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Graeme Pollock: The left‑handed genius cricket lost too soon

By Harsh Thakor* 
Graeme Pollock’s batting belonged to that rare realm where timing, power and imagination fused into something almost otherworldly. In a career cut short by South Africa’s isolation, he still carved out a legacy that places him—without exaggeration—among the finest left‑handed batsmen the game has known. His Test average of 60.97, second only to Sir Donald Bradman among players with completed careers, remains a monument to what might have been had he enjoyed a full international life at the crease.
Born on February 27, 1944, Pollock grew into a batsman who made cricket look deceptively simple. He struck the ball with a timing so pure that even defensive strokes carried an aesthetic glow. Bradman himself rated only Garry Sobers as Pollock’s equal among those he had seen, a tribute that alone places the South African in exalted company. Pollock’s batting was a study in contrasts: mercurial power delivered with minimal effort, and strokes of classical beauty emerging from an unorthodox, wide stance that defied coaching manuals. He hardly moved his feet, yet the ball sped to the boundary as if summoned.
Standing tall at six‑foot‑two, Pollock leaned into his drives with a grace that belied the force behind them. His massive forearms powered the ball through the off‑side, and when bowlers dared to pitch short, he simply rocked back and dispatched them with a cut or a pull that felt inevitable. Ali Bacher once said that if you bowled a bad ball to Pollock, it went for four. The truth was harsher: many good balls met the same fate. Though predominantly a front‑foot player, he could step back and send the ball soaring into the stands with a casual flick, a reminder that his genius was not bound by technique.
His early Test years were a procession of brilliance. At just nineteen, he announced himself with a sublime 122 at Sydney against an attack featuring Graham McKenzie and Richie Benaud. Bradman famously remarked, “Next time you decide to play like that, send me a telegram.” In Adelaide, Pollock and Eddie Barlow stitched together a 341‑run stand, with Pollock’s 175 showcasing his ability to dominate without appearing hurried. By the end of that Australian tour, still in his teens, he had amassed 399 runs at 57.
England felt his full force in 1965. His 125 at Trent Bridge, made in 140 minutes, left the great EW Swanton awestruck. Swanton wrote that the innings, in style, power and beauty, deserved a place among the game’s finest. Pollock’s dominance was such that when he was dismissed, South Africa’s total was only 162. His brother Peter’s ten wickets sealed the match, but Graeme’s batting remained the defining memory.
The 1966–67 series against Australia elevated him further. His 209 at Johannesburg, scored when bowlers targeted his supposed weakness on the leg side, proved he had become a complete batsman. By the end of the series, he averaged 76.71. Then came the 1970 demolition of Australia, a four‑nil triumph in which Pollock’s 274 at Durban—still one of the great innings in cricket history—stood as a towering masterpiece. It was an innings that blended every element of batsmanship: placement, power, audacity and serenity.
And then, abruptly, it ended. At twenty‑six, Pollock played his final Test. Apartheid‑era isolation shut the door on what could have been a career of staggering proportions. Yet he bore no bitterness. He supported the boycott, believing it necessary for a greater cause. In 1971, he joined fellow players—including Barry Richards and Mike Procter—in a symbolic walk‑off protest against apartheid during a celebratory match.
Denied official cricket, Pollock still produced feats that reinforced his legend. In sixteen unofficial Tests against strong rebel sides, he scored 1376 runs at 65.52, including centuries against fearsome fast bowlers like Sylvester Clarke and Franklyn Stephenson. He even struck a double century—222 not out—in one‑day cricket in 1974–75, the first such feat in the format.
Pollock retired from first‑class cricket in 1986–87 with 20,940 runs, 64 centuries and an average of 54.67. His conversion rate from fifties to hundreds was extraordinary, a testament to his appetite for dominance. Cricket writers and former players have long debated his place among the greats. Many bracket him with Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, while some rank him ahead of Sunil Gavaskar and Greg Chappell. Ten former internationals—including Derek Underwood, John Snow, Alvin Kallicharran, Mike Procter and Barry Richards—named him in their all‑time XIs. Had he played a full career, there is a compelling argument that he might have stood second only to Bradman.
Critics like Sobers and Imran Khan suggested Pollock still had to prove himself against sustained short‑pitched pace. But his performances against Lillee, Clarke and Stephenson in unofficial matches dispelled much of that doubt. He relished pace; he was never intimidated by it.
Graeme Pollock’s career remains one of cricket’s great “what ifs,” but what he achieved in 23 Tests is enough to secure his immortality. He was a batsman who made the extraordinary look routine, who turned cricket into an art form, and who left behind an imprint that time has not dimmed.
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*Freelance journalist 

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