 having taken 33 wickets to equal the record in an Australia West Indies Test series He topped the West Indian bowling averages with an average of 16 42 49 Cozier described Ambrose s performance as instrumental in winning the series and his bowling as flawless 49 In the one day tournament Ambrose took 18 wickets at 13 38 13 He took eight wickets in the two match final both games were won by the West Indies 49 In the first final he took five for 32 driven to bowl with more hostility when the Australian batsman Dean Jones asked him to remove his white wristbands while bowling He followed up with three for 26 in the second match to be named player of the finals 52 After a one day tournament in South Africa West Indies returned home for Test and ODI series against Pakistan The ODI series was drawn 13 53 but the West Indies defeated Pakistan 2 0 in the Tests Ambrose took nine wickets at 23 11 to be fifth in the team bowling averages The Wisden report suggested that he was suffering from fatigue after his team s busy schedule but although not at his best he continued to take important wickets 53 For Northamptonshire in 1993 Ambrose was second in the team first class bowling averages with 59 wickets at 20 45 54 Having developed a slower ball and using the yorker more sparingly 55 Ambrose took five wickets in three games as West Indies won an ODI tournament in Sharjah in late October and November 1993 13 56 The team competed in another tournament this time in India later that November They finished as runners up and Ambrose took four wickets in five matches 13 57 Immediately following this West Indies toured Sri Lanka to play three ODIs and a Test a rain ruined match in which Ambrose took three wickets 58 More success against England Edit Ambrose took six for 24 to bowl England out for 46 at Queen s Park Oval Trinidad When he returned to the West Indies Ambrose took 19 first class wickets for the Leeward Islands at an average of 11 68 59 in his first appearances for the islands in two years 16 but as England arrived to tour West Indies he complained of fatigue and there were rumours he planned to retire 60 He played in three times in the five match ODI series taking two wickets and took a further two wickets in the first Test which West Indies won 13 61 In Wisden Alan Lee described his performances at this time as lethargic 62 and in the Guardian Paul Allott wrote that he bowled like a shadow owing to the effects of continuous cricket 60 Ambrose was ineffective at the start of the second Test but recovered 60 ending the match with eight wickets 16 according to Lee he struck the critical blows of the match in the first innings 61 In the third Test played in Trinidad he took five for 60 in England s first innings but after the visiting team built a substantial lead West Indies were bowled out to leave England needing 194 to win and an hour to bat on the fourth evening Ambrose took six wickets to leave England 40 for eight at the close of play the next morning they were bowled out for 46 and Ambrose had figures of six for 24 in the innings and match figures of 11 for 84 63 he was named man of the match Lee described the collapse as staggering and judged Ambrose bowling to be of the highest calibre He continued He delivered one of the most devastating spells of even his career 63 Allott called it the definitive spell of fast bowling 60 Ambrose took four wickets in the fourth Test but West Indies lost the match their first defeat in Barbados for 59 years and Ambrose was fined 1 000 by the match referee for knocking down his stumps in frustration when he was the last man out 64 He took one more wicket in the drawn final Test to finish the series with 26 wickets and top the West Indian bowling averages 16 65 Writing in Wisden Lee summarised Ambrose s performances Ambrose was magnificent He was deservedly named man of the series not only for taking 26 wickets at an average of 19 96 apiece and winning the Trinidad Test single handed but for the more profound truth that West Indies now look to him whenever they need wickets He carried the attack alone 66 Ambrose returned to play for Northamptonshire in 1994 but arrived later than scheduled Claiming to need a rest 67 he missed his scheduled flight and arrived four days late 68 His absence may have contributed to Northamptonshire s elimination in the preliminary stages of the Benson and Hedges Cup 69 At the time members of the county were unhappy with Ambrose s performances for the team 67 the committee fined him and he expressed contrition 70 During the remainder of the season he bowled extremely effectively to take 77 first class wickets the most for the club in 18 years at an average of 14 45 to top the national