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Monday, February 2

Wilfred Norris Slack (1954-1989) Test Cap # 516

© Wisden Cricket Monthly
Full name Wilfred Norris Slack
Born December 12, 1954, Troumaca, St Vincent
Died January 15, 1989, Banjul, The Gambia (aged 34 years 34 days)
Major teams England, Middlesex, Windward Islands
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Wilf Slack, the Middlesex and England left-handed opener, collapsed and died while batting in Banjul, capital of The Gambia, on January 15, 1989, at the age of 34. He had suffered four blackouts on the field or in the nets in the two previous years, but exhaustive tests had failed to identify the cause. Born in St. Vincent, Slack came to England at the age of eleven and learned his cricket at High Wycombe. He played for various local teams and in 1976, when 21, he was Buckinghamshire's leading run-scorer with 748 in his début season. The Middlesex coach, Don Bennett, marked him as first-class county material, and he was signed by them the next year. However,

Tony Pigott (1958-2026) Test Cap # 504


Robin Jackman (1945-2020) Test Cap # 490



Name:Michael Hendrick
Born:August 13, 1945, Simla, Punjab, India
Died:December 25, 2020, Cape Town, (aged 75y 135d)
Nicknames:Jackers
Batting Style:Right hand bat
Bowling Style:Right arm fast medium
Height:5ft 9in
Other:Commentator
Teams:England,Zimbabwe,Rhodesia,Surrey,Western Province

Profile
Robin David Jackman was an English cricketer, who played in four Test matches and 15 One Day Internationals for the England cricket team between 1974 and 1983. He was a seam bowler and useful tail-end batsman. During a first-class career lasting from 1966 to 1982, he took 1,402 wickets. He was a member of the Surrey side that won the County Championship in 1971, and also played for Western Province in South Africa in 1971–72, and for Rhodesia between 1972–73 and 1979–80.

Jackman was born in the northern Indian hill town of Shimla on 13 August 1945 where his father, a major with the 2nd Gurkha Rifles, was stationed. The family returned to Britain in 1946.As a child, Jackman initially had ambitions to become an actor until his uncle, the comedy actor Patrick Cargill, dissuaded Jackman from pursuing the career due to its low success rate."In that case", replied the young Jackman, "I'll play cricket for Surrey and England instead."In his developing years, Jackman was a batsman who could bowl off-spin.His father pulled him out of school at the age of 17, for he saw a future for his son as a professional cricketer. The young Jackman applied for a trial at Surrey and joined the club in 1964.It took him a couple of years to break into the first team, and during this time he switched to becoming a seam bowler.At 5 ft 9in tall, he was comparatively short for a seamer, and some felt he would struggle to prove himself at first-class county level, but Jackman worked hard to extract the absolute maximum from his talent, spending winters practising in South Africa.

Graham Barry Stevenson (1955-2014) Test Cap # 485

  
Full name Graham Barry Stevenson
Born December 16, 1955, Ackworth, Yorkshire
Died January 21, 2014 (aged 58 years 36 days)
Major teams England, Northamptonshire, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Height 6 ft 0 in

Profile
Graham Stevenson was an unpretentious Yorkshire allrounder who played a couple of Tests and four one-dayers for England in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He had a storming ODI debut, taking 4 for 33 and cracking 28 off 18 balls to squeeze England home by two wickets against Australia at Sydney. He also cracked an unbeaten 115 from No.11 for Yorkshire against Warwickshire in 1982 in a last-wicket partnership of 149 with...Geoff Boycott, who merrily crawled to 79 before being last out.

Graham Barry Stevenson (born 16 December 1955, Ackworth, West Yorkshire, England - 21 January 2014) is an English former cricketer, who played in two Tests and four One Day Internationals from 1980 to 1981.His county cricket career was spent mainly with Yorkshire and latterly, for one season, .

Stevenson was a right-armed fast bowler, who also found occasional success as a right-handed lower order batsman, and very occasional wicket-keeper; playing for Yorkshire from 1973 to 1986, and for Northamptonshire in 1987. Stevenson took 488 first-class wickets in 188 games at an average of 28.84, with an additional 307 wickets in the one day game. He scored two first-class centuries, with a top score of 115 not out. With that innings, Stevenson became only the eighth No. 11 to make a first-class hundred, in a partnership of 149 with Geoffrey Boycott against Warwickshire at Edgbaston in 1982. That partnership remains Yorkshire's all-time record for the tenth wicket.

