Travis Basevi, the architect of StatsGuru and one of Cricinfo’s pioneers, dies at 47
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Basevi was born in Geelong, Australia, in March 1975, but it was while studying in Sydney as a teenager in the early 1990s that he first encountered the nascent CricInfo, via the Internet Relay Chat (IRC) system that helped to connect its loose online community of cricket fans before the dawn of the mainstream internet.
“We instantly hit it off, Travis was a hilarious guy,” Misra recalls. “We collaborated on lots of things for CricInfo – the first and biggest one was the completion of the Test and ODI scorecard database in 1995. At that time he didn’t know how to program – however he would painstakingly go through every scorecard and crosscheck them against references like Wisden etc. and find and correct errors.
“We painstakingly created the first scorecard format, that was not only pleasing to the eye but also displayed all relevant information, including the right amount of spacing to fit players like “Bromley-Davenport”! When we finally announced the completion of the scorecard database in 1995, it was a huge milestone for CricInfo.”
“Travis was quintessential Cricinfo,” Sambit Bal, ESPNcricinfo’s global editor, says. “He stayed in for the adventure and did whatever needed to be done, formatting scorecards, coding them and other pages, and writing ball-by-ball-commentary, and perhaps also some match reports. His programming genius was established early, and he would soon be a colossus of the site behind the scenes.”
However, Basevi’s crowning achievement was the creation of StatsGuru, the first iteration of which went live in 1998. While other colleagues talked about the possibilities of mapping the range of data now populating the site, Basevi simply went ahead and did it, using his self-taught brand of coding to connect every facet of a cricket scorecard like a puppeteer with endless strings.
“Travis took over maintaining and extending the live scoring interface from me,” Misra explains. “During the 1996 World Cup we had created some scripts to go through the scorecards and create live stats – he would then go on to take those scripts to create his masterpiece – StatsGuru. The enormous impact that StatsGuru has had on the cricketing world cannot be explained in words. Travis was also incredibly modest and unassuming, very few people knew of the contributions he had made.
“StatsGuru was at once a leap of imagination and a coding marvel,” Bal adds. “It was built in the late ’90s – think about it – and remains his most renowned contribution. Cricket fans will be eternally grateful to him for it, but to those of us who worked with him and still work on the site today, his stamp is everywhere.”
As CricInfo’s global influence grew, Basevi travelled the world for a series of assignments, including to Bangladesh in 1998 for the original Champions Trophy (then the Wills International Cup). In 2000, he was headhunted by the formative wisden.com, for whom he would build the bespoke Wisden Wizard stats engine, but three years later he returned to his original calling, following CricInfo’s acquisition by Wisden, and the merger of the two websites.
Basevi moved to London in that time, and made his home in Kilburn, in easy commuting distance from his beloved Queen’s Park Rangers as well as a range of his favourite pubs in Camden and Chalk Farm – visits to which he would catalogue with the same forensic detail that he brought to his cricket statistics.
In 2014, Basevi took up a new role as Chief Technology Officer at CricViz, where he built the database and tools that underpin the company’s own statistical analysis.
He leaves behind his wife, Jane, and son, Victor, and a vast network of colleagues and admirers.
“He was more Cricinfo than any of us would ever be,” Bal adds. “And he will live on as long as Cricinfo does.”
Andrew Miller is UK editor of ESPNcricinfo. @miller_cricket
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