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Wednesday, January 21

Thomas Armitage (1848-1922) Test Cap # 1


THE FIRST ENGLISH TEAM in 1876-77 squad witch played the first test 
against australia at malbourne in march 1877 this historic picture
taken shortly before they left england
BACK:harry jupp,tom emmett,alfred hogben(sponcer of the trip),allan hill,
tom aritage,FRONT:ted pooley,james southern,james lillywhite jnr,
alfred shaw,george ulyett,andrew greenwood,
ON GROUND:harry charwood,jhon selby.© ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Name Thomas Armitage
Born April 25, 1848, Walkley, Sheffield, Yorkshire
Died September 21, 1922, Pullman, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America (aged 74 years 149 days)
Major teams England, Players of United States of America, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Thomas Armitage, who was born at Walkley, near Sheffield, on April 25, 1848, died at Pullman, near Chicago, where he had long resided, on September 21. Scores and Biographies (xii-656) said of him : " Is an excellent bat and field anywhere, and a straight round-armed middle-paced bowler, combined with underhand lobs, which at times have been very successful." For Keighley v. Wakefield on June 15, 1872, he took eight wickets in the first innings and all ten in the second. Between 1872 and 1878 he assisted Yorkshire in 53 matches, making 1,074 runs with an average of 13.59, and taking 119 wickets for 14.08 runs each. His highest score for the county was 95 v. Middlesex at Sheffield in 1876, and his chief success as a bowler to take with lobs 13 wickets for 46 runs - 6 for 20 and 7 for 26--against Surrey at Sheffield in June, 1876. His bowling in that match made a great impression on James Southerton who thought he had never seen lobs that were so good. In the whole season of 1876 Armitage took 45 wickets for Yorkshire at a cost of 669 runs. Daring 1876-77 he visited Australia as a member of James Lilly white's team and took part in both Test matches played during the tour. He was a failure in Australia, falling far below his form at home. Of the English players in the tour of 1876-7, when an England side was for the first time beaten in even terms, James Lillywhite is now the only survivor.

Qazi Manzarul Islam (1984-2007) Test Cap # 35

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Qazi Manzarul Islam
Born May 4, 1984, Khulna
Died March 16, 2007, Kartikdanga, Khulna (aged 22 years 316 days)
Major teams Bangladesh, BCB Development Squad, Khulna Division
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
Manjural Islam, who played six Tests and 25 ODIs for Bangladesh between 2003-04 and 2005-06, has been killed in a road accident. He was 22 and, as such, he has become the youngest Test cricketer to die.Reports say that he was on a motorbike in Khulna when he lost his balance and collided with an oncoming bus. Sajjadul Hasan, a local first-class cricketer, also died on his way to hospital. Both players had finished playing a match in Fatullah the previous day, where Manjural took four wickets.A left-arm spinner, Manjural made his ODI debut in November 2003 at the age of 19 and took the wicket of Michael Vaughan with his third ball, the first time any Bangladesh player had taken a wicket in his first international over.

Phillip Joel Hughes (1988-2014) Test Cap No:408

A Precocious Talent We Lost 

Full name Phillip Joel Hughes
Born November 30, 1988, Macksville, New South Wales
Died November 27, 2014, St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney (aged 25 years 362 days)
Major teams Australia, Australia A, Australia Under-19s, East Torrens, Hampshire, Middlesex, Mumbai Indians, New South Wales, New South Wales Under-19s, South Australia, Western Suburbs, Worcestershire
Playing role Opening batsman
Batting style Left-hand bat
Fielding position Occasional wicketkeeper

Profile
Phillip Hughes Tries To Gather Himself 
After Being Struck By A Sean Abbott
Bouncer, New South Wales v South Australia, 
Sheffield Shield, Sydney, 1st day, 
November 25, 2014
Phillip Hughes, who died after being struck by a bouncer a week before his 26th birthday, was a precocious talent from whom Australian cricket expected big things.At 19, Hughes underlined why he was one of the most exciting young talents around when he became the youngest to score a century in a Pura Cup/Sheffield Shield final. Just months before Hughes' death Australia captain Michael Clarke had tipped him to be a 100-Test man.

If a textbook technique was the sole criterion for a first-class opener then Hughes wouldn't have made a rapid rise to the international level. The most important thing as far as Australia's selectors were concerned was that Hughes picked up plenty of runs from his country-baked technique, which included compulsive slicing through point and slashing to cover, as well as stepping away to provide room for tennis-style drives down the ground.

