New Zealand's oldest former test representative Trevor Barber has died, after passing away at a retirement home in Christchurch on Friday.
Barber, 90, made his test debut at his home ground, the Basin Reserve, against the West Indies in March 1956.
Spinner Sonny Ramadhin dismissed Barber cheaply in both innings en route to a nine-wicket win for the West Indies, but the man regarded as one of the finest fieldsman in New Zealand did have the satisfaction of taking the catch that dismissed the great Sir Garfield Sobers, off his captain John Reid.
Born in Otaki in 1925, it proved to be a solitary test appearance for the right-handed middle-order batsman and occasional wicketkeeper who played 49 first-class games for Wellington from 1945/46 to 1958/59 before rounding out his career with one season captaining Central Districts (1959/60).
Barber had already captained Wellington to a Plunket Shield title in 1956/57, and became Central Districts' oldest former representative.