I have seen almost all his international innings starting with his first test series and the world cup finals of 1975 where he made most of his contribution when Windies were fielding.
In the preceding winter he had made his Test debut in India. (1974-745)
Chandra got him in both innings of the first test. He did not reach double digits for the match !
Next test was at Delhi where I lived. West Indies lost 3 wickets by around lunch time and then he came in. Chandra was not playing, I cant remember why, but Prasanna and Bedi made him look like an absolute novice and during the course of his first fifty runs he looked like getting out half a dozen times. But he survived and went on to score an unbeaten 192.
Even in the next three matches he had a top score of 50 in six innings. I wasn't impressed and for a long time the image of him struggling before the Indian spinners stayed with me and I refused to accept him as the giant he was proclaimed in England and Australia.
The series in India was immediately followed by one against Pakistan where he scored 17 runs in the three innings he played falling twice to spinners Intikhab Alam and Mushtaq Mohammad.
He was not a sensation (with the bat in the 1975 world cup) and in the winter he went to Australia for a 6 test series. He scored 0, 12 and 12 in the first two tests but West Indies persisted with him. In the next two tests he batted pretty aggressively but managed just a couple of forties and a thirty. Lillee and Thomsons seemed to have his measure.
The he decided to open the batting. In the last two tests, as opener, he scored 30 (38 balls), 101 (138 balls), 50 (54 balls) and 98 (103 balls) !! He averaged under 40 for the series but his last two tests showed batting of a very high order with brilliant and fearless strokeplay.
Windies returned hom to face India within weeks. This time Richards was ready and scored over 500 runs with three centuries and an average in the 90's. We did not watch that series live and had our own explanation for Richards' change of fortune.
Prasanna was injured during the first innings of the first test and did not play any more on the tour. The attack was never the same without him. This was true but we were being less than gracious. Venkatraghvan was no Prasanna but he was a very good bowler and there was Bedi besides Chandra.
The next series in England should have shut all of us for all time to come.
In just four test matches, Richards scored 829 runs in the series starting off with 232 at trent Bridge and signing off with 291 at the Oval. He averaged 118 plus for the series.
But he had another two ordinary series against Pakistan and Australia at home averaging under 30 for the two series.
I always thought him to be suspect against the really top class spinners. He enjoyed the ball coming on to the bat and I suspect a crafty spinner on a slow wicket was not his cup of tea. Unfortunately he did not play the great Indian spinners again in a test match. By the time he played India next in the 80's the spin department was in the hands of Shastri and Maninder and an ageing Venkat. Still in two series one at home and one away in two years he averaged in the 40's and 30's.
Even overall he never got close to what he had promised in that summer of '76 in England.
In 24 series (100 tests) after that one, he managed 400 runs in a series only once - and scored just 16 centuries in those 100 tests - managing more than a single century in a series just once and a top score of 208 not out against Australia.
So he never really dominated a series in the manner of Bradman or a Sobers or even a Lara after that year in the England and the series at home against India just before that.
Yet when he came on the crease you expected your team to be slaughtered and if he fell early you felt somehow robbed. His very presence at the crease demoralised the bowlers. I agree with the father of the poster who compared this aspect with Hayden. I too wrote once about the impact Hayden must have on bowlers when they see this huge hulk of a man walking casually down the track, the bat a toy in his massive hands, even as the bowler is planning to let go a thunderbolt. You wouldn't like to be in a dark alley with a guy like Hayden you would think. Richards had the same impact. The difference was in class of stroke play.
Richards, inspite of his Sehwag like disregard for reputations as well as a complete lack of fear of dismissal, played all the strokes in an orthodox manner as far as execution was concerned but wioth a complete disregard of which line and which type of movement should be hit in which direction. He decided where he would hit the bal;l and that is where it stayed hit.
His footwork, unlike Sehwag's, was exemplary in so far as he moved back and across (not always to the off stump though) and played perfect square cuts from the leg stump and ferocious pulls from outside off and he never looked like he was going to hit the ball with anything except the middle of the blade. When he moved forward he took a giant stump, even far outside the off stump, except that from there he might whip a perfect delivery anywhere between covers and square leg - all from the middle of the bat and you knew it.
It was awesome to see him move back outside the leg stump (before the ball left the hand almost) to hit ferociously to cover or over square leg. The six he hit to finish an innings in a one dayer when he moved back and across outside the off stump and picked up what looked like a middle stump yorker to far beyond the top of the square leg fence. You gasped.
When I read about Trumper I guess he must have had a similar impact on his opponents and fans except that he was gentle in his demeanour while Richards made you feel you were about to be owned.
to be continued . . .