His perceived weakness against the short ball helped him in South Africa in 2009, when he used the pace of Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel against them and he was the youngest man to score a century in each innings of a Test when he managed the feat in Durban in his second Test.

But after his stunning rise as the replacement for the retired Matthew Hayden, the fall was swift; after he was roughed up by Andrew Flintoff and failed at Lord's he broke the news of his dropping on Twitter. He remained the Test backup opener and in Wellington in 2010 he finished off the win with a brutal 86 off 75 balls. He replaced the injured Simon Katich for three Tests of the 2010-11 Ashes and despite struggling, he finished the Shield season strongly and was first in line to become Shane Watson's full-time partner when Katich lost his contract. A third Test century arrived in Colombo in 2011 but later that year he could not stop edging Chris Martin of New Zealand and was again dropped.Returned to the side once more against Sri Lanka in 2012-13, Hughes struggled against spin on the Test tour of India that followed and although he played the first two Ashes Tests in England in 2013, he faced the axe again after a lean Lord's Test.

It had taken nearly four years after his Test debut for Hughes to break into the Australian one-day side, but he showed his limited-overs potential in July 2014 when he became the first Australia to score a double-century in a List A match.A month later he made the highest score of his first-class career, an unbeaten 243 for Australia A as he staked claim for a Test recall.There were to be no further additions to his 26 Test caps though as, three months later, he was rushed to hospital after a sickening blow from a short ball during a Shield game. He never regained consciousness and died from his injuries. He was 25.

Test debut South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg, Feb 26-Mar 2, 2009
Last Test England v Australia at Lord's, Jul 18-21, 2013
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
27 November Another Sad Day For WORLD CRICKET
Phil Hughes Shapes To Crash The Ball 
Through The Off Side, Australia v South Africa, 

Australia v South Africa, Tri-series, Harare, 

August 27, 2014
Phillip Hughes has died as a result of the injuries he sustained when struck by a bouncer on Tuesday, Cricket Australia has confirmed. He was 25.Team doctor Peter Brukner confirmed the news in a statement released on Thursday afternoon.

"It is my sad duty to inform you that a short time ago Phillip Hughes passed away," Dr Brukner said. "He never regained consciousness following his injury on Tuesday. He was not in pain before he passed and was surrounded by his family and close friends.

"As a cricket community we mourn his loss and extend our deepest sympathies to Phillip's family and friends at this incredibly sad time. Cricket Australia kindly asks that the privacy of the Hughes family, players and staff be respected."

Players, coaches and other friends had been in and out of St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney throughout Wednesday and Thursday, visiting Hughes and supporting his family, and each other. Australia's captain Michael Clarke, a close friend of Hughes', had been at the hospital until after midnight on Wednesday night and returned at about 6am on Thursday.

Brad Haddin, Steven Smith, Shane Watson, David Warner, Nathan Lyon, Moises Henriques, Mitchell Starc and Daniel Smith all spent time at the hospital, as did Ricky Ponting, Simon Katich, Phil Jaques and Brett Lee. Some flew in from interstate, including Aaron Finch, Matthew Wade, Peter Siddle, Peter Forrest, George Bailey, Ed Cowan, Justin Langer, and Cricket Australia's CEO James Sutherland and high performance manager Pat Howard. The national coach Darren Lehmann was there as well.

Also keeping vigil at the hospital were the Hughes family, including his mother and sister, who had been at the Sheffield Shield match between South Australia and New South Wales on Tuesday when Hughes was struck by the bouncer while batting on 63. At a press conference at St Vincent's Hospital on Thursday afternoon, Clarke read a statement on behalf of Hughes' parents Greg and Virginia, and brother and sister Jason and Megan.

"We are devastated by the loss of our much-loved son and brother Phillip," Clarke read. "It has been a very difficult few days. We appreciated all the support we have received from family, friends, players, Cricket Australia and the general public.

"Cricket was Phillip's life, and we as a family shared that love of the game with him. We would like to thank all the medical and nursing staff at St Vincent's Hospital and Cricket NSW medical staff for their great efforts with Phillip. We love you."

James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia CEO, said that Hughes was an incredibly talented and dearly loved member of the Australia, South Australia, Adelaide Strikers and formerly New South Wales sides. He described Hughes as "a rising star whose best cricket was still ahead of him".

"But was Phillip as a person that we will miss most," Sutherland said. "He was a classic example of his country upbringing - humble, understated and hard working. When the chips were down or he had a setback he simply got on with the job and worked harder. He set a wonderful example to any young person seeking to make their way in life.