bowling averages According to Andrew Radd in Wisden the club were mollified by his success but he wrote Rarely in Northamptonshire s history have the performances and the personality of one cricketer dominated a season to the extent that Curtly Ambrose did in 1994 68 Ambrose missed the final match of the season with a shoulder problem 68 Apparent decline EditShoulder injury Edit Ambrose s shoulder injury caused by his bowling workload 71 caused him to miss the West Indies tour of India in the last three months of 1994 72 Although he returned to join the tour of New Zealand in early 1995 he did not reach his full bowling pace he took one wicket in the ODI series and five in the two Test matches 16 73 He remained in the team when Australia toured the Caribbean later in 1995 the West Indies lost the Test series 2 1 their first defeat in a Test series since 1980 74 After taking two wickets in four ODIs 75 Ambrose took 13 wickets at 19 84 in the four Test series to lead the West Indian averages 76 He took nine of these wickets in Trinidad during the third Test when West Indies levelled the series having lost the first Test the second was drawn 77 Bowling on a pitch that was extremely difficult for batting and which both teams considered to be unsatisfactory Ambrose took nine for 65 in the match and was named man of the match During the game Ambrose had to be pulled away from a verbal confrontation with Steve Waugh by the captain Richardson 78 But outside of this match the Australian team judged his bowling to have declined in pace following his shoulder injury and that he lacked the variety to adapt to a different role 79 The West Indies cricket manager former Test bowler Andy Roberts publicly claimed during the series that several of his team possessed attitude problems and complained that the fast bowlers would not follow his advice 80 During the tour of England which followed Ambrose did not take a wicket in the three match ODI series according to journalist Simon Barnes both Ambrose and the team lacked confidence following their defeat by Australia he lacked rhythm and displayed signs of frustration and unhappiness 81 He was more effective in the Test series and according to Tony Cozier in Wisden was always captable of a spell of incisive quality bowling 82 But he was affected by injury throughout the six match series he withdrew injured from the third Test having bowled fewer than eight overs and missed the fifth Test completely 82 Other bowlers in the team overshadowed Ambrose and it was not until the final Test that he reached his most effective form in taking five for 96 in the first innings and seven wickets in the match 71 83 Waving to the crowd as he left the field on the final day with an injury Ambrose seemed to indicate that he would not tour England again 82 83 He ended the series third in the bowling averages with 21 wickets at 24 09 84 But according to Cozier the senior players in the team caused problems for the management and when the players returned home Ambrose and three other members of the team were fined 10 per cent of their tour fee in Ambrose s case the fine was for general failings of behaviour and attitude 85 and setting a bad example to younger team mates 86 Along with other senior players Ambrose was rested from West Indies next tour an ODI tournament in October 1995 87 but he returned to play in a three team ODI tournament in Australia in December and January 88 However affected by the refusal of Brian Lara to tour following after being fined for his behaviour during the tour of England the team failed to qualify for the final 89 Ambrose took ten wickets in the tournament and took three wickets in consecutive innings in the latter game he was man of the match 90 West Indies were more successful in the World Cup in India Pakistan and Sri Lanka which began in February They reached the semi finals losing to Australia 91 Ambrose was man of the match with three for 28 in his team s opening match 91 and took ten wickets at 17 00 in the competition He conceded an average of just three runs per over for the tournament the second best among those who played in more than two games 92 In March Ambrose played in a home series against New Zealand In the five match ODI series 10 wickets at 17 60 including four for 36 in the opening game 13 16 He took eight wickets in the two Test series at an average of 20 50 leading the team averages 93 and took five for 68 in the second match 16 During the English cricket season he returned to Northamptonshire and took 43 wickets in nine games to lead the national bowling averages but he missed several matches with recurring injuries and his contract was not renewed for the following year He was