Born(1919-10-10)10 October 1919Port of Spain, Trinidad
Died7 August 1996(1996-08-07) (aged 76)Port of Spain, Trinidad
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm mediumRight-arm off-break
RoleAll-rounder
National sideWest Indies
Test debut (cap 49)22 July 1939 v England
Last Test30 March 1954 v England
Tests umpired1 (1965)
Matches29
Runs scored1,243
Batting average30.31
100s/50s1/8
Top score101
Balls bowled5,236
Wickets58
Bowling average27.41
5 wickets in innings1
10 wickets in match1
Best bowling7/55
Catches/stumpings18/0
Overview
Gerry Ethridge Gomez (10 October 1919 – 6 August 1996) was a cricketer who played 29 Test matches for the West Indies cricket team between 1939 and 1954, scoring 1,243 runs and taking 58 wickets. He captained in one match for the West Indies when England toured in 1947/8.
Gomez was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad. During his career at the domestic level, he was an all-rounder of good standard, playing 126 matches and scoring runs at a batting average of nearly 45, in addition to taking 200 wickets at an average just above 25 with his medium pace.
He remained involved with cricket, as manager and administrator, and also served as an umpire in the Test match between West Indies and Australia in Georgetown, Guyana, in April 1965, when the appointed umpire, Cecil Kippins, pulled out on the day before the match. Kippins was ordered to withdraw by the British Guiana umpires' association, as Barbadian umpire Cortez Jordan was appointed as the second umpire, the first time a West Indian umpire had stood in a Test match outside his home territory. This was the first first-class match that Gomez umpired, and his only Test as an umpire.