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Thursday, October 23

Paul Anthony Hibbert (1952-2008) Test Cap No:284

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Full name Paul Anthony Hibbert
Born July 23, 1952, Brunswick, Victoria
Died November 27, 2008, Essendon, Victoria (aged 56 years 127 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium

Profile
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Paul Hibbert was a tall, dark, stodgy opening batsman who played once for Australia, against India at Brisbane in the opening Test of the troubled 1977-78 summer, making a 77-ball 13 and 2. "He was a bit unlucky to make his debut on a greentop at the Gabba," former Victoria captain Ray Bright said. "If it had been a flat deck at Adelaide, who knows how he would have gone? It's all a matter of opportunity." His call-up came on the back of a remarkable feat of self-denial at Melbourne, where he made a century against the touring Indians without hitting a single boundary, only the second batsmen to make a hundred without finding the rope (the other was former Derbyshire batsman Alan Hill, who made 103 for Orange Free State v Griqualand West in 1976-77). For his state he was reliable, improving with age as he passed 800 runs in 1983-84 and finishing his career with 725 runs in 1985-86. He was also a useful medium pace seamer. His later years were troubled and dogged by alcoholism.

Only Test Australia v India at Brisbane, Dec 2-6, 1977
First-class span 1974-1987
List A span 1975-1987

David William Hookes (1955-2004) Test Cap No:276

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Full name David William Hookes
Born May 3, 1955, Mile End, Adelaide, South Australia
Died January 19, 2004, The Alfred Hospital, Prahran, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 48 years 261 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia
Batting style Left-hand bat
Other Coach, Commentator

Profile
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Natural, aggressive and irrepressible, David Hookes was an Australian cricketer of the 1970s who remained one into the 21st century. Not that he was a reactionary or relic; on the contrary, he was a savvy media performer and an innovative coach. But he had throughout his career a breezy confidence that recalled days when cricket was a more spontaneous and flamboyant affair.It was while indulging in the oldest of Australia rites, the post-match drink, that Hookes was killed in circumstances still shocking in their senselessness, by a bouncer's gratuitous punch, on January 19, aged 48. Typically, he had been in the company of players both from his current state, Victoria, and his former state, South Australia, after an ING Cup game - a habit ingrained when he made his debut at Adelaide 28 years ago.was in his second season that Hookes, barely 21, first grabbed attention, harvesting five Sheffield Shield centuries from six innings, including centuries in both innings in consecutive games - a feat accomplished only once before, 70 years earlier, by Surrey's Tom Hayward.

"Heck!" trumpeted Australia's Cricketer magazine. "It's Hookes!" Today, he might have had to prove his consistency over a longer course; then, he was at once slotted into Australia's middle-order for March 1977's Centenary Test with Greg Chappell and Doug Walters, where his five consecutive fours from Tony Greig's off-spin is among the most treasured cameos. "I made Tony Greig famous," he once said drolly.In that moment, too, Hookes became the face of Australia's cricket future. A blond, broad-shouldered, loose-limbed left-hander, Hookes was chased by the agents of Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket not merely for his cricketing gifts but his marketing potential. Despite having played but a single Test, he was advanced two-thirds of his fee rather than the half that others received: the new matinee needed a heart-throb.

Gary John Gilmour (1951-2014) Test Cap No;267

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Full name Gary John Gilmour
Born June 26, 1951, Waratah, New South Wales
Died June 10, 2014, Sydney (aged 62 years 349 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm fast-medium

Profile
© Getty Images
© Getty Images
At his mid-1970s peak, Gary Gilmour was a penetrative left-arm swing bowler and a talented hitter, bringing comparisons with another left-armer from New South Wales's central coast, Alan Davidson. He struck 122 on his first outing for New South Wales in January 1972, and made 52 and took 4 for 75 on his Test debut against New Zealand two years later. He then excelled in English conditions when Australia
toured England in 1975; his 6 for 14 in the World Cup semi-final against England and 5 for 48 in the final against West Indies were followed by 9 for 157 in the third Test at Headingley. But after an impressive home series against West Indies, Gilmour's powers as a bowler ebbed dramatically, so much so that he bowled only nine inconsequential overs in the Centenary Test. A debilitating foot injury was a handicap; so was a light-hearted attitude to training and fitness that owed more to the 1950s than to the increasingly professional era of which he was part.

© Getty Images
Gary "Gus" John Gilmour was an Australian cricketer who played in 15 Tests and 5 One Day Internationals (ODIs) between 1973 and 1977.At the peak of his career, Gilmour combined spectacular, free-hitting batting with penetrative left-arm swing bowling and the ability to hang on to a blinding catch in the slips cordon. He earned comparisons to the Australian all-rounder Alan Davidson.Gary John Gilmour was born 26 June 1951 in the Newcastle suburb of Waratah. He attended Waratah Primary Schooland Newcastle Boys High School.He was awarded two "Blues" by the New South Wales Combined High Schools Sports Association: in 1967 (Baseball) and 1969 (Cricket).