replaced by the much younger Mohammad Akram as overseas player 94 Team in decline Edit Following Australia s victory in 1994 95 when West Indies toured Australia in 1996 97 the series was heavily publicised as a re match However the visiting team were often ineffective continuing a trend of decline and depended heavily on their senior players one of whom was Ambrose He began the series poorly continuing a pattern established in several preceding series and critics suggested that he was no longer effective 95 After taking only three wickets in the first two Tests both of which were lost by West Indies 16 Ambrose told his team mates that he would take ten wickets in the third On a difficult pitch for batting he managed to take nine in the match including three in the first hour of the game despite struggling with a hamstring injury West Indies won and Ambrose was named man of the match 96 but he missed the fourth Test with an injury Writing in Wisden Greg Baum suggested that Ambrose absence possibly affected the outcome of the series Australia won easily to ensure they won the series 95 Ambrose returned for the final match and on another difficult batting pitch took five for 43 on the first day West Indies won and Ambrose was again man of the match 97 He led the West Indies bowling averages with 19 wickets at 23 36 98 but had been the driving factor in West Indies two wins 95 Ambrose also played in an ODI tournament during the tour of Australia taking nine wickets at 27 33 13 Later in the season between March and May 1997 India toured West Indies Ambrose took ten wickets at 30 10 in the Test series including five for 87 in the second Test but was no longer the home team s most effective bowler 16 99 Then in June Sri Lanka played a two Test series won 1 0 by West Indies In the first Ambrose took five for 37 in the first innings and eight wickets in the game to be named man of the match This included his 300th wicket in Test matches he was the 12th bowler and fourth West Indian to reach this landmark 100 Ambrose also played five ODIs during the West Indies home season taking nine wickets 13 West Indies loss of form continued in late 1997 when they lost every international match during their tour of Pakistan 101 Ambrose played in two out of West Indies three matches in an ODI tournament taking one wicket 13 but his performance in taking one wicket in the two Test matches he played he missed the third match with injury prompted Fazeer Mohammed writing in Wisden to describe Ambrose as a shadow of his former self 101 Any danger that Ambrose might have retired after this series was forestalled when Brian Lara was appointed West Indies captain and immediately spoke to Ambrose and Walsh to ask them to continue in the team 102 When England toured the West Indies between January and April 1998 16 he took 30 wickets at 14 26 to top the bowling averages for the series note 1 104 Many of the pitches during the tour were poor for batting but Ambrose was very effective particularly in the second third and fourth Tests In addition he dismissed Mike Atherton the England captain six times in the series Scyld Berry wrote in Wisden that Ambrose was back to something near his peak form He defied every prediction that he was finished after his tour of Pakistan 103 In the second Test Ambrose took eight wickets he conceded only 23 runs from 26 overs in the first innings and bowled a spell of five wickets for 16 runs from 47 deliveries in the second to complete figures of five for 52 105 Having won the second match West Indies lost the third but according to Matthew Engel Ambrose s abiding power was the most constant feature of a fluctuating match 106 His eight wickets in the game including five for 25 in the first innings took him past fifty Test wickets in Trinidad 106 He followed up with six wickets in West Indies victory in the fourth Test taking four for 38 in the final innings Tony Cozier wrote that Ambrose thundered in arms and knees pumping like pistons to generate all of his old pace 107 Following the Test series which West Indies won 3 1 Ambrose played in the first three matches of the ODI series 108 and took three wickets 13 Final years of career EditAmbrose and Walsh missed the Mini World Cup ODI tournament in October 1998 109 in Ambrose s case following damage to his house caused by Hurricane Georges 110 They returned to the team for West Indies first ever tour of South Africa and Ambrose took 13 wickets in the series at an average of 23 76 but West Indies lost every game of the five match series 111 In the first Test match Ambrose and Walsh bowled effectively but lacked support from the other members of the attack 112 In the second Test the pair again lacked