Barbados plans Wes Hall statue outside Kensington Oval
Wes Hall was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame in 2015. (AFP)
Wes Hall was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame in 2015. (AFP)

PLANS are being considered to add a statue of Wes Hall outside the Kensington Oval in Barbados. Hall, now aged 81, enjoyed an excellent career as a fast bowler with West Indies before becoming a respected administrator.

He also served as a minister for tourism and sport in the Barbados government and qualified as an ordained minister. He remains hugely popular in Barbados and has a stand named after him and his opening partner, Charlie Griffith, at the ground.

As a player, his career highlights include the first Test hat-trick by a West Indies player – against Pakistan in 1959 – and a leading part in a maiden series victory over Australia in 1964-65. He also bowled the final over in the tied-Test at Brisbane in 1961 and helped West Indies to victory over England in 1963. Desmond Haynes recently named him among his best-ever Barbados XI.

There is already a statue of Garry Sobers on the approach to Kensington Oval. Originally unveiled in Wildey, a few kilometres outside of Bridgetown, in 2002, it was moved to the ground ahead of the World Cup in the Caribbean in 2007.

The plan is for the statue of Hall to complement that of Sobers, which has become something of a tourist attraction in its own right.

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