A score of 122 on his debut for New South Wales in January 1972, first caught the eye of the Australian selectors, who weren't afraid to blood him at age 22 during an "experimental" season.Gilmour's Test debut consisted of 52 runs and 4 for 75 in a big win over New Zealand at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. However, he appeared in only two of the next five Tests, as Australia rotated through a number of players with an eye on the Ashes series later in the year. Gilmour gave them something to ponder with seven wickets in a Test at Auckland, which included 5 for 64 in the first innings to set up a series-tying victory.

Competition for fast bowling places in the Australian team was intense at this time. Gilmour wasn't selected for the 1974–75 Ashes series, but reappeared in green and gold when selected for the 1975 England tour, which included the inaugural World Cup. The Australians, inexperienced at one-day cricket, adopted a casual yet aggressive approach, often employing a full slips cordon for their opening bowlers. Gilmour was twelfth man in the early stages of the tournament, but selected for the semi final against England at Headingley.

Terrence James Jenner (1944-2011) Test Cap No:248

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Full name Terrence James Jenner
Born September 8, 1944, Mount Lawley, Perth, Western Australia
Died May 25, 2011, Brighton, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 66 years 259 days)
Major teams Australia, Cambridgeshire, South Australia, Western Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

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Terrence James Jenner (8 September 1944 – 25 May 2011) was an Australian cricketer who played nine Tests and one ODI from 1970 to 1975. He was primarily a leg-spin bowler and was known for his attacking, loopy style of bowling, but he was also a handy lower-order batsman.In his latter years he was a leg-spin coach to many players around the world, and a great influence on Shane Warne. He was also a radio cricket commentator for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
©geety image
Jenner was born in Mount Lawley, Western Australia. He was first selected as an all-rounder in grade cricket in Perth at the age of 17, playing for Mount Lawley. After two years in grade cricket, he was selected to make his debut for Western Australia, primarily as a bowling all-rounder in the 1963–64 season. However, as the WACA Ground was not conducive to spin, and with England left-arm orthodox spinner Tony Lock playing in the team, Jenner rarely appeared in the XI, claiming only 34 wickets in four seasons.He moved to South Australia in 1967–68, playing at the more spin-friendly Adelaide Oval and became a regular member of the playing team. After three seasons there, he was selected for the 1970 tour to New Zealand, but did not play in the Test matches.
He was finally able to make his debut in the 1970–71 Australian season in the First Test of the 1970-71 Ashes series at Brisbane. He did not however make a large impact, scoring 0 and 2 and taking 2/95, resulting in his immediate dismissal from the team.

Neil James Napier Hawke (1939-2003) Test Cap No:224

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Full name Neil James Napier Hawke
Born June 27, 1939, Cheltenham, Adelaide, South Australia
Died December 25, 2000, North Adelaide, South Australia (aged 61 years 181 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast

profile
© Playfair Cricket Monthly
Neil James Napier Hawke was an Australian Test cricketer and leading Australian rules footballer.Born in Cheltenham, South Australia, Hawke quickly developed as a natural all-round sportsman who excelled in cricket, football and golf and made his senior Australian rules football debut for South Australian National Football League (SANFL) club Port Adelaide in August 1957.
Hawke stamped himself as a future champion when in his third game he kicked 15 goals for Port against South Adelaide before being surprisingly dropped two weeks later.

Hawke quit Port at the end of 1957 to try his hand in Western Australia and made his West Australian National Football League (WANFL) debut in 1958 for East Perth Football Club, playing 42 matches and kicking 157 goals in two seasons with the Royals, including East Perth's 1958 and 1959 premierships. Hawke topped the WANFL's goalkicking list in 1959 with 114 goals, represented Western Australia against South Australia and gained local fame for apparently being the first footballer to perfect the drop punt over a long distance. Previously, the drop punt was only used over short distances on wet days but Hawke's innovation was said to have revolutionised the game in Western Australia.
©getty image

Fresh from his success on the football field, Hawke also made an impact on the cricket field as a medium-fast swing bowler with an unusual "crab-like'" action, a capable lower-order batsman and a sound fieldsman. He made his first-class cricket debut for Western Australia in November 1959, scoring 89 and returning the figures of 0/49. However, Hawke failed to capitalise on this initial success and returned to South Australia at the end of the 1959/60 cricket season.Playing for West Torrens Football Club in the SANFL and South Australia in the Sheffield Shield, Hawke continued to star in both football and cricket. Hawke was part of the 1963 South Australian football team that defeated Victoria at the Melbourne Cricket Ground; the first time

South Australia had won at the MCG since 1926, and in so doing became the first (and still the only) person to have represented both South Australia and Western Australia in Australian Rules football and cricket. His cricket also developed enough for him to make his Test debut on 15 February 1963 in the Fifth Ashes Test against England at the Sydney Cricket Ground, scoring 14 and recording match figures of 2/89.Hawke was a member of the 1963/64 Sheffield Shield winning South Australian team, and toured England (where he qualified for the British amateur golf championship and became Fred Trueman's 300th Test victim), India and Pakistan in 1964 and the West Indies in 1965. The West Indies tour found Hawke in top form as he took 24 wickets at 21.83 in the Test series, including match figures of 10–115 in the third Test at Bourda Cricket Ground, Georgetown, Guyana, as well as making his highest score, an unbeaten 45 at Sabina Park, Jamaica.