support but bowled well The visiting team generally bowled too many bouncers to be effective but Ambrose took eight wickets in the game including six for 51 in the second innings 113 He was ineffective in the third Test 114 and despite bowling what Geoffrey Dean in Wisden called a superb opening spell could not prevent South Africa building up a large total against an attack lacking two other main bowlers 115 Ambrose pulled out of the attack himself later in the innings with a back injury 116 and did not bowl in the second innings 115 He missed the final Test with a hamstring injury 117 He was fit to play in the first six games of a seven match ODI series won 6 1 by South Africa and took six wickets 13 118 In March 1999 16 West Indies then faced Australia in a home series and contrary to expectations West Indies drew the series 2 2 The outcome of the series was decided by a small group of players including Ambrose whom Mike Coward described in Wisden as five of the most distinguished cricketers of all time 119 Ambrose took 19 wickets at 22 26 second to Walsh in the averages 120 His best figures came in the fourth and final Test when he took five for 94 in the first innings and eight wickets in the match 121 but in the third match although he only took four wickets in total Coward described Ambrose as rampant and wrote that Steve Waugh who scored 199 had to survive some extraordinary pace bowling from Ambrose 122 He played four of the ODIs which followed in April taking three wickets 13 The following month Ambrose took part in the 1999 World Cup in England and he was the second most economical bowler in the tournament in conceding an average 2 35 runs per over while taking seven wickets at 13 42 123 West Indies went out in the group stages and Matthew Engel suggested that the bowlers were tired and judged the team outright failures 124 Following the World Cup the West Indian selectors chose to rest Ambrose along with Walsh from alternate ODI tournaments Ambrose consequently missed two ODI series but in October 1999 he played two ODIs in a series against Bangladesh in Dhaka and three in a tournament in Sharjah 13 125 In the latter competition Ambrose conceded five runs from ten overs against Sri Lanka the second most economical bowling figures from a full allocation of 10 overs in all ODIs 126 However in all five matches he took just one wicket 13 and he injured his elbow in Sharjah which forced him to miss West Indies tour of New Zealand which began in December 127 Ambrose recovered in time to play for the Leeward Island in domestic cricket taking 31 wickets at 12 03 in seven first class games 128 When Zimbabwe toured the West Indies he returned to the West Indies team to be named man of the match in the first Test Zimbabwe were bowled out for 63 when chasing 99 runs to win 129 He took a wicket in the second and final Test 16 and four wickets in six matches during a three way ODI series also involving Zimbabwe and Pakistan 13 These were his final ODIs in 176 matches he took 225 wickets at an average of 24 12 and conceding 3 48 runs per over 1 Pakistan subsequently played a three Test series against West Indies in his last home series Ambrose took 11 wickets at 19 90 to head the West Indian bowling averages 130 Before his next series a five match series in England Ambrose announced that he would retire after the final Test 131 although the president of the West Indies Cricket Board unavailingly tried to persuade him to continue for a little longer 132 West Indies lost the series 3 1 Tony Cozier reviewing the series suggested that only Ambrose and Walsh of the West Indian team emerged from the series with any credit The other bowlers were ineffective and Ambrose publicly commented during the series on the lack of support that he and Walsh received 133 He was second in the averages to Walsh with 17 wickets at 18 64 134 After taking just one wicket in the first Test although Martin Johnson in Wisden suggested he bowled very well 135 Ambrose took five wickets in the second Test but was again unlucky as the batsmen were beaten by many deliveries that he bowled 136 After this match Ambrose returned to the West Indies having been rested from an ODI tournament involving England and Zimbabwe 137 138 He took four wickets in the first innings of both the third and fourth Tests 16 passing 400 wickets in the latter match 139 After he took three wickets in his final Test match the crowd gave him a standing ovation and the England players formed a guard of honour when he came out to bat 140 141 In 98 Test matches he took 405 wickets at an average of 20 99 1 according to Mike Selvey in Swetes his mother rang a bell each time he took a Test wicket 142 Having