As a schoolboy, Stephen Camacho represented St Stanislaus College, in Georgetown, for five years and in his last year at school
was Captain of cricket. He played for the Guyana Colts against Australia in Georgetown in 1964 and hit a brilliant 157.
in 1968, Camacho made his first class debut for Guyana against Australia, at Bourda. Later in 1968 he was selected to play
for the Presidents XI against the MCC in Barbados. Opening with Geoffrey Greenidge, he made 85 and earned a place as an opening batsman in the West Indies team. He played in all five Test matches against the MCC in the West Indies in 1968, scoring 328 runs for an average of 32.80, with a highest score of 87 in Trinidad.
He played a total of 11 Tests, his sober style perfectly complementing the expansive batsmanship of his opening partners Roy Fredericks
and Seymour Nurse. He topped the averages in England in 1969 but never made a Test hundred.
A poor series against India in 1970 - 71, signalled the end of his Test career.
After retirement in 1979, Camacho embarked on a long and distinguished career serving West Indies cricket, first as a selector then secretary and later as chief executive of the WICB.
In 2000 Camacho retired as WICB chief executive. In August 2003, Camacho was nominated by the Guyana Cricket Board
for the post of WICB president, which became vacant when Wes Hall retired (because of ill health) after holding the post for two years.
Stephen Camacho was the author of a 112-page hardback book (ISBN 13: 9789769507586; ISBN 10: 976950758X) named
"Cricket at Bourda: Celebrating the Georgetown Cricket Club",
which was published on 01 January 2007 ....