Tributes swell after Roebuck dies at 55

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By Western Morning News | Monday, November 14, 2011, 08:00

Friends and rivals alike have paid glowing tributes to former Somerset and Devon cricket captain Peter Roebuck, who died in South Africa on Saturday.

Roebuck, 55, fell to his death from a window on the sixth floor of a Cape Town hotel. Although no inquest has been opened, Roebuck's death is being described as suicide by police in Cape Town.

Roebuck, who worked as a journalist and broadcaster, was in Cape Town covering a Test match between South Africa and Australia.

One of the newspapers he worked for, the Sydney Morning Herald, reported on its website that moments before his fatal plunge, Roebuck was being questioned by police over allegations of a sexual assault. Cape Town police are refusing to confirm what they were speaking to Roebuck about at the time.

Roebuck played for Somerset from 1969 to 1991 – skippering the side in 1986, 1987 and 1988.

He joined Devon in 1992, taking over as captain the next year, and led his adopted county to unprecedented success in the Minor Counties Championship.

For four years running – between 1994 and 1997 – Devon were the Minor Counties champions. They did the double in 1994 – winning the one-day MCC Trophy at Lord's by beating Lincolnshire – and were back at Lord's in 1998 to beat Shropshire in the same competition.

Nick Folland took over as captain in 2000, but he retired unexpectedly early the next season and Roebuck was invited to return.

He led the side back to Lord's, where they lost to Norfolk, and retired for good in 2002 after Devon lost to Warwickshire Board XI at Worcester in the one-day cup.

Folland, who had two years with Somerset and was captain of the England Amateur XI before he turned professional in 1993, played under Roebuck during Devon's glory years. He said Roebuck may have been a complex character, but it was a privilege to have played with him.

"He was a remarkable man, a fine cricketer and an outstanding captain," said Folland, who retired as Devon's all-time leading run scorer.

"He could be moody, he was certainly eccentric, but he set high standards as a cricketer and drove the team hard. He had a way of getting the best out of players.

"As a cricketer, he was aggressive. He wanted to get batsmen out and he wanted to win, but he always tried to play positive cricket. And if there was a battle to be fought on the pitch, he relished it.

"They were great days to be playing for Devon, and we were lucky to have had him."

Cornwall's captain during Roebuck's time with Devon was Godfrey Furse, who is now the team manager.

Relations between Devon and Cornwall were often frosty during the 1970s and 1980s, but that all changed under Roebuck and Furse.

"We had one bad game at St Austell when he was first captain and there wasn't time to get a result, but after that we got on pretty well," said Furse, who owns a hotel in Newquay.

"It was always a battle of wits with 'Roby' and I used to enjoy pitting mine against his. Roby generally played positive cricket and that meant our games almost always produced a result. Devon were a good side then and often won. But we had our moments too, such as Falmouth in 1995 when they were the MCC Trophy holders and we knocked them out in the first round."

Furse added that Roebuck respected Minor Counties cricket. "Peter respected the competition and always strove to play good cricket and improve the players around him," he said.

Roebuck was just like any other journeyman professional with Somerset until he became captain and then found himself embroiled in the Richards-Garner affair that almost tore the county apart.

Roebuck supported a committee decision to sack West Indian Test stars Viv Richards and Joel Garner at the end of the 1986 season.

After an acrimonious battle fought out in public, Richards, Garner and Ian Botham all left Taunton. A public feud between Roebuck and Botham simmered away in the Press and in books for years afterwards.

Roebuck hit the headlines again in 2001 when he appeared in court charged with assaulting three young South African men who had been living with him at his house in Taunton. He was given three four-month prison sentences, suspended for two years.

Roebuck had taken out Australian citizenship some years earlier. After his court appearance, he left Britain for good and divided his year between houses in Sydney and Pietermaritzburg, in South Africa.

      

Comments

       
  • Profile image for nicold

    WENDYDAVEY

    I'm sure he was loved by all the men he assaulted!

    By nicold at 16:13 on 15/11/11

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  • Profile image for The Normandy Arms

    he certainly knew his way around a womans body !
    the caning thingy was just tom foolery that got out of hand.

    By The Normandy Arms at 15:52 on 15/11/11

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  • Profile image for The Normandy Arms

    Lets just say ididnt get much sleep
    so if you didnt know peter please keep your comments to yourself.

    By The Normandy Arms at 15:48 on 15/11/11

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  • Profile image for stagedoor

    nice comment wendy,
    did you mean he was 100% after all men?

    By stagedoor at 13:31 on 15/11/11

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  • Profile image for The Normandy Arms

    Nicold
    dont believe all you read
    we knew Pete from our time in Budleigh
    he was a warm person
    and i can tell you he was a 100% all man
    a great leader and cricketer who will be sadly missed.
    rip my dear friend x

    By The Normandy Arms at 13:03 on 15/11/11

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