Remembering Greg 2005Remembering Greg
Erin McPhee
writer2@nsnews.com
A memorial cricket match held Saturday marked the 10-year anniversary of a tragic sports-related accident that occurred on the North Shore.
North Vancouver resident Greg Hobson, 21, died after being hit in the head with a cricket ball while batting June 3, 1995 during game play at Norgate Park.
Greg was known to always wear a helmet; however, on that day, he had removed his helmet, possibly due to heat.
"I remember him as a youth playing at West Van," says Bill Sims, president of the North Shore Cricket Club, of which Greg was a member. "We were always anxious to get the Hobson twins. They were a prize. I was very, very pleased when they came to join (the club)."
Since 1996, the club has been holding an annual match in Greg's memory.
Twin boys Greg and Wayne Hobson were born in South Africa and moved to the North Shore with their parents Wendy and John when they were 15.
"We were very close twins always," says Wayne. "We spent more quality time in 21 years than most people do in their life."
The brothers grew up playing cricket and upon moving to the North Shore joined the adult league as their skill level was so high. Their athletic careers were mirror images of each other's and they played on the same teams throughout their childhood and into their 20s.
"He was just a happy character to be around on the field, always smiling and having fun," says Wayne, now 32. "In such a serious, serious game, he always found a way to make it enjoyable.
"Once the accident happened, cricket was never the same for me. There was something missing."
The twins shared the field on the day of the accident.
Greg was well mannered, dedicated to the game, a willing learner, a talented athlete and was said to have been able to throw equal to any pro-baseball player, Sims says.
He graduated from West Van secondary and was studying architecture at BCIT at the time of the accident.
"When we lost Greg it was one of the saddest days in the club's history," Sims says. "I admired him greatly."
Wayne remains a member of the club, though he has less time for games due to work commitments and a pending wedding about which his family and friends are extremely excited.
The impact of Greg's death has been felt and honoured both locally and internationally. After the accident, the family received phone calls from Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan and South Africa.
"When this happened there were 700 or 800 people at his funeral at West Vancouver United Church," says John. "It shocked the community. It shocked the world.
"It just didn't stop because it was unheard of that something like that would happen on a cricket ground," John says.
The Australian cricket side signed a bat in memory of Greg after defeating England in the final cricket match played at Lord's after their 2001 tour of England, says John.
PGA Tour golfer Greg Norman also decided to do something for the family after he heard of the accident - he signed a glove in memory of Greg after his first round of the 1999 US Open golf tournament played at Pinehurst, N.C.
Locally, some increased safety precautions have been adopted by the club. They've established a local book of rules in addition to the official rules of cricket in order to create a safer environment in which to play. For example, all junior players must now wear a helmet.
A Greg Hobson Memorial Cricket Fund has also been established and organized by Greg's parents. The fund has allowed for the purchase of 85 cricket helmets and their distribution to junior players. Each helmet carries the inscription "In memory of Greg Hobson, 1973 - 1995."
The fund is also allowing the family to establish a memorial bench in Greg's memory at Northlands Golf Course. The family is now waiting for final approval from the course.
The fund also recently supported the tsunami aid effort this past Christmas.
Another memorial bench was established by the B.C. Cricket Association and placed in Stanley Park, near the Brockton Point cricket ground clubhouse. Wayne says the family often visits the site, which faces the North Shore mountains, where the family continue to reside.
From 1995 to 2001 a Greg Hobson Memorial Golf Tournament was held at the Seymour Golf and Country Club, and the North Shore Cricket Club continues to make the Greg Hobson memorial match an annual fixture on its calendar.
"The two sides that are playing, they were playing the day that my son was killed," says John. "Both captains were good friends of his. They decided that whenever they have to play, one of those matches are going to be in memory of him."
Saturday's event was a regularly scheduled trophy game between the two premier division teams - Kitsilano's Meraloma Cricket Club and the North Shore Cricket Club.
"The aim of this match is to preserve the memory of Greg and serve as a sobering thought to everyone who plays that even though we play to win and we play for fun, it reminds us of the bigger scope of the game and the bigger scope of life," says Bob Adie, webmaster for the North Shore Cricket Club.
published on 08/31/2005