Stevenson made all his international appearances on tour with England. He travelled to Australia and India in 1979–80, and to the West Indies in 1980–81. He made his One Day International debut in Australia, in the World Series Cup, taking four wickets and scoring 28 not out in a winning cause.

Test debut India v England at Mumbai, Feb 15-19, 1980
Last Test West Indies v England at St John's, Mar 27-Apr 1, 1981
ODI debut Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 14, 1980
Last ODI West Indies v England at Albion, Feb 26, 1981
First-class span 1973-1987
List A span 1973-1987

Wayne Larkins (19539-2025) Test Cap # 484


Graham Roy Dilley (1959-2011) Test Cap # 483

© PA Photos
Full name Graham Roy Dilley
Born May 18, 1959, Dartford, Kent
Died October 5, 2011 (aged 52 years 140 days)
Major teams England, Kent, Natal, Worcestershire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast
Other Coach

Profile
 Graham Dilley in delivery stride,
against Australia © Getty Images

Graham Dilley was plucked from Kent as a 20-year-old and taken to Australia in 1979-80 as the Great White Hope fast bowler. Tall, blond, good-looking and seriously quick, he had obvious star quality. But though he played 41 Tests and in several of them lived up to his billing, his career meandered through loss of rhythm - his action was always a bit ugly and chest-on - and some thoroughly nasty injuries. He reached his peak in 1986 and 1987 when he was undisputed as England's spearhead, but it was his fate to be remembered more for supporting Ian Botham as a batsman at Headingley 1981. After retirement, he endured a period of well-publicised poverty, caused partly by his impulsive mid-career move from Kent to Worcestershire, which meant he never got a benefit. He returned to the cricket fold with a spell as bowling coach to the England women's team, and was appointed assistant coach of the men's side for the tour of India in 2001-02. He died aged just 52 in 2011 following a short illness.
One of the quickest bowlers of his generation, with a memorable surge to the crease, Dilley took 138 Test wickets at 29.78 for his country but his best-remembered contribution to the England cause came with the bat - he made 56 supporting Ian Botham in a 117-run partnership which helped England to a famous Ashes Test win over Australia at Headingley in 1981.
Graham Dilley in action against,
Pakistan © PA Photos

David Leslie Bairstow (1951-1998) Test Cap # 481

© The Cricketer International
Full name David Leslie Bairstow
Born September 1, 1951, Horton, Bradford, Yorkshire
Died January 5, 1998, Marton-cum-Grafton, Yorkshire (aged 46 years 126 days)
Major teams England, Griqualand West, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
© catchindia.com
David Bairstow was found hanged at his home on January 5, 1998. He was 46. Reports said he had been suffering from depression: his wife was ill, he had financial troubles, he faced a drink-driving charge and was in pain from his own injuries. The news stunned cricket, especially as Bairstow had always seemed the most indomitable and least introspective of men, and led to much comment on the problems faced by retired sportsmen.David "Bluey" Bairstow was not merely the Yorkshire wicketkeeper but almost the embodiment of the country's cricket throughout the 1970s and 1980s. He arrived in county cricket amid a blaze of publicity when he was drafted from grammar school in Bradford into the Yorkshire side as an 18-year-old on the day he sat an English Literature A-level. He was allowed to sit the exam at 7am, then went out and caught five Gloucestershire batsmen over the next three days. From then on, he was a regular, and while Yorkshire's affairs swirled turbulently around him, Bairstow was always there: loud, combative, combustile. "He wasn't a great wicketkeeper and he wasn't a great batsman," said his team-mate Phil Carrick, "but he was a great cricketer."

John Christopher Balderstone (1940-2000) Test Cap # 467

Chris Balderstone and Doncaster footballer on,
 the same day © The Cricketer International
Full name John Christopher Balderstone
Born November 16, 1940, Longwood, Huddersfield, Yorkshire
Died March 6, 2000, Carlisle, Cumberland (aged 59 years 111 days)
Major teams England, Leicestershire, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Umpire

Profile
  Leicestershire players wait to bat in a dugout.
© Wisden Cricket Monthly
John Christopher Balderstone, one of the few men to have played cricket and football at the highest level, died suddenly at his home in Carlisle on March 6 at the age of 59. He had been suffering from cancer. Most success came on the cricket field where he played a major role in Leicestershire winning their first Championship title in 1975, following eight years at Yorkshire, and he won two Test caps against the all-conquering West Indies side of 1976.His soccer career started at Huddersfield Town but after 117 appearances as a scheming inside-forward he moved to Carlisle United where, during his 369 appearances in which he scored 68 goals, he was a member of the side which gained promotion to the First Division for just one season, 1974-75, and which was briefly on top of the table.