Barry Kenneth Shepherd (1937-2001) Test Cap No:223

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Full name Barry Kenneth Shepherd
Born April 23, 1937, Donnybrook, Western Australia
Died September 18, 2001, Fremantle, Western Australia (aged 64 years 148 days)
Major teams Australia, Western Australia
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

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Barry Kenneth Shepherd played in 9 Tests from 1963 to 1965.Barry Shepherd was an outstanding junior sportsman in Australian rules football, hockey and cricket. Twice representing Western Australia in schoolboy football, he won the medal for best player at the carnival on the first year of his selection (in Tasmania). He was runner-up for the same medal the following year (in Melbourne). Richmond Australian rules football club showed significant interest in recruiting him.

John Wesley Martin (1931-1992) Test Cap No:216


Full name John Wesley Martin
Born July 28, 1931, Wingham, New South Wales
Died July 15, 1992, Burrell Creek, New South Wales (aged 60 years 353 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales, South Australia
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox, Slow left-arm chinaman

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John Wesley Martin  was an Australian cricketer who played in 8 Tests from 1960 to 1967. Martin grew up on the central coast, near Taree, one of 10 children of the manager of Burrell Creek's post office and general store, which Johnny himself ended up managing. He died on 15 July after a heart attack, having survived one 20 years earlier, and had bypass surgery in 1984. He was 60.Born in Wingham of 28 July 1931, John Wesley Martin (whose mother was related to 1890s Surrey and England fast bowler Tom Richardson) first went down to Sydney at 15, and saw Bradman and Barnes score 234 each against England in December 1946. His imagination was fired. Over the next few years his local reputation spread, and in 1953-54 he joined Sydney grade club Petersham, catching the overnight train to the match each Saturday and returning home that evening. Buzzing his curving chinaman (googly), appealing alternately softly and urgently, bustling quickly back for the next one, and batting with great vigour (he hit 166 sixes for his grade club), Martin was eventually chosen for NSW in 1956-57. A promising Rugby League career was shelved.

Clifford Louis O'Neill (1937-2008) Test Cap No:211

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Full name Norman Clifford Louis O'Neill
Born February 19, 1937, Carlton, Sydney, New South Wales
Died March 3, 2008, Erina, New South Wales, Australia (aged 71 years 13 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat

profile
© Playfair Cricket Monthly
© Playfair Cricket Monthly
Norman Clifford O'Neill OAM (19 February 1937 – 3 March 2008) was an cricketer who played for New South Wales and Australia. A right-handed batsman known for his back foot strokeplay, O'Neill made his state debut aged 18, before progressing to Test selection aged 21 in late 1958. Early in his career, O'Neill was one of the foremost batsmen in the Australian team, scoring three Test centuries and topping the run scoring aggregates on a 1959–60 tour of the Indian subcontinent which helped Australia win its last Test and series on Pakistani soil for 39 years, as well as another series in India. His career peaked in 1960–61 when he scored 181 in the Tied Test against the West Indies, and at the end of the series, had a career average of 58.25. his performances on the 1961 tour of England saw him named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year. Thereafter his form was less formidable, characterised by nervousness and fidgeting at the start of his innings. Persistent knee problems as well as a controversial media attack on the legality of West Indian bowler Charlie Griffith saw him dropped from the Australian team after 1965. O'Neill also bowled occasional leg spin and was regarded as one of the finest fielders of his era. He later became a cricket commentator and his son Mark O'Neill also played cricket at state level.

Ronald Arthur Gaunt (1934-2012) Test Cap No.210

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Full name Ronald Arthur Gaunt
Born February 26, 1934, York, Western Australia
Died March 30, 2012, Sydney (aged 78 years 33 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria, Western Australia
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast

Profile
© PA Photos
A fast bowler from Western Australia, Ron Gaunt played three Tests for Australia in three different series. He took a wicket in his first over of Test cricket, in Durban in 1957-58, after he was flown in to replace the injured Ian Meckiff. On the 1961 Ashes tour of England, Gaunt took 40 first-class wickets at 21.12 but was only included in the Test side at The Oval. He moved to Victoria mid-career and added one more Test in 1963-64, his final year of first-class cricket. In later years, Gaunt coached Merv Hughes and Tony Dodemaide at Footscray Cricket Club in Melbourne, before he moved to the Gosford region of New South Wales. In 2012, Gaunt died in Sydney at the age of 78.

He was chiefly a fast bowler, who took 266 wickets in first-class cricket at an average of 26.85, playing first for Western Australia and then for Victoria. His opportunities to play for Australia were restricted by the presence of Alan Davidson, Garth McKenzie and Ian Meckiff in the team at that time, but he took the wicket of Dick Westcott in his first over in test cricket and in all he took 7 wickets for Australia at an average of 44.28. After he retired from playing, he became a successful coach and was involved in the development of Merv Hughes and Tony Dodemaide among others.