retired from cricket Ambrose has concentrated on music playing with several bands 1 143 He played bass guitar with the reggae band Big Bad Dread and the Baldhead one fellow band member was his former team mate Richie Richardson 144 Ambrose was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Nation KCN by the Antiguan Barbudan government on 28 February 2014 alongside Richardson and Andy Roberts 145 Style and technique EditMike Selvey wrote in The Guardian in 1991 that Ambrose had the sort of easy repetitive no sweat action which is the key to unyielding accuracy There is no respite and all his other qualities are byproducts 146 At his peak Ambrose did not rely on pronounced swing or seam movement of the ball Instead he repeatedly bowled into the same areas of the pitch and the height from which he delivered the ball made him extremely difficult to face The ball bounced sharply after pitching sometimes deviating slightly from a straight line after pitching on the seam and frequently took the edge of the batsman s bat to be caught behind the wicket 142 His 1992 citation as Wisden Cricketer of the Year states that he had outright pace and he generates a disconcerting steepling bounce from fuller length deliveries His height and a slender sinewy wrist contribute greatly to the final velocity of the ball the wrist snapping forward at the instant of release to impart extra thrust 4 Writing in 2001 following Ambrose s retirement Michael Atherton whom Ambrose dismissed more often than any other batsman said At his best there is no doubt that Ambrose moved beyond the fine line that separates the great from the very good Quality bowlers essentially need two of three things pace movement and accuracy Ambrose had all three 147 Ambrose s height and the accuracy with which he bowled made it difficult for batsmen to play forward to the ball instead they were forced to play with their weight going back His accuracy meant that he was effective if the pitch favoured batsmen 146 He bowled an effective yorker 4 and unlike other fast bowlers used short pitched deliveries sparingly 148 although he could bowl a hostile bouncer 4 and concentrated on bowling a full length aimed at the wickets 148 Ambrose rarely engaged in verbal sparring with batsmen although in later years he occasionally inspected the pitch in an area close to the batsman before an innings began and rubbed his hands to suggest that he would enjoy bowling there 149 He always aimed to concede as few runs as possible when bowling and frequently berated himself when he offered an easy delivery from which to score 4 149 Following his dismissal of a batsman Ambrose often celebrated by pumping the air with his fists 148 149 With Courtney Walsh Ambrose developed a reputation for performing at his best when his team seemed likely to lose 149 and he often took wickets in clusters which devastated the opposition 142 In addition he was often most effective against the leading batsmen on a team he was also capable of exploiting vulnerabilities in the techniques of other batsmen 150 As of 2020 Ambrose s 405 Test wickets place him 15th on the list of leading Test wicket takers 151 Of those who have taken over 200 Test wickets Ambrose has the third best bowling average behind Malcolm Marshall and Joel Garner 142 152 and has the eighth best economy rate he rises to third if only those who have taken over 250 wickets are included 142 153 For much of his career Ambrose was rated the world s best bowler in the ICC player rankings first reaching the top in 1991 he rarely dropped below second and was ranked in the top 10 from 1989 until the end of his career 154 His highest rating of 912 in the rankings which he achieved in 1994 is the equal sixth best rating of all time 155 In 2010 Ambrose was chosen by a panel of writers and experts as a member of ESPNcricinfo s All Time XI for West Indies 156 The following year he was inducted into the International Cricket Council Hall of Fame 157 During his playing days Ambrose had a reputation for reticence 4 and rarely spoke to journalists or the opposition 140 His response to a request for an interview in 1991 Curtly talks to no one note 2 158 became associated with him throughout his career 140 but he was more willing to talk to journalists after he retired 150 Coaching career EditIn January 2022 Ambrose was appointed as bowling coach of Jamaica Tallawahs for CPL 2022 edition 159 See also EditList of international cricket five wicket hauls by Curtly AmbroseNotes Edit The first Test was abandoned owing to dangerous playing conditions the pitch was judged unfit for cricket 103 A journalist had asked Viv Richards about Ambrose who was walking past Interrupting the conversation Ambrose