In loving memory

Bob
Simpson

1936 - 2025 · aged 89

Bob Simpson was the granite-jawed, relentlessly competitive embodiment of Australian cricket at its most complete. Born Robert Baddeley Simpson on 3 February 1936 in the inner-Sydney suburb of...

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1936
2025
A Life

Bob remembered.

Bob Simpson was the granite-jawed, relentlessly competitive embodiment of Australian cricket at its most complete. Born Robert Baddeley Simpson on 3 February 1936 in the inner-Sydney suburb of Marrickville — the third son of Scottish immigrant parents who brought with them an ethic of toughness and tenacity — he was captaining school teams by the age of twelve and made his first-class debut for New South Wales against Victoria at sixteen. Over the next four decades, first as a player and then as a coach who rebuilt Australian cricket from its lowest ebb, he left a mark on the sport that few in the country's history could match.

As an opening batsman, Simpson was patience and precision made flesh. His 311 against England at Old Trafford in 1964 — his first Test century, cashed in from a platform of rock-solid defence — remained among the highest individual scores by an Australian in Test cricket for six decades. His first-wicket partnership of 382 with Bill Lawry against the West Indies in 1965 stood as an Australian record for generations. He was also an outstanding leg-spin bowler, taking 71 Test wickets, and was regarded by contemporaries as perhaps the finest slip fielder the game had ever seen, pouching 110 catches in 62 Tests and 384 in first-class cricket overall. In a career of 21,029 first-class runs and 60 centuries, the only criticism ever levelled was that he took too long to score his first Test hundred — it came in his 30th match.

In 1977, at the age of 41, he was asked to come out of retirement to captain a depleted Australia side while World Series Cricket stripped the team of its stars. He answered without hesitation. Then in 1986 he was appointed the country's first full-time national coach, working alongside Allan Border to restore discipline, fitness and fielding standards to a team that had lost its way. The results defined an era: Australia won the 1987 Cricket World Cup — their first — and regained the Ashes in 1989. The players who came through that period — Steve Waugh, David Boon, Mark Taylor, Merv Hughes — would go on to form the spine of the dominant Australian side of the 1990s. Simpson's coaching fingerprints were on all of it.

He was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1985, the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2006 and the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame in 2013, and was made an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2007. He died in Sydney on 16 August 2025, aged 89, at a private funeral attended by his former players, Steve Waugh and David Boon among them, and former Prime Minister John Howard.

From the Memoriance team.
Timeline

A life in moments.

1936
February 3

Born in Marrickville, Sydney

Robert Baddeley Simpson is born in the inner-Sydney suburb of Marrickville, the third son of Scottish immigrant parents. He grows up surrounded by the game, captaining school teams by the age of twelve. Cricket, he once said, was "the only thing I ever really wanted to do."

1952
November 1

Sheffield Shield debut for NSW, aged 16

Just sixteen years old, Simpson makes his Sheffield Shield debut for New South Wales against Victoria — the youngest player to represent the state. He has already captained teams two years above his own age group. A remarkable career has its first page.

1964
July 23

Scores 311 at Old Trafford — a triple century as captain

At Old Trafford, in his 30th Test match, Simpson finally scores his first Test century — and doesn't stop. He bats for over 12 hours to reach 311, one of only seven triple-centuries by an Australian in Test history. It is the innings that defines him as a player and captain. He is also Australia's captain for the match.

1977
December 2

Comes out of retirement at 41 to captain Australia

With World Series Cricket splitting the game and Australia's best players unavailable, the 41-year-old Simpson comes out of a nine-year retirement to captain the national side. He scores 176 in Perth and leads Australia to a 3–2 series win over India — one of the most remarkable comebacks in Australian sporting history.

1987
November 8

Coaches Australia to their first Cricket World Cup

As national coach alongside captain Allan Border, Simpson guides Australia to victory in the Cricket World Cup in India — their first ever. The win is the foundation of a generation of Australian dominance. His coaching legacy will shape the careers of Steve Waugh, Mark Taylor, Merv Hughes and Shane Warne.

2025
August 16

Passes away in Sydney, aged 89

Bob Simpson dies in Sydney, aged 89. A minute's silence is observed at Australia's T20 match against South Africa in Cairns, with players wearing black armbands. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese calls his contribution to the sport "service to be remembered for generations." Cricket Australia describes him as "a mainstay of a very strong Australian team."

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Details

For the record.

Born
February 3, 1936 · Marrickville, Sydney
Died
August 16, 2025 · Sydney
Age at passing
89