Author, publisher and founder of Fairfield Books
Mike Procter could have been an all-time great of Test cricket. Bowling at speed in his seven Tests, all against Australia, he took 41 wickets at a breathtaking average of 15, and he had a second string of effective off-breaks. As a batter, one of only three men alongside CB Fry and Don Bradman to score six successive first-class centuries, he could turn a match with his powerful, classical hitting.
Yet, after the age of 23, with South Africa excluded, he played no Test cricket. Apart from the two seasons of Kerry Packer’s World Series, his stage was the domestic game: in South Africa and England. Some of his contemporaries became infected by bitterness, not always able to motivate themselves for what seemed…