said If you want to know about Curtly you ask Curtly When the journalist complied Ambrose responded Curtly talks to no one 158 References Edit a b c d Curtly Ambrose ESPNCricinfo profile ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 29 August 2012 a b c d e f g h Streeton Richard 23 March 1988 Ambrose follows famous footsteps The Times London p 46 a b c Sundaresan Bharat 13 June 2011 Curtly Ambrose a reluctant cricketer who became a legend The Indian Express Retrieved 30 August 2012 a b c d e f g h i j Wright Graeme ed 1992 Curtly Ambrose Cricketer of the Year Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 65 66 ISBN 978 0 947766 19 1 a b c d Lawrence and Goble p 12 Cozier Tony 1989 Cricket in the West Indies 1987 88 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 062 ISBN 0 947766 13 8 Ahmed 1989 pp 981 83 985 86 Ahmed 1989 pp 986 87 Ahmed 1989 p 978 Cozier 1989 pp 288 92 Cozier 1989 pp 284 305 07 Cozier 1989 p 281 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Statsguru CEL Ambrose One Day Internationals ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 4 October 2012 Wright Graeme ed 1990 Sharjah Champions Trophy 1988 89 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 1 015 16 ISBN 0 947766 15 4 a b Woodcock 1990 pp 960 61 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Player Oracle CEL Ambrose CricketArchive Retrieved 30 August 2012 Woodcock 1990 pp 967 73 Woodcock 1990 pp 962 63 Rutnagur Dicky 1990 The Indians in the West Indies 1988 89 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 994 ISBN 0 947766 15 4 Test Bowling in Each Season by Curtly Ambrose CricketArchive Retrieved 30 August 2012 Ambrose A true great BBC Sport 4 September 2000 Retrieved 30 August 2012 Radd Andrew 1990 Northamptonshire in 1989 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 498 500 ISBN 0 947766 15 4 a b Lee 1991 pp 967 70 Lee 1991 pp 974 79 a b Lee 1991 pp 984 85 Lee Alan 11 April 1990 Russell s fight is all in vain The Times London p 46 Cozier Tony 1991 Cricket in the West Indies 1989 90 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 154 ISBN 0 947766 16 2 Radd Andrew 1991 Northamptonshire in 1990 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 532 35 ISBN 0 947766 16 2 List A Bowling in Each Season by Curtly Ambrose CricketArchive Retrieved 30 August 2012 Ahmed 1992 pp 1 012 13 Ahmed 1992 p 1 011 Ahmed 1992 pp 1 014 16 1 022 Cozier 1992 p 1 044 a b Cozier 1992 p 1 043 Cozier Tony 1992 Cricket in the West Indies 1990 91 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 135 ISBN 0 947766 18 9 Berry 1992 pp 297 98 a b Berry 1992 p 294 Callaghan John in Berry 1992 pp 309 Berry 1992 pp 317 328 Ahmed Qamar 1993 Wills Trophy 1991 92 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 045 ISBN 0 947766 20 0 Rutnagur Dicky 1993 Benson and Hedges World Series Cup 1991 92 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 055 ISBN 0 947766 20 0 Cricket Records Benson amp Hedges World Cup 1991 92 ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 1 September 2012 Frith David 1993 Benson and Hedges World Cup 1991 92 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 965 ISBN 0 947766 20 0 Dean 1993 p 1 036 a b Vice Telford 24 January 2010 Last day at Kensington Oval always belongs to us ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 1 September 2012 Dean 1993 p 1 037 39 a b c Dean 1993 p 1 039 40 Radd Andrew 1993 Northamptonshire in 1992 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 473 76 ISBN 0 947766 20 0 a b c d e Cozier 1994 pp 1 044 47 Cozier 1994 pp 1 057 58 a b Cozier 1994 pp 1 059 60 Cozier Tony 1994 Benson and Hedges World Series Cup 1992 93 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 112 14 ISBN 0 947766 22 7 a b Rutnagur Dicky 1994 The Pakistanis in the West Indies 1992 93 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 087 89 ISBN 0 947766 22 7 Radd Andrew 1994 Northamptonshire in 1993 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 529 ISBN 0 947766 22 7 Harris Norman 16 January 1994 Deadly dark destroyer at the height of his powers The Observer London p B12 Engel Matthew ed 1995 Pepsi Champions Trophy 1993 94 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 139 44 ISBN 0 947766 24 3 Engel Matthew ed 1995 Hero Cup 1993 94 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 145 54 ISBN 0 947766 24 3 Rutnagur Dicky 1995 The West Indians in Sri Lanka 1993 94 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 071 76 ISBN 0 947766 24 3 Cozier Tony 1995 Cricket in the West Indies 1993 94 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 217 ISBN 0 947766 24 3 a b c d Allott Paul 31 March 1994 The murderous scowl that means Ambrose is