"The word tragedy gets used far too often in sport but this freak accident is now a real-life tragedy. Just shy of his 26th birthday, Phillip has been taken from us far too young. It's an understatement to say that we are completely devastated. Our grief runs deep and the impact of Phillip's loss is enormous but nothing compares to the loss felt by those closest to him.

"Phillip was a cherished son, brother, friend and team-mate. In these darkest of hours cricket puts its collective arms around the Hughes family. To his parents Virginia and Greg and siblings Megan and Jason we offer our love and endless support."

On Tuesday, Hughes was playing for South Australia against his former state New South Wales when he missed his attempted hook and the ball struck him on the neck below the helmet. He underwent surgery on Tuesday after being rushed to hospital from the SCG, and was then in an induced coma.

Hughes played 26 Tests for Australia and scored three centuries, and he appeared a strong chance to win a recall for next week's first Test against India at the Gabba, with Clarke expected to be ruled out due to injury. Hughes first emerged as an international cricketer on the 2009 tour of South Africa, where at the age of 20 in Durban he became the youngest man ever to score two centuries in a Test.

He scored 26 first-class centuries and was a prolific scorer for New South Wales, for whom he had debuted at the age of 18, and later for South Australia. Hughes had been part of Australia's most recent Test squad, for the series against Pakistan in the UAE, but he was not called on to play a Test in that series.

Andrew Symonds (1975–2022) Test Cap # 388


Shane Warne (1969–2022) Test Cap # 350


Bruce Yardley (1947–2019) Test Cap No:294


Sam Gannon (1947–2021) Test Cap No:290


Tony Mann (1945–2019) Test Cap No:285


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

© premier.cricketvictoria.com.au
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
© thatscricketerswallpaper.blogspot.com
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

©getty image
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
©getty image
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

© The Cricketer International
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.

Maxwell Henry Norman Walker (1948-2016) Test Cap No:263

© maxwalker.com.au
Full name Maxwell Henry Norman Walker
Born September 12, 1948, West Hobart, Tasmania
Died September 28, 2016 (aged 68 years 16 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Other Commentator

Profile
© Martin Williamson

Maxwell Henry Norman Max Walker AM was an Australian cricketer and Australian rules football player. After six years of balancing first-class cricket in summer, professional football in winter and study for a degree in architecture, Walker earned a place in the Australian cricket team in 1973 and represented his country in the sport until injury ended his career in 1981. Following his retirement he worked as an architect and also commenced a career in radio and television media. He wrote 14 books over a period of thirty years and became a successful public speaker. His unorthodox cricket bowling action earned him the nickname "Tangles", and his larrikin character made him a much-loved figure with the Australian public. Walker died of myeloma on 28 September 2016 after being diagnosed with the disease three years earlier.Walker was born in Hobart, Tasmania on 12 September 1948.While in high school he represented Tasmania as an opening batsman in their colts team, scoring a century in one match.After graduating from a Hobart high school in 1967 he relocated to Melbourne to play football and also enrolled in an architecture degree at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology.He graduated with a fellowship diploma in 1973.

In 1966, while still a high school student, Melbourne Football Club coach Norm Smith visited Walker's family home in Hobart to sign him to the Demons.He relocated from Hobart to Melbourne in 1967 and made his VFL debut the same year. He spent six seasons with Melbourne, playing a total of 85 games as a ruckman and defender and earning one Brownlow Medal vote in 1968.After returning from the Australian cricket team's 1972–73 tour of the West Indies, Walker informed the club that he would not be joining them for the 1973 VFL season, as the season was about to start and he needed to complete a thesis for his Upon moving to Melbourne in 1967 Walker joined the Melbourne Cricket Club. Although he earned a reputation as a batsman as a junior, he was given an opportunity to open the bowling attack for Melbourne, which showed his true cricket potential.His strange bowling action, bowling right arm over his right leg, earned Walker the nickname of "Tanglefoot" which was quickly shortened to "Tangles".He made his first-class debut for Victoria in February 1969 against Queensland, the final match of Victoria's 1968-1969 Sheffield Shield season.Despite taking five wickets in the match, he did not get a chance to play in the 1969-1970 season due to the depth in Victoria's bowling.He earned a second match in December 1970 and became a regular in the 1971-72 season, playing a total of 135 matches for Victoria.
© Getty Images

He made his test debut for Australia in the second Test against Pakistan cricket team that commenced on 29 December 1972.He took five wickets in the match and retained his place in the team for the next match, the final of the series. In that match, a final innings performance of 6-15 by Walker prevented Pakistan from winning the match. During the series he was selected for Australia's tour of the West Indies that ran from February to April 1973.Walker played a total of 34 Tests, taking 138 wickets as a medium-fast bowler.He played in 17 ODI's between 1974 and 1981, as well as playing in the breakaway World Series Cricket from 1977 to 1979. His final match for Australia was the infamous underarm match between Australia and New Zealand on 1 February 1981.An Achilles tendon injury subsequently forced his retirement from cricket.After retiring from competitive cricket in 1981 Walker practiced architecture for 10 years.He also became a celebrity on television and radio, as well as a successful author and public speaker.