Test debut South Africa v Australia at Durban, Jan 24-29, 1958
Last Test Australia v South Africa at Adelaide, Jan 24-29, 1964
First-class span 1955-1964

Arthur Theodore Wallace Grout (1927-1968) Test Cap No:206


Full name Arthur Theodore Wallace Grout
Born March 30, 1927, Mackay, Queensland
Died November 9, 1968, Wickham Terrace, Brisbane, Queensland (aged 41 years 224 days)
Major teams Australia, Queensland
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
Wally Grout entitled his autobiography My Country's Keeper, expressing his pride in the office he assumed at the age of 30 and held for almost a decade. Mobile, sometimes acrobatic, and a perceptive judge of batsmen's weaknesses, his presence was for many years talismanic: Australia did not lose a series during his tenure. Grout claimed a record six catches in an innings on Test debut, and in February 1960 scooped a first-class record eight in an innings for Queensland against Western Australia. He was also a batsman good enough to score a Test half-century as an emergency opener batsman, and a humorist with a touch of Australian comedian Lennie Lower. Asked by an Englishman if he'd attended a public school, he replied: "Eton. And drinkin'." He ignored doctor's warnings about his weak heart and kept on playing until he was 39 - and died from a heart attack less than three years later.

John William Wilson (1921-1985) Test Cap No:205

Full name John William Wilson
Born August 20, 1921, Albert Park, Melbourne, Victoria
Died October 13, 1985, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 64 years 54 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
John William Wilson (20 August 1921, Albert Park, Victoria – 13 October 1985, Melbourne, Victoria) was an Australian cricketer who played in one Test in 1956.A left-arm spinner who delivered the ball at almost medium pace, Wilson was nicknamed "Chuck" or "Chucker" because of the jerkiness of his action, a legacy of a childhood injury. He played once for his home state before moving to South Australia in 1950–51, playing virtually every first-class match for the state side until 1956–57.He toured England with the 1956 Australian cricket team, but Wisden commented that he "never adapted himself to English conditions" and "lacked finger-spin".[2] He took just 43 wickets on the tour. His one successful match in an undistinguished tour came at Bristol, where he took 12 Gloucestershire wickets for 61 runs in the match, at one point taking six wickets in seven overs for no runs as the county were all out for just 44 in their first innings. His seven for 11 in that innings remained his best bowling performance.

Kenneth Donald Mackay (1925-1982) Test Cap No:203

© The Cricketer International
Full name Kenneth Donald Mackay
Born October 24, 1925, Windsor, Queensland
Died June 13, 1982, Point Lookout, Stradbroke Island, Queensland (aged 56 years 232 days)
Major teams Australia, Queensland
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
© Getty Images
Kenneth Donald Mackay, MBE(A awarded who gave in services to cricket in 1962.), who died on June 13, 1982, aged 56, was one of the best and most popular cricketers ever produced by Queensland. As a left-handed middle-order batsman, he possessed a highly distinctive style, this endearing him to crowds which otherwise might have found his rate of scoring unendurably slow. At the crease he stood impassively, cap at a rakish angle, knees slightly bent, chewing compulsively. He employed negligible backlift and was an uncanny judge of line, often leaving balls that seemed to make the bails quiver. When a stroke was required, his most prolific were a deflection wide of cover-point's right hand and a type of shovel shot past mid-wicket. He was more often a match-saver than a match-winner. Very occasionally he would play an innings of remarkable and unexpected aggression and unorthodoxy, one such being at Lord's against Middlesex in 1961 when he made a whirlwind 168. As a right-arm medium-paced bowler, he became in the early sixties a useful member of the Australian attack, possessing the ability to contain batsmen for long periods and often taking good wickets. He had a stealthy, almost apologetic approach to the wicket, but the innocuous appearance of his deliveries masked subtle variations of pace and swing.

William Patrick Anthony Crawford (1933-2009) Test Cap No:202

Full name William Patrick Anthony Crawford
Born August 3, 1933, Dubbo, New South Wales
Died January 21, 2009 (aged 75 years 171 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast

Profile
William Patrick Anthony Crawford (3 August 1933 – 21 January 2009) was an Australian cricketer who played in four Tests, including one in England at Lord's in 1956 and three in India in 1956–57. He was born in Dubbo, New South Wales.He was a right-arm fast bowler.During the 1956 tour to England, Crawford was denied permission to have his pregnant wife accompany him on the sea voyage by the Australian Board of Control under its policy against spouses travelling with the team; she travelled separately.Crawford suffered an injury during his debut Test at Lord's and bowled only 29 balls.