Born in Longwood, he played in Paddock's side in the Huddersfield League before his 15th birthday and in 1961 made his Yorkshire debut against Glamorgan at Headingley, making 23 in his only innings that summer. But after scoring 1,332 runs in eight seasons he moved to Leicestershire where his career blossomed.He took a good deal of satisfaction in winning the Man of the Match award when Leicestershire, under the leadership of Ray Illingworth, beat Yorkshire in the 1972 Benson and Hedges Cup Final, and his maiden first-class century came the following year against Lancashire at Liverpool, the first of 32, of which the highest was an unbeaten 181 against Gloucestershire at Grace Road in 1984.A member of the first-class umpires' list since 1988, he stood in two limited-overs internationals against South Africa and had the minor distinction to be the first Third Umpire used. He was highly respected and Barrie Leadbeater, the umpires' chairman and a close friend, said: 'He was a fine, positive player who won a lot of friends by his approach.

Robert Andrew Woolmer (1948-2007) Test Cap # 463

© The Cricketer International
Full name Robert Andrew Woolmer
Born May 14, 1948, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India
Died March 18, 2007, Kingston University Hospital, Jamaica,
West Indies (aged 58 years 308 days)
Major teams England, Kent, Natal, Western Province
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Coach

Profile
Bob as Pakistan's coach © AFP
Bob Woolmer was the most highly regarded cricket coach in the world. As a consequence he was employed by two leading Test nations, South Africa and Pakistan, and approached by two more, England and West Indies. In addition he was a good enough player to have been signed by Kerry Packer for World Series Cricket. Underpinning his abilities was a schoolboyish enthusiasm for the game matched in recent times, perhaps, by only Colin Cowdrey and Shane Warne.

Few individuals within the game have had to make so many contentious decisions. Joining Packer and hence forfeiting the chance of captaining Kent and England; signing up for the first breakaway tour of South Africa in the sure knowledge that a Test career would never be resumed; turning down the opportunity to coach England in 1999 when the ECB's first choice ahead of Duncan Fletcher. For such a mild-mannered man he was mired in undue controversy - and that was the case even before he met Hansie Cronje. Yet Woolmer never expressed any regret about the course of his life.

It is sad, not least for his family, that such a talented cricketing man will be remembered, at least by those with a passing knowledge of the game, for the circumstances of his death and his association with Cronje, a man who let him down badly. For Woolmer to emerge from his partnership with Cronje with his reputation untainted was testimony to his honest nature. The essential point was that Woolmer would not have done anything to harm the game he loved. He liked his money - which Test cricketer of the mid-1970s did not, given how poor the remuneration was pre-Packer? - but he liked cricket even more.

Michael Hendrick (1948-2021) Test Cap # 459

 

Name:Michael Hendrick
Born:October 22, 1948, Darley Dale, Derbyshire
Died:July 27, 2021 (aged 72y 278d)
Nicknames:Hendo
Batting Style:Right hand bat
Bowling Style:Right hand bat
Height:6ft 3in
Other:Umpire, Coach
Teams:England,Derbyshire,Nottinghamshire

Profile
Michael Hendrick was an English cricketer, who played in thirty Tests and twenty-two One Day Internationals for England from 1973 to 1981. He played for Derbyshire from 1969 to 1981, and for Nottinghamshire from 1982 to 1984.Cricket correspondent Colin Bateman remarked, "Hendrick was a lively fast-medium seam bowler who could produce plenty of bounce to trouble county batsmen. His 770 first-class wickets came at an impressive cost of just 20 apiece". Bateman added, "...he loved to pin batsmen down with his accuracy and force errors, and to do so he bowled negatively and slightly short – too short to take wickets consistently at the top level".

Hendrick was born in Darley Dale, Derbyshire, on 22 October 1948.He