Once he retired from cricket, Walker first appeared on radio, calling cricket for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) with Drew Morphett and Alan McGilvray for four years from 1981.He was also part of the commercial radio cricket coverage run by 2UE and 3AK.His first television appearances date back to 1982, where he was the cricket expert on Channel 7's World of Sport. After moving to Channel 9 in 1985, he was also part of National Nine News Melbourne with Brian Naylor, reading sports reports on the nightly news.He also hosted the Nine Network's The Sunday Footy Show from 1993–1998 and Nine's Wide World of Sports program until it was cancelled in 1999. He was also a commentator for Channel Nine's cricket matches between 1986 and 1991.In 2005 appeared on the Nine Network's sports show Any Given Sunday, hosted by James Brayshaw, as well as ABC2's sports program Late Night Legends featuring highlights of the 1974–75 Ashes series in which Walker had a prominent role.

Walker's distinctive broad Australian accent was parodied by The Twelfth Man (Billy Birmingham), on the 1994 album Wired World of Sports II.It follows Walker through a day at his job at the Nine Network in which he is involved in an assault on co-host Ken Sutcliffe in order to increase his chances of being included on the cricket commentary team.He also appeared in television advertisements throughout his career, commencing with an Aerogard commercial in the mid-1970s.Max Walker was also the author of 14 books with total sales exceeding one million copies. His first book, Tangles (written with Neil Phillipson), was an autobiography published in 1976. His subsequent books contained light-hearted anecdotes from his career, with titles such as The Wit of Walker, How to Kiss a Crocodile and How to Puzzle a Python. His final book Caps, Hats and Helmets was released in 2006.Following the cancellation of Nine's Wide World of Sports in 1999, Walker commenced appearing on the public speaking circuit.He turned it into a successful business and continued speaking until at least 2015. Walker held the designation of Certified Speaking Professional which is the highest accreditation within Professional Speakers Australia. In 2016 he presented a keynote address at the Professional Speakers Australia annual convention He received the Educator of the Year award from Professional Speakers Australia at that same convention.

On 13 June 2011, Walker was named a Member of the Order of Australia for service to cricket at a national and international level as a player and commentator, and to the community through a range of youth and social welfare organisations.Walker was married twice and had five children, three sons from his first marriage and two daughters with his second wife Kerry.He was an avid collector of fountain pens and featured in one episode of the ABC's Collectors.Walker died from myeloma on 28 September 2016, after being diagnosed in August 2013.

Test debut Australia v Pakistan at Melbourne, Dec 29, 1972 - Jan 3, 1973
Last Test England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 25-30, 1977
ODI debut New Zealand v Australia at Dunedin, Mar 30, 1974
Last ODI Australia v New Zealand at Melbourne, Feb 1, 1981
First-class span 1968/69 - 1981/82
List A span 1971/72 - 1981/82

Alan Thomson (1945–2022) Test Cap No:250


Rod Marsh(1947–2022) Test Cap No:249


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

©en.wikipedia.org
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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with shane warne©getty image
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.

Ashley Mallett(1945–2021) Test Cap No:247


Eric Freeman(1944–2020) Test Cap No:244


John William Gleeson (1938-2016) Test Cap No:242

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name John William Gleeson
Born March 14, 1938, Kyogle, New South Wales
Died October 8, 2016,(aged 78 years 208 days)
Major teams Australia, Eastern Province, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

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© Getty Images
John William Gleeson was an Australian cricketer who played in 29 Tests from 1967 to 1972.e is best known for his unique bowling style, which according to Cricket Australia CEO, James Sutherland, "bamboozled batsmen" and "regularly dumbfound the best batsmen in any team".Gleeson grew up in the country town of Tamworth. He was the son of a dairy farmer from Wiangaree in north eastern New South Wales, and attributed the finger strength required to bowl with his two-fingered grip to his childhood, which he spent milking cows.