Peter John Parnell Burge (1932-2001) Test Cap No:200

© ICC
Full name Peter John Parnell Burge
Born May 17, 1932, Kangaroo Point, Brisbane, Queensland
Died October 5, 2001, Main Beach, Gold Coast, Queensland (aged 69 years 141 days)
Major teams Australia, Queensland
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

profile
Peter John Parnell Burge was an Australian cricketer who played in 42 Tests between 1955 and 1966. After retiring as a player he became a highly respected match referee, overseeing another 25 Tests and 63 ODIs.He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1965 and in 1997 was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) "for service to cricket as a player, administrator and international referee, and to harness racing."

Leslie Ernest Favell (1929-1987) Test Cap No:198

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Full name Leslie Ernest Favell
Born October 6, 1929, Arncliffe, New South Wales
Died June 14, 1987, Magill, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 57 years 251 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
The early death of Les Favell robs cricket of a highly-esteemed figure, a breezy opening batsman who became a fine coach, an analytical commentator and columnist, partron of the Australian Cricket Society, and a life member of the SACA.Born in Arncliffe, Sydney on Oct 6, 1929, Leslie Ernest Favell, having grown up with the famous St George club when NSW were as powerful as many a Test team, moved to Adelaide as a young man and began a long distinguished career with South Australia in 1951-52. By his retirement after the 1969-70 season he had played 258 innings for his adopted State, making an unrivalled 9656 runs, mostly at an urgent rate, averaging 38.17, with 23 centuries. In all first class cricket his tally was 12,379 (36.62) with 27 centuries, one of them for Australia, an exercise in self-denial in the Madras Test of Jan 1960, during a tour which cost him two stone in weight. That, his finest innings, was played with a new upright stance, on a pitch sprinkled with sawdust.

James Harry de Courcy (1927-2000) Test Cap No:197

© Getty image
Full name James Harry de Courcy
Born April 18, 1927, Newcastle, New South Wales
Died June 20, 2000, Belmont, Newcastle, New South Wales (aged 73 years 63 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

Profile
© wn.com
James Harry de Courcy, a coronation year tourist to England in 1953, died of heart failure in Newcastle on June 20, aged 73. He had been ill for some time. He was the first Novocastrian to be picked for an Australian team directly out of Newcastle club cricket. Full of charm and vivacity, Jimmy De Courcy was an oldfashioned dasher, who played in the last three Ashes Tests in 1953. His 41 at Old Trafford on debut was the rain-ruined game in which the Aussies slumped spectacularly to 35 for 8 in their second innings against Johnny Wardle and Jim Laker. He made more than 1,000 runs on the Ashes tour of 1953. In a carefree atmosphere against a Combined Services XI which included a young Freddie Trueman at Kingston, scored a career-best 204, sharing a 377-run fourth-wicket stand with Keith Miller in three and a half hours. Neil Harvey recalls the 5ft 7ins De Courcy: 'He liked to hit the ball and didn't believe too much in defence. He was a good team man in 1953 and fitted in well with everybody. At Northampton, when we played against Frank Tyson for the first time, Arthur Morris was captain. We were sent in and I was still in my civvies as I watched the opening over. Tyson had Colin McDonald lbw second ball so I asked Graeme Hole if he would mind going in at three. Two balls later he was out and I still wasn't ready so Jimmy went in. He lasted the over only to fall at the other end. When I got out there we were 10 for 3 and Artie said to me: "Where the bloody hell have you been?" Making his New South Wales debut in 1947-48 as a 20-year-old from Hunter Valley club Lambton-New Lambton, De Courcy averaged almost 40 in 45 Sheffield Shield appearances in a 10-year period in which New South Wales won the Shield on eight occasions. His highest Shield score was 114 in three and a half hours against South Australia in 1951-52 in Sydney, and included a century stand with 16 year-old debutant Ian Craig, a future captain of Australia. De Courcy was prolific at Newcastle club level, making 23 hundreds and more than 7,500 runs for Lambton. His 1,028 runs at 85.57 in 1954-55 remains a competition record. He also played four seasons with Western Suburbs in Sydney grade ranks. A boilermaker by trade, he enjoyed old-time dances and attending the first-class games in Sydney and Newcastle. He collapsed while having a cigarette. He had been discharged from hospital for only four days after a longstanding lung infection.

John Charles Hill (1923-1974) Test Cap No:196


Full name John Charles Hill
Born June 25, 1923, Murrumbeena, Melbourne, Victoria
Died August 11, 1974, Caulfield, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 51 years 47 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
Jack Hill, 51, who died in Melbourne on August 11, was a topspin bowler who took seven wickets in two Tests at Trent Bridge and Old Trafford in 1953. They included leading batsmen in May, Graveney, W. J. Edrich and Kenyon and he twice dislodged Bailey. Hill took 63 wickets on the tour and in a third Test in 1955 dismissed Holt at Bridgetown. Lifting his front foot high, almost a goose- step, Hill delivered with a leg-break roll, but needed responsive turf for the ball to turn at his pace. Often around the leg stump, he was a difficult bowler for wicketkeepers & one sharp blow on an ankle knocked Len Maddocks' legs from under him.From Ballarat he moved to Melbourne CC, then transferred to St. Kilda. After three years in the RAAF he first played for Victoria in 1946 but was not chosen regularly until Jack Iverson retired. After having his skull fractured twice as a St. Kilda footballer, Hill gave up football in 1949 and often took powders to relieve headaches while playing cricket. He had 15 games for Victoria before selection to tour England soon after taking 7 for 51 against South Australia. Hill took 121 wickets for Victoria. He was a civil servant.

