Career
Wight was a prolific run scorer at the top of the order, scoring 16,965 runs during his thirteen years at Somerset. Only Harold Gimblett made more runs for the county. After playing, he became an umpire in English first-class cricket, standing in matches from 1966 to 1995.
His family was a mix of Scottish and Portuguese blood with good cricketing talent.
Wight came to England at the age of 20, arriving on a cargo boat in 1951. The conditions in England came as a shock to him, with rationing and outside toilets still prevalent.
He had arrived in the country with the intention of studying engineering. Fortunately for the cricketing world, his employer in Burnley refused to release him, as promised, for his motor mechanic examinations
With this, he emigrated to Toronto before returning to Lancashire to work in a factory.
Playing career In 1953, he was scoring runs for Burnley Cricket Club in the Lancashire League when his brother-in-law suggested he try out for Somerset. He impressed in the nets and was selected to play in a trial game, against the touring Australians. A shaky start saw him dismissed for a first-innings duck but he scored a century in the second-innings and was offered a Somerset contract.
Wight passed 1,000 runs in a season for the first of ten successive years during 1954.
His first full season with the county, totalling 1,343 runs in 50 first-class innings. The following year he made his maiden County Championship century, with 106 in the first innings of a nine wicket victory over Worcestershire.
The next three seasons proceeded in a similar fashion, with Wight scoring runs with an average fluctuating between the high twenties and low thirties, failing to make the big scores needed to boost it further. lieutenant was during the 1959 season that he truly established himself as one of the leading batsmen in English cricket, despite missing a number of games due to eye problems.
He finished the season with 1,874 runs, and with the joint second highest batting average (of those playing more than 2 innings) in the County Championship, behind only M. J. K. Smith.
Coaching and umpiring career When he was released by Somerset in 1965 he had scored 16,965 runs for the county. After retiring he opened a cricket school in Bath and spent 30 summers as an umpire. He umpired 567 games in total and when added to his games as a player he holds the record for most first-class appearances in Post-War England.
First-class Miscellaneous.