He used a grip similar to that of the unique "bent-finger" action of Jack Iverson, using two fingers: a bent middle finger and the thumb pressing against the ball on both sides in an attempt to find a new variety of bowling tricks. He was one a small number of Australians who experimented with revolutionary bowling grips in the wake of Iverson's stay in international cricket.Gleeson preferred to bowl downwind on a greenish surface, since pace from the wicket compensated for his not being a large spinner of the ball. His accuracy resulted in him mainly being used for defensive purposes, rather than an attacking one. Under the old LBW law, batsmen could not be given out if they were struck outside off stump, allowing batsmen to safely use their pads without offering a shot to nullify his googly.

Gleeson was one of the prominent debutants of the 1966–67 Australian cricket season in the Sheffield Shield, taking 23 wickets in six matches.In the 1966–67 season, he took four wickets in five balls, including a hat-trick, in a Sydney grade game, before taking 5/28 against Victoria. He was subsequently selected in an Australian "Second" team to tour New Zealand at the end of the year. He was selected for the 1967–68 Test series against India in Australia. He made his debut in the First Test at Adelaide Oval, taking 2/36 and 2/38. He managed less success in the remaining three Tests, taking five wickets to end with nine at an average of 28.55.In 1968 he won selection for the Ashes tour of England, playing all five Tests and taking 12 wickets at 34.66 The 1968–69 season saw a heavy workload for Gleeson, in five Tests against the West Indies cricket team. In the first two Tests he took 13 wickets, including hauls of 5/122 and 5/61, and finished the series with 26 wickets at an average of 32.46.He also peaked in his batting contributions, making his two highest scores of 42* and 45 in consecutive Tests at the Sydney Cricket Ground and the Adelaide Oval. The subsequent 1969–70 tour to India was to be Australia's last Test series win there for 35 years. He took match figures of 7/108 in the First Test at Mumbai, the leading return by an Australian in an eight-wicket victory, but only three wickets in the next four matches, ending the series with ten wickets at 34.70.

In 1969–70, when Australia toured South Africa, Gleeson's value was such that he insured his right hand for A$10,000. Gleeson took 18 wickets in two first class matches against provincial team at the start of the tour and then another five in the First Test at Cape Town, and five in the second innings in the Third Test in Johannesburg. Most of the South Africans were seeing him for the first time and struggled to understand his action. It was Barry Richards, the most junior of them, who claimed to have worked him out. Not once in seven innings did Gleeson, who took 19 wickets at 38.94 in the series, dismiss Richards, as South Africa took a 4–0 series win.Gleeson was the top Australian wicket taker in the 1970-71 Ashes series, but his 14 wickets cost 43.21as his quest for variety resulted in loose balls and he was punished by the English batsmen who had met him in 1968.Despite being able to use their legs without danger, batsmen were still unable to overcome him during the 1971-72 domestic season when he took 45 wickets at 16.31 in eight matches, including 19 wickets in two consecutive matches. Gleeson was recalled for the 1972 Ashes tour, but was dropped after the first three Tests, in which he managed only three wickets at 52.33. He had minor skills with the bat, with one first class half century and a Test top score of 45.After Gleeson toured South Africa with Derrick Robin's team in 1973–74, Graeme Pollock helped to organise a position for him in the Eastern Province team for his final first class season.He served on the inaugural governing committee of World Series Cricket. After 40 years of service with Telecom, he retired in 1995 as the New South Wales internal communications manager for the firm.

Test debut Australia v India at Adelaide, Dec 23-28, 1967
Last Test England v Australia at Nottingham, Jul 13-18, 1972
First-class span 1966/67 - 1974/75
List A span 1970/71 - 1973/74

Graeme Watson(1945–2020) Test Cap No:241


Brian Taber (1940–2023) Test Cap No:240


David Renneberg (1942–2025) Test Cap No:239


Keith Stackpole (1940–2025) Test Cap No:238


Peter Allan (1934–2021) Test Cap No:236


Peter Philpott (1934–2021) Test Cap No:234


Bob Cowper (1940–2025) Test Cap No:229


Ian Redpath (1941–2024) Test Cap No:227


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

©en.wikipedia.org
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

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© 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.
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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.

Brian Booth (1937–2018) Test Cap # 222


Brian Booth (1933–2023) Test Cap # 221


Frank Misson (1938–2024) Test Cap # 217


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.

Barry Jarman (1936–2020) Test Cap # 215


Gordon Rorke (1938–2025) Test Cap # 213


Keith Slater (1935–2025) Test Cap # 212


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

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© 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.