Test debut England v Australia at Nottingham, Jun 11-16, 1953 
Last TestWest Indies v Australia at Bridgetown, May 14-20, 1955 
First-class span 1945-1956

Ronald Graham Archer (1933-2007) Test Cap No:193

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Ronald Graham Archer
Born October 25, 1933, Highgate Hill, Brisbane, Queensland
Died May 27, 2007, Brisbane, Queensland (aged 73 years 214 days)
Major teams Australia, Queensland
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast
Other Referee, Administrator

Profile
Deprived of the bull's-eye But for a knee injury that ended his career at 23, allrounder Ron Archer would almost certainly have captained Australia. He had been recommended to succeed Ian Johnson for the 1957-58 South African tour, only to wrench his knee after catching a spike in some matting in a Karachi Test on the way home from the 1956 Ashes tour.

George Ronald Thoms (1927-2003) Test Cap No:192

© en.wikipedia.org
Full name George Ronald Thoms
Born March 22, 1927, Footscray, Melbourne, Victoria
Died August 29, 2003, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 76 years 160 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
Not only was George Thoms a member of Australia's one-Test club, he is the only Test cricketer to have been a gynaecologist. An eminent surgeon who introduced the concept of laser surgery to Australia in the mid-70s, Thoms quit representative cricket prematurely, at 27, for fear of sustaining a hand injury which would have finished his career as a surgeon. Good enough to make three centuries and average 35 at first-class level in a formidable era for fast bowlers, he scored 16 and 28 on debut for Australia on a green Sydney wicket alongside fellow rookies Richie Benaud and Colin McDonald against the West Indies in the fifth Test of the 1951-52 summer. "My strengths were more with defence, to keep them out early or as (his Victorian captain) Lindsay Hassett would say, 'see you at lunch or see you after the new ball,' Thoms said in a recent interview. Thoms was awarded an Order of Australia Medal in 1996. He attended the grand reunion of Australian cricket, involving almost 200 of Australia's living Test cricketers in Sydney, just weeks before his death.

Only Test Australia v West Indies at Sydney, Jan 25-29, 1952
First-class span 1946-1954

Gilbert Roche Andrews Langley (1919-2001) Test Cap No:189

© Getty Images
Full name Gilbert Roche Andrews Langley
Born September 14, 1919, North Adelaide, South Australia
Died May 14, 2001, Fullarton, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 81 years 242 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
Even when wearing flannels, Gil Langley seemed to have stepped straight from a council dustcart, but he missed little behind the stumps after Don Tallon's withdrawal from Australia's 1949-50 tour of South Africa gave him a first overseas trip. Langley's rumpled kit, shambling gait and razor-edged appeal endeared him to team-mates, while his nine catches in the 1956 Lord's Test stood as an Australian record for almost 44 years. He actually began his first-class career as a batsman, and picked up some useful tailend runs in Tests, including a half-century at Bridgetown in April 1955. An outstanding Australian Rules footballer who represented his state, he was the Labour MP for Unley in South Australia's parliament for 20 years.

Graeme Blake Hole (1931-1990) Test Cap No:188

Full name Graeme Blake Hole
Born January 6, 1931, Concord West, Sydney, New South Wales
Died February 14, 1990, Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 59 years 39 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales, South Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Graeme Hole played in 18 Tests for Australia from 1951 to 1955 and toured England under Lindsay Hassett in the summer of 1953. The verdict on his Test career must be that it was deeply disappointing both to the player and the selectors, who kept faith with him for as long as they reasonably could. When he was summoned to the colours against England in February 1951, he seemed to have everything in his favour, not least his personal charm, good looks and grace of movement.

James Wallace Burke (1930-1979) Test Cap No:187

Full name James Wallace Burke
Born June 12, 1930, Mosman, Sydney, New South Wales
Died February 2, 1979, Manly, Sydney, New South Wales (aged 48 years 235 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
After scoring an eyecatching century on his Test debut against England in January 1951, Jim Burke took his omission from the 1953 Ashes tour so hard that he redoubled efforts to banish risk from his game. Henceforward he was both a curse on bowlers and the bane of spectators: his 28 not out in 250 minutes during the Brisbane Test of December 1958 is almost as infamous as Trevor Bailey's batting marathon in the same game. Team-mates, though, often had cause to bless his blunting presence. His highest Test innings underwrote an innings victory at Cape Town in January 1958, and his dour batting belied an impish humorist.

