Ali Bacher, South Africa's last captain before the isolation years, said D'Oliveira had played a pivotal role in the ultimate transformation of South African cricket.
"It was tragic that he had to go overseas because of the colour of his skin to give expression to his undoubted talent," Bacher said.
"To play at that age for England, and a lot of people close to him said he was actually even older, was a fantastic achievement. He was one of those extraordinary players and he succeeded against all odds."
ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said D'Oliveira's impact in a divided country transcended the world of cricket and he was an inspiration for underprivileged South Africans.
"When I was growing up in South Africa, Basil was a revered personality in 'non-white' cricketing circles," Lorgat said in an ICC statement. "At the time his influence and his legacy in a divided South Africa stretched way beyond the cricket field.
"Basil was a man of great humility whose dignity impressed everyone when he found himself at the centre of one of cricket's most infamous episodes."
"While he never regarded himself as such, he was a hero to a generation of disenfranchised South Africans."
this
Users
Comment
article