a happy man The Guardian London p 23 a b Lee 1995 pp 995 1 001 Lee 1995 p 1 002 a b Lee 1995 pp 1 005 06 Lee 1995 p 1 009 Lee 1995 p 992 Lee 1995 p 990 a b Hopps David 26 April 1994 Northants must manage without Ambrose while he takes a rest The Guardian London p 23 a b c Radd Andrew 1995 Northamptonshire in 1994 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 553 ISBN 0 947766 24 3 Engel Matthew ed 1995 Benson and Hedges Cup in 1994 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 701 ISBN 0 947766 24 3 Northants to fine Ambrose The Guardian London 27 April 1994 p 21 a b Selvey Mike 25 August 1995 Ambrose tilts the balance The Guardian London p 24 Mohan R 1996 The West Indians in India 1994 95 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 1 049 62 ISBN 0 947766 31 6 Power Terry 1996 The West Indians in India 1994 95 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 096 ISBN 0 947766 31 6 Craddock p 1 120 Craddock pp 1 124 28 Craddock p 1 123 Craddock pp 1 130 34 Craddock p 1 134 Craddock p 1 122 Cozier 1996 p 339 Barnes Simon 29 May 1995 Ambrose troubled by demons of doubt The Times London p 24 a b c Cozier 1996 p 343 a b Lee Alan in Cozier 1996 pp 380 82 Cozier 1995 p 347 Cozier 1996 p 341 W Indies quartet fined for breaches of discipline The Times London 24 November 1995 p 44 Engel Matthew ed 1997 Singer Champions Trophy 1995 96 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 155 ISBN 0 947766 38 3 Engel Matthew ed 1997 The West Indians in Australia 1995 96 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 1 132 33 ISBN 0 947766 38 3 Engel Matthew ed 1997 Benson and Hedges World Series 1995 96 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 161 ISBN 0 947766 38 3 Engel Matthew ed 1997 Benson and Hedges World Series 1995 96 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 1 164 66 ISBN 0 947766 38 3 a b Lee 1997 p 1 018 Records Wills World Cup 1995 96 Best economy rates ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 18 September 2012 Cameron D J 1997 The New Zealanders in the West Indies 1995 96 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 144 ISBN 0 947766 38 3 Radd Andrew 1997 Northamptonshire in 1996 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 579 ISBN 0 947766 38 3 a b c Baum p 1 063 64 Baum p 1 072 Baum p 1 075 Baum p 1 066 Cozier 1998 pp 1 111 12 Cozier pp 1 131 32 a b Mohammed pp 1 094 95 Berry p 1 023 a b Berry 1999 p 1 022 Berry 1999 p 1 027 Marks Vic in Berry 1999 pp 1 034 35 a b Engel Matthew in Berry 1999 pp 1 037 38 Cozier Tony in Berry 1998 pp 1 041 42 Berry 1999 pp 1 048 52 Cozier 2000 p 1 329 West Indies Cricketers Off To Bangladesh The Barbados Nation 24 October 1998 Retrieved 7 October 2012 Dean pp 1 160 61 Dean pp 1 162 63 Dean pp 1 164 65 Dean p 1 167 a b Dean pp 1 168 69 Tennant Ivo 4 January 1999 Donald leaves West Indies begging for mercy The Times London p 26 Dean p 1 171 Dean pp 1 172 77 Coward pp 1 218 19 Coward p 1 221 Coward pp 1 230 31 Coward pp 1 227 29 ICC World Cup 1999 Best economy rates ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 7 October 2012 Engel Matthew 2000 The World Cup 1999 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 435 ISBN 0 947766 57 X Cozier Tony 24 July 1999 A convenient solution to dilemma ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 13 November 2012 One Day Internationals Bowling records Best economy rate in an innings ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 13 November 2012 Eyre Rick 12 November 1999 Ambrose unfit not selected for NZ tour ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 13 November 2012 Cozier Tony 2001 Cricket in the West Indies 1999 2000 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 361 ISBN 0 947766 63 4 Cozier Craig 2001 The Zimbabweans in the West Indies 1999 2000 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co pp 1 206 08 ISBN 0 947766 63 4 Mohammed Fazeer 2001 The Pakistanis in the West Indies 1999 2000 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 1 211 ISBN 0 947766 63 4 Ambrose It s time to leave Barbados Nation Retrieved 14 October 2012 Hobson Richard 30 August 2000 Rousseau makes last appeal to Ambrose The Times London p 29 Cozier 2001 p 423 Cozier p 428 Johnson Martin in Cozier 2001 p 432 Pringle Derek in Cozier 2001 pp 438 39 Cozier 2001 p 440 Laven Kate 2001 The Natwest Series 2000 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co p 455 ISBN 0 947766 63 4 Hopps David in Cozier 2001 p 447 a b c Atherton p 29 Hobson Richard in Cozier 2001 p 454 a b c d e Selvey Mike 30 August 2000 Two metre terminators final act Mike Selvey salutes the demolition man Curtly Ambrose The Guardian London p 26 Spooner Philip 31 August 