WEST, PETER ANTHONY, who died on September 2, 2003, aged 83, was the
beaming and unflustered front man for BBC's televised cricket coverage for nearly
20 years until his retirement in 1986. The smile was genuine: Peter West was a
charming and courteous man with a boyish enthusiasm for sport that never left
him. But he had an acute sense of the need to marry sport and commerce, and
his most lasting contribution may well be as a pioneer of sporting sponsorship.
At Cranbrook School he won colours at five games and was captain of cricket
for three years: post-war employment as a sports reporter for the Exchange
Telegraph agency seemed the perfect job. His break came in 1947 while covering cricket at Taunton. C. B. Fry's telephonist failed to materialise and West offered
to phone his copy through. In return Fry, liking the clarity of the young man's
voice, promised a recommendation to the BBC, with West wisely not letting on
that he had already failed a newsreading audition. By August he was commentating
on the South African tour and a year later was covering the London Olympics.
He was in the commentary team when the BBC first televised Test cricket nationally
in 1952 - he had been doing rugby since 1950 - and soon made his debut at
Wimbledon. Aside from sport he hosted light entertainment programmes, and from
1957 to 1972, much to the amusement of the rugby fraternity, West was the dinnerjacketed
compère of
Come Dancing. There was even a stint presenting Miss World.
He also set up the
Playfair cricket and rugby annuals, editing the former until
1953, wrote books on the 1953 and 1956 Ashes, covered cricket for
The Times,
and was their rugby correspondent for 11 years. In 1970 he set up the sports
marketing agency West Nally, which married the entrepreneurial vision of Patrick
Nally with West's reputation and ambassadorial skills. The company were involved
with the Benson and Hedges Cup from its start in 1972 and, five years later,
managed Cornhill Insurance's ground-breaking sponsorship of Test matches in
England. After retiring from television, West was offered the chance to cover the
1986-87 Ashes tour for the
Daily Telegraph. He leapt at the chance to fill in one
of the last gaps in his sporting CV, understandably imagining that the
Telegraph
expected him to cover the cricket in his own Corinthian and by then rather oldfashioned
way. Instead, a tragi-comic few months ensued, with the
Telegraph,
which was in a confused period, sending increasingly testy messages demanding
that West match the latest revelations or speculations in the tabloids. The experience
did produce one last cricket book,
Clean Sweep, to sit alongside his engaging
memoir,
Flannelled Fool and Muddied Oaf. West then headed for a happy
retirement in the West Country, cultivating his garden.
© John Wisden & Co