The RIP Thread

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
Hugh Morris former Glamorgan and England cricketer has died aged 62.

RIP <rose>

The tribute issued by Glamorgan:

Glamorgan County Cricket Club is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Glamorgan legend, trophy winning captain and former CEO Hugh Morris MBE. Hugh was a hugely respected and much-admired figure within the game, whose contribution to cricket in England and Wales will be fondly remembered. Our thoughts are with his family, friends and colleagues at this very difficult time.



Hugh Morris was a colossus both on and off the field for Glamorgan County Cricket Club as well as the England and Wales Cricket Board and belonged to an elite group of Glamorgan cricketers to have won a Championship-winners medal, as well as silverware in one-day cricket, in addition to playing for England. Whether it was with his trusty Gray-Nicholls bat in hand or latterly, a pen or with a mouse, Hugh always had Glamorgan’s best interests at heart. Hugh comfortably takes his place as one of the true greats of the modern-day Club, alongside the likes of Johnnie Clay, Maurice Turnbull and Wilfred Wooller: dependable, courageous and always, one of us, fighting for what was best for our Club. (writes Andrew Hignell)



On hearing of Hugh’s passing, Dan Cherry, the man who succeeded him as Glamorgan’s CEO, led the tributes to the 62 year-old.



“Everyone here at Glamorgan County Cricket Club and further afield are devastated on hearing the awful news about Hugh. The last few years have been extremely difficult for him and his family, but we were pleased to see Hugh several times during the 2025 season here at Sophia Gardens. I know that the fact that our Men’s team won promotion to the First Division of the Rothesay County Championship, and our Women’s team began their existence by reaching the final of their 50-overs competition put a smile on Hugh’s face as he was undergoing a difficult course of treatment.



“Hugh holds a very special place in the history of Glamorgan Cricket as well as in the hearts of the Club’s supporters for his efforts, both on and off the field. He was a man of great energy and a true gentleman, whilst his achievements will live long in the Club’s record books and I doubt if any batter in any county team will ever surpass Hugh’s seasonal record of 2,276 first-class runs. As a player and administrator, Hugh led from the front and fearlessly fended off whatever thunderbolts opposing bowlers sent in his direction. He inspired us with his actions, whether with the bat in hand or leading us in the field, besides helping to save the cash-stricken Club when foreclosure seemed a possibility and finally inspiring all he met while bravely undergoing prolonged and challenging treatment.



“Hugh leaves us with an outstanding legacy, not least a Stadium here at Sophia Gardens of international calibre – a far cry indeed from the ground when he first played for Glamorgan as a teenager - plus a Welsh Fire franchise poised for even greater success in the cricketing landscape of the 2020s and beyond. The Club, Welsh cricket and the game as a whole has lost a great player, a tireless administrator, and a fine human being of great dignity and integrity.



“Our thoughts and prayers at this tragic time are with his wife Debbie, their twin daughters Bethan and Emily, plus Hugh’s many friends from across the world of sport and former colleagues throughout the cricketing world.”



The affable, blond-haired opening batter joyously led Glamorgan to their first-ever silverware in one-day cricket as his beloved Club won the Sunday League title in 1993, and during his seventeen years in the 1st XI he established productive opening partnerships, initially with Alan Butcher and subsequently with Steve James which provided the platform for the rest of the batters to flourish at a time when most other counties had at least one established international fast bowler in their armoury.



Fittingly, the left-hander was at the non-striker’s end at Taunton when Steve hit the winning runs as Glamorgan defeated Somerset to become the County Champions of 1997. It was also a match which proved to be Hugh’s farewell appearance for the Welsh county as he equaled Alan Jones` Club record of 52 hundreds during the first innings of the game with a superb 165 during what proved to be a match-winning partnership with Matthew Maynard. He bowed out of professional cricket with a career tally of 19,785 first-class runs and a hugely impressive batting average of 40.29.



Hugh subsequently held senior posts at the England and Wales Cricket Board, initially helping to set up an Academy system based at Loughborough University before acting as Managing Director of English Cricket and, with the same gimlet-eyed attention to detail that he had shown when leading Glamorgan to the Sunday League title, overseeing the implementation of a series of policies including central contracts, besides shrewdly managing the national side through some difficult times during the early 2000s. We at Glamorgan benefitted from his vision of academies and indoor training centres, and it is therefore very fitting that the Club will shortly be renaming their Indoor School at Sophia Gardens as the Hugh Morris Cricket Centre in his lasting memory.



He returned to Glamorgan Cricket in 2013 as Chief Executive and Director of Cricket at a time when the Club faced severe and existential financial challenges. Together with other senior figures, Hugh helped the debt-ridden Club to get back onto an even keel. After arriving facing a deficit in the region of £17 million and the threat of liquidation, by the time Hugh retired from the Welsh county during December 2023, the Club’s finances were out of the red, besides boasting an impressive list of international fixtures plus a successful franchise in The Hundred – all testament to Hugh’s tact, diplomacy and business nous, especially in fighting for a Welsh identity in the new short-form game, besides staving off competition from Bristol and Taunton. He played a huge role in the successful staging of the 2015 Ashes at the Cardiff ground, as well as the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup in 2019, plus the first batch of concerts. Hugh leaves his beloved Club with a bright and stable financial future and, having spent countless hours in driving down the debt, Glamorgan’s balance sheet is now the envy of many other counties.