Test debut Australia v England at Adelaide, Feb 2-8, 1951 
Last Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Feb 13-18, 1959 
First-class span 1948-1959

John Brian Iverson (1915-1973) Test Cap No:185

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Full name John Brian Iverson
Born July 27, 1915, Melbourne, Victoria
Died October 24, 1973, Brighton, Victoria (aged 58 years 89 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
John Brian Iverson, who died in Melbourne on October 24, aged 58, was an unusual bowler who created something of a sensation during a brief career in Australian cricket. He bowled fast when at school, but took no part in cricket for twelve years afterwards. While on Army service in New Guinea, Big Jack, as he was known, developed a peculiar method of spinning the ball, which he gripped between his thumb and middle finger. This enabled him to bowl a wide variety of deliveries, including off-breaks, leg-breaks and googlies, without any change of action. He first attracted attention in big cricket in 1949-50 when he took 46 wickets for Victoria at an average cost of 16.12. In the following autumn with W. A. Brown"s team in New Zealand, he, in all matches, disposed of 75 batsmen at a cost of seven runs each and in the next Australian season, at the age of 35, he was chosen for his country against the England team captained by F. R. Brown. So perplexing did the visiting batsmen find the bowling of this tall man that in the Test series he obtained 21 wickets for 15.73 runs apiece, including six for 27 in the second innings of the third Test at Sydney. During the fourth Test at Adelaide he suffered an ankle injury when he trod on the ball. He played in only one game in each of the next two seasons and then gave up cricket altogether.

Test debut Australia v England at Brisbane, Dec 1-5, 1950
Last Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Feb 23-28, 1951
First-class span 1949-1954

Geffery Noblet (1916-2006) Test Cap No:184

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Full name Geffery Noblet
Born September 14, 1916, Parkside, Adelaide, South Australia
Died August 16, 2006, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 89 years 336 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Geff Noblet, thin and upright, seemed nearly to touch the clouds when he bowled. He was 6ft 3in, nothing these days, but dwarfed almost all his Australian team-mates and once dismissed the great West Indian Frank Worrell for a king pair in a tour match in Adelaide. Competition for places in Australia's best XIs after the war was so intense, however, that he remained an understudy for almost his entire career.

John Moroney (1917-1999) Test Cap No:183

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Full name John Moroney
Born July 24, 1917, Macksville, New South Wales
Died July 1, 1999, Orange, New South Wales (aged 81 years 342 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
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Jack Moroney came late to big cricket because of the Second World War, and failed to secure the regular Test place many believed he deserved. His fielding was heavy-footed, and his reputation for dour batting was not helped by an odd reluctance to use his power, sparking the observation by RS Whitington that he batted `like a purposeless porpoise'. Moroney grumbled that maintaining discipline as a school-master was difficult enough, without irreverent pupils being offered such a tag for their teacher.

Ronald Arthur Saggers (1917-1987) Test Cap No:182

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Full name Ronald Arthur Saggers
Born May 15, 1917, Sydenham, Sydney, New South Wales
Died March 17, 1987, Harbord, Sydney, New South Wales (aged 69 years 306 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
Although tall for a wicketkeeper, Ron Saggers was considered stylish by his contemporaries and was among the top flight of Australian 'keepers. Coming to England in 1948 as understudy to Talton, he played in the Headingley Test, taking three catches, and then in 1949-50, with Tallon unavailable, he was the senior wicketkeeper in Hassett's team to South Africa. He played in all five Tests, effecting 21 dismissals with 13 catches and eight stumpings. In 77 first-class matches - he represented New South Wales from 1939-40 to 1950-51 - he took 147 catches and made 74 stumpings, including ten dismissals (seven in one innings) for New South Wales against a Combined XI at Brisbane in 1940-41. A useful right-handed batsman, he scored 1,888 runs with an average of 23.89, his one century being his 104 not out against Essex in 1948 when the Australians put on 721 runs in one day.

Test debut England v Australia at Leeds, Jul 22-27, 1948
Last Test South Africa v Australia at Port Elizabeth, Mar 3-6, 1950
First-class span 1939-1951

Douglas Thomas Ring (1918-2003) Test Cap No:181

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Full name Douglas Thomas Ring
Born October 14, 1918, Hobart, Tasmania
Died June 23, 2003, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 84 years 252 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
The burly, beamish Doug Ring never appeared a great cricketer, but that was mainly because he played in a team and an era full of them. As it was, his leg-spin was thoughtful, his batting hearty and his record impressive enough to earn him inclusion in Sir Donald Bradman's all-conquering Ashes team of 1948. In 13 Tests over almost six years, he obtained 35 wickets at 37.28 and 426 runs at 22.42. He might have achieved more but for spending most of his 20s in the army, and injuring his back while lifting the gun carriage of a twenty-five pounder in New Guinea.

Ring adjusted his action as a result, becoming slightly more open-chested; on the advice of a Dr Searby from East Melbourne, he would prepare for cricket by rolling round on the dressing room floor. He made up for biomechanical impairment with sagacity. His main variation was a useful sliding top-spinner, which he passed on to the young Richie Benaud when they toured England in 1953, plucking an apple out of a bowl of fruit while the Australians were travelling on a train between matches.

