Douglas Sang Hue

Crowd trouble started on the fourth day when Basil Butcher was correctly given out by Sang Hue, the fifth wicket to fall in the second innings with West Indies still 28 runs behind.

Unfortunately strong winds blew the gas back towards the police, into the commentators' stand and then into the main pavilion, where the Governor-General, Clifford Campbell, and other dignitaries were watching the match.

[5] At the February 1974 Test against England at Port of Spain, Trinidad, West Indian batter Bernard Julien defended the last ball of the second day.

After a 2½ hour meeting between the captains, the umpires, and West Indies Cricket Board representatives, the official decision was to reinstate Kallicharran, with Greig's appeal "withdrawn".

[6][7] Sang Hue spent a summer in England in 1977, umpiring matches in the County Championship, John Player League and Benson & Hedges Cup.

Ray Robinson, the Australian Cricket writer, said of him that he had the shortest white coat and the longest dismissal finger on that side of the Atlantic.