Born in St. David’s Hospital in the Canton district of Cardiff, Hugh hailed from a well-known cricketing family in Cowbridge with his talents at both the summer game as well as rugby being initially nurtured at Blundell’s School in Devon. Hugh’s nascent leadership skills were also spotted whilst he was at the famous boarding school near Tiverton and, by the time he had become a student at South Glamorgan Institute (now Cardiff Metropolitan University), Hugh had already captained England’s age-group teams. Having added captain of Young England to his already impressive c.v., Hugh became Glamorgan’s youngest-ever full-time captain midway through the 1986 season and, the following year, he proudly introduced their Royal Highnesses The Prince and Princess of Wales to the Glamorgan side as they met Gloucestershire in a one-day game at Sophia Gardens as the Welsh county launched their Centenary celebrations.



Hugh was amongst a crop of immensely talented homegrown players to emerge with Glamorgan during the 1980s, under the tutelage of Head Coach Alan Jones, as well as Wales National Coach Tom Cartwright. The group, which also included Matthew Maynard, Steve Watkin and Robert Croft, blossomed during the daffodil-golden 1990s as the Club enjoyed arguably one of their finest-ever decades. All four also won personal honours by playing for England, in Hugh’s case, many felt somewhat belatedly, with the left-hander winning three caps despite having enjoyed a series of run-laden summers, including in 1990 when he set a new Club record of 2,276 runs that summer, having become one of the most dependable English-qualified opening batters on the county circuit.



Throughout his career, Hugh always batted with great poise and calmness. The first of his Championship hundreds for the Welsh county came in mid-July 1984 against Yorkshire with Hugh, having started in the number five or six berth in the order, moving up to open and becoming the steady and unflappable anchor, very much in the mould of fellow left-hander Alan Jones. Hugh’s orthodox and technically correct approach to batting reflected his upbringing on shirtfront pitches at Blundell’s School, his early years in the Cardiff CC team plus the input from a range of talented coaches, including schoolmaster Ted Crowe and a host of England age-group and Young England personnel.



As Glamorgan’s captain, and later as CEO, Hugh’s approach to leadership was very strategic and methodical, always devising a clear plan, so that everyone clearly knew their role. This was most evident in the Sunday League success in 1993 as the Club, with Viv Richards in their ranks, lifted their first-ever one-day silverware by defeating Kent at Canterbury during the last game of a fine campaign.



Hugh’s debut in Test cricket for England had come two years earlier during their series against the 1991 West Indians. It came as no surprise that despite facing the fearsome pace quartet of Patrick Patterson, Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose and the great Malcolm Marshall, Hugh and Graham Gooch shared an opening stand of 112 at The Oval, with one ball from Ambrose lifting sharply and nearly taking off Hugh’s nose as he leapt up in the air to fend off the vicious delivery. Nevertheless, it was an innings which Hugh looked back on with great pride, and the image which a photographer had taken of him airborne, with both feet off the ground, was the screensaver on both his laptop and his mobile phone for the rest of Hugh’s life.



Hugh had also been a hugely talented rugby player having won a sports scholarship at Blundell’s School in Tiverton, which his grandfather had attended back in the 1920s. It was here where, alongside his brother Andrew, Hugh won a place in the school’s 1st XI when only fourteen, besides going on to shine as a talented fly-half with a decent right boot. He further developed his rugby-playing skills at South Glamorgan Institute and also accepted an invitation to train with Cardiff Athletic Club. With Gareth Davies, the Welsh number ten, being the regular choice for Cardiff’s 1st XV, Hugh opted to further his rugby-playing career with Aberavon as well as briefly for Newport before deciding, after a series of knee injuries to focus on his cricketing career. Nevertheless, in 1984 Hugh was chosen in the Welsh Students team which met their counterparts from France at Swansea with the Welsh squad including future internationals Paul Thorburn, Ieuan Evans and Robert Jones.



In December 2002 Hugh was diagnosed with throat cancer having discovered a lump on the side of his neck whilst shaving. After an Oxford specialist had overseen a series of operations, the medics discovered the primary tumour in one of Hugh’s tonsils and he subsequently had a bilateral neck dissection which removed all of his glands. This was followed by a grueling course of radiotherapy and plastic surgery during which he adopted the same stubbornness and dogged approach which he had shown whilst opening the batting for Glamorgan, England and the MCC. During his treatment, Hugh also became Patron of Heads Up, a charity focusing on head and neck cancer, for whom he helped to raise £300,000 over an eight-year period. He also became a fundraiser with Macmillan Cancer Support and, after being given the all-clear during 2007, he returned to work full-time with the ECB and resumed his duties as their Managing Director.