Samuel John Everett Loxton (1921-2011) Test Cap No:180

Sam Loxton talks to the media in Sydney,
 June 8, 2005.© Getty image
Full name Samuel John Everett Loxton
Born March 29, 1921, Albert Park, Melbourne, Victoria
Died December 2, 2011, Queensland (aged 90 years 248 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Sam Loxton at his Gold Coast home, August 16, 2008,
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Sam Loxton, one of the last remaining members of Australia's 1948 Invincibles, has died at the age of 90. Loxton passed away overnight in Queensland, leaving Neil Harvey and Arthur Morris as the only surviving members of Don Bradman's great 1948 side that toured England without losing a match.With the square-jawed look of a prizefighter, Sam Loxton was a gutsy batsman who liked nothing more than having fast bowlers try the blast him out with short-pitched bowling - "If they do, I'll hit `em over the fence" - as well as being a fast-medium bowler capable of moving the ball in the air. He made his debut against India in 1947-48 and as part of the 1948 Invincibles scored 973 runs at 57.23 on tour, appearing in three Tests. He made his only Test hundred against South Africa at Johannesburg in 1949-50, playing in all five Tests, but lost his place after a poor start to the 1950-51 Ashes series. He was a Liberal-Country member of parliament, & was also a Test selector between 1972 and 1981.

Leonard Joseph Johnson (1919-1977) Test Cap No:179


Full name Leonard Joseph Johnson
Born March 18, 1919, Ipswich, Queensland
Died April 20, 1977, Silkstone, Queensland (aged 58 years 33 days)
Major teams Australia, Queensland
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
A Queensland stalwart of the post-war years, Joseph Leonard `Len' Johnson, died in Ipswich on April 20. Born in 1919, he first attracted attention in the so-called Sheffield Shield competition for Australian troops at Bougainville, in the Solomons, at the end of the war. Norm McMahon, treasurer of the present Australian touring team, also played there. Len Johnson was a fast-medium right-arm bowler and strong hitter in the lower order. His eventual tally of 171 wickets in 43 Shield matches for Queensland was a State record until overtaken by Ross Duncan and Peter Allan. He toured New Zealand with an Australian `Second XI' in 1950, but was destined to play for his country only once: against India at Melbourne in the final Test of the 1947-48 series. He scored 25 not out and took 3 for 66 and 3 for 8, and was entitled to feel a trifle hard done by to have received only that one cap. It is thought that Sam Loxton won preference over him in selection for the 1948 tour of England.

Only Test Australia v India at Melbourne, Feb 6-10, 1948
First-class span1946-1953

William Arras Johnston (1922-2007) Test Cap No:177

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Full name William Arras Johnston
Born February 26, 1922, Beeac, Victoria
Died May 25, 2007, Sydney, New South Wales (aged 85 years 88 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm fast-medium, Slow left-arm orthodox
Height 6 ft 2 in

profile
Bill Brown, Bill Johnston, Neil Harvey and Sam Loxton
Alternating between a sharp medium-pace and finger-spin, left-handed Bill Johnston was a fixture in Australian XIs for a decade after the war, until an incapacitating knee injury forced him from the game. Genial and avuncular, he nonetheless had a mean bouncer and a keen appetite for overs, harvesting 102 wickets at 16.8 on his first tour of England with Don Bradman's 1948 Invincibles, including 9 for 183 from 84 overs in the first Test at Trent Bridge. Historians tend to cast him as an auxiliary to Lindwall and Miller, but he was more reliable than either, and the four years he took to surpass 100 Test wickets was a record. His innings were notable mostly for their beaming brevity, but in January 1952 he held out long enough as last man to help Doug Ring (a team-mate at Melbourne's Richmond club) secure a famous one-wicket victory against West Indies at the MCG, and the following year in England finished atop Australia's tour averages after collecting 102 for only once out.

Ronald Arthur Hamence (1915-2010) Test Cap No:176

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Full name Ronald Arthur Hamence
Born November 25, 1915, Hindmarsh, Adelaide, South Australia
Died March 24, 2010, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 94 years 119 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

profile
Hamence (left) pictured with Invincibles teammate Ernie Toshack
Ronald Arthur Hamence played for Australia.A short and compact right-handed batsman, Hamence excelled in getting forward to drive and had an array of attractive back foot strokes.Already the youngest Australian to play district cricket, he was also, from the death of Bill Brown in 2008 until his own death in 2010, the oldest surviving Australian Test cricketer.
While Hamence only played three Test matches for his national team, he had a successful domestic career, being called South Australia's most successful batsman in 1950.He played 99 first-class matches from 1935 until 1951,which brought him a career total of 5,285 runs that came at an average of 37.75 runs per innings and included 11 centuries.He scored two of these centuries in his first and last first-class matches.Born in the Adelaide suburb of Hindmarsh,Hamence was the cousin of Charlie Walker, a fellow Australian cricketer.At 15 years and 25 days, Hamence became the youngest district cricketer in South Australian cricket history when he made his debut for Adelaide club West Torrens in 1930.[9] While playing with the SA team, he worked as a public servant at the Government Printing Office. He was a compact batsman preferring attack over defence, however he suffered a weakness throughout his career against fast bowling.