2006 I was a fast bowler I m now a musician Ambrose ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 22 September 2010 Vaidyanathan Siddhartha 4 June 2006 Reggae with Big Bad Dread and the Baldhead ESPNcricinfo Archived from the original on 15 June 2012 Retrieved 24 October 2012 Three New Knights PDF The Antigua and Barbuda High Commission Official News letter February 2014 Retrieved 3 January 2016 a b Selvey Mike 24 July 1991 Rocking and rumbling with long tall Curtly Height is not the only quality which sets Ambrose apart The Guardian London p 15 Atherton pp 29 31 a b c Marks Vic 14 July 1991 The joyful destroyer The Observer London p 39 a b c d Atherton p 31 a b Bagchi Rob 13 September 2011 How Curtly Ambrose West Indies silent assassin became a big noise The Guardian London Retrieved 15 October 2012 Test matches Bowling records Most wickets in career ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 15 October 2012 Statsguru Test matches Bowling records ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 15 October 2012 Statsguru Test matches Bowling records ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 15 October 2012 Reliance ICC Test Championship Bowling Rankings Curtly Ambrose International Cricket Council Reliance Retrieved 15 October 2012 Reliance ICC Best Ever Test Championship Rating International Cricket Council Reliance Retrieved 15 October 2012 Becca Tony The Invincibles ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 15 October 2012 Ambrose makes it into ICC Hall of Fame ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 15 October 2012 a b Selvey Mike 27 September 1991 Ambrose so silent Gooch so golden The Guardian London p 16 Chanderpaul Ambrose join Jamaica Tallawahs coaching staff for CPL 2022 ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 14 March 2022 Bibliography EditAhmed Qamar 1989 The Pakistanis in the West Indies 1987 88 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 13 8 Ahmed Qamar 1992 The West Indians in Pakistan 1990 91 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 18 9 Atherton Mike 2001 Brothers in Arms Curtly Ambrose In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 63 4 Baum Greg 1998 The West Indians in Australia 1996 97 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 44 8 Berry Scyld 1992 The West Indians in England 1991 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 18 9 Berry Scyld 1999 England in the West Indies 1997 98 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 50 2 Coward Mike 2000 The Australians in the West Indies 1998 99 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 57 X Cozier Tony 1989 The West Indians in England 1988 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 13 8 Cozier Tony 1992 The Australians in the West Indies 1990 91 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 18 9 Cozier Tony 1992 The West Indians in Australia 1992 93 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 22 7 Cozier Tony 1996 The West Indians in England 1995 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 31 6 Cozier Tony 1998 The Indians in the West Indies 1996 97 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 44 8 Cozier Tony 2001 The West Indians in England 2000 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 63 4 Cozier Tony 2000 Cricket in the West Indies 1998 99 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 57 X Craddock Robert 1996 The Australians in the West Indies 1994 95 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 31 6 Dean Geoffrey 1993 The South Africans in the West Indies 1991 92 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 20 0 Dean Geoffrey 2000 The West Indians in South Africa 1998 99 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 57 X Lawrence Bridgette Goble Ray 1991 The Complete Record of West Indian Test Cricketers Leicester ACL and Polar Publishing UK Ltd ISBN 0 9514862 2 5 Lee Alan 1991 England in the West Indies 1989 90 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 16 2 Lee Alan 1995 England in the West Indies 1993 94 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 24 3 Lee Alan 1997 The World Cup 1996 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 38 3 Mohammed Fazeer 1999 The West Indians in Pakistan 1997 98 In Engel Matthew ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 50 2 Woodcock John 1990 The West Indians in Australia 1988 89 In Wright Graeme ed Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co ISBN 0 947766 15 4 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Curtly Ambrose amp oldid 1148055216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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