Sadly, this dreadful illness struck again late in 2021 when Hugh was initially diagnosed with bowel cancer, before further medical tests showed that it had spread to his liver. He duly underwent another extensive course of chemotherapy, with his second fight with cancer and fund-raising work, not going unnoticed as in 2022 Hugh was recognized by Her Majesty The Queen in what proved to be her final Birthday Honour’s List with the former Glamorgan captain being awarded the MBE for his services to cricket and charity. Once again, Hugh bravely fought this terrible illness with great stoicism and determination, but he tragically lost his fight on 28 December.
 
Just read a snip on Martin Chivers has passed. He was one of the first players l knew of. RIP Martin…..

You must log in or register to see images

RIP - As a teenager saw him play quite a bit at the Dell which was only 15 mins up the road from Winchester where we lived. After promotion to Division 1 of course we always seemed to lose there! Chivers was a somewhat a lanky, awkward player to watch, by he definitely knew how to put the ball on the back of the net.
 
Last edited:
I also see that Terry Yorath (Leeds United) another player from my generation has passed away.

A warrior touched by tragedy - Terry Yorath obituary​

You must log in or register to see images


Yorath was part of the greatest era in the history of Leeds United.

Former Wales captain and manager Terry Yorath, who has died at the age of 75, was the first Welshman to play in a European Cup final, but was deeply affected by two off-field tragedies.

He played for Leeds United, Coventry City and Tottenham Hotspur, skippered Wales in 42 of his 59 international appearances, and later managed Swansea City, Bradford City, Cardiff City and Sheffield Wednesday.

Yorath will however perhaps always be most closely associated with the Wales team he managed that just missed out on qualification for the 1994 World Cup as a result of an agonising defeat by Romania.

He is survived by three children - son Jordan and daughters Louise and Gabby, the BBC Sport presenter who married Scotland rugby union international Kenny Logan in 2001.

Another son, Daniel, died suddenly at the age of 15 in 1992 from the genetic heart condition hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Yorath was also player-coach of Bradford in 1985 and was at Valley Parade when a fire killed 56 people.

You must log in or register to see images


Yorath's all-action style - he is pictured being booked during a First Division game at West Ham in 1973 - suited Don Revie's uncompromising Leeds side.

Born in Cardiff, Yorath was a combative midfielder and a natural leader after emerging in Don Revie's Leeds United team in the early 1970s.

He joined Leeds as a schoolboy in 1965 and signed on as a professional two years later, but his early first-team chances were limited by the presence of Billy Bremner and Johnny Giles in Revie's famous line-up.

But he was a regular when Leeds won the First Division title in 1973-74, and was in the side that lost 2-0 to Bayern Munich in the 1975 European Cup final.

Sold to Coventry a year later, he captained the Sky Blues for most of his three seasons there before joining Tottenham in 1979.

After Tottenham, Yorath played for Vancouver Whitecaps before joining Bradford as player-coach. Later, for a time he combined club management at Bradford and Swansea with managing Wales on a part-time basis, before eventually taking the Wales job full-time.

The two World Cup near misses​

You must log in or register to see images


Yorath's spell as Wales manager ended after the Romania game.

Yorath was twice involved with taking Wales to the brink of qualification for the World Cup finals - a feat that had only previously been achieved once, in 1958.

He was captain in 1977 when Scotland controversially beat Wales 2-0 at Anfield with the first goal coming from the spot after Scotl, and striker Joe Jordan appeared to handle the ball in the Wales penalty box, but the decision went in the Scots' favour.

Jordan, who had been a team-mate at Leeds, was also godfather to Yorath's daughter Gabby.

Then, as manager in 1993, Yorath steered Wales to within a win of reaching the 1994 finals in the USA, but his team lost 2-1 at home to Romania in agonising circumstances.

Paul Bodin missed an opportunity to put Wales 2-1 ahead when he hit the crossbar from the penalty spot, although Yorath refused to blame the defender.

"It wasn't Paul's fault we lost the game. People forget [goalkeeper] Nev Southall made a hash of it for the first goal from [Gheorghe] Hagi," he told BBC Radio Wales.

The match was Yorath's last in charge of Wales as he was not offered a new contract.

He was inducted into the Welsh Sport Hall of Fame in 2017.

You must log in or register to see images


Yorath spent over 40 years in football as player and manager, but was particularly affected by two off-field tragedies

Off-field tragedies affected Yorath​

At the time of the Bradford fire in 1985, Yorath was assistant coach with the Bantams, and helped evacuate supporters - including his own family - during the disaster.

Talking about the events of that day at Valley Parade on BBC Radio Wales in 2017, Yorath said that after warning people in the directors' lounge to get out, he had to "break a window and jump out of it".

He added: "The first thing I saw when I got outside was this old guy with his hands folded across his chest and you could see the burns on his arms.

"It was horrendous to go back there the next day and see the devastation. It was horrible, horrible... shocking."

On the same BBC Radio Wales programme, Yorath was asked how he had coped with the death of his son Daniel, who had undiagnosed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and said: "I didn't, really."

He added: "I started drinking more. I would go up to his grave every night and do the things people say they do when they lose someone. I'd go into his room and smell his clothes."
 
Last edited: