Former Australian captain and coach Bob Simpson passed away aged 89 on Saturday. A legendary figure in the rise of Australia’s modern-day dominance, Simpson’s Test career spanned more than two decades after he made a stunning return to lead the national side in his forties.Simpson played 62 Tests and two ODIs between 1957 and 1978, amassing 4869 Test runs alongside 71 wickets. In the 39 Tests he captained, Australia won 12.Test comeback at 41Having retired in 1968, Simpson was persuaded to make a comeback for Australia at 41 in 1977 when the team was tattered by the breakaway World Series Cricket defections. He played 10 more Tests, comprising two hundreds. Simpson averaged 52.83 in 1977 and 32.38 the following year.Story continues below this adA man known for his immense endurance, Simpson broke multiple records as he ended his seven-year drought to record his maiden Test century in 1964 at the Oval. Batting for over 13 hours, Simpson converted his first ton into a mammoth Test triple hundred (311), still ranking as one of three batters to ever achieve the feat. Simpson was also the first Tes captain to record a triple century. Simpson’s record as the youngest skipper to smash 300 in Tests stood for more than 61 years, until South Africa’s Wiaan Mulder edged past him in July 2025 with his record-breaking triple century on Test captaincy debut in Zimbabwe.Successful coaching career, and a Ranji Trophy connectionFollowing his retirement in 1978, Simpson took over as Australia’s first full-time coach between 1986 and 1996, ushering in a band of legendary cricketers and leading the country to their first-ever World Cup triumph in 1987. Under Simpson, Australia also regained the Frank Worrell Trophy in 1995 after a 17-year drought.Simpson was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2006 and the ICC Hall of Fame in 2013.BrIntriguingly, Simpson was a part of both tied Tests in the history of cricket, as an opening batter against the West Indies in 1960 in Brisbane and as coach against India in Chennai in 1986. Simpson also served as a consultant to the Indian cricket team in the 1990s and also had a brief stint in the same role for the Rajasthan cricket team in the Ranji Trophy in the early 200s.Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese posted a tribute to Simpson on social media, lauding his commitment to cricket.Story continues below this ad“Bob Simpson’s extraordinary service to Australian cricket spanned generations. As a player, captain and then era-defining coach, he set the highest of standards for himself and the champions he led. He will be long remembered by the game he loved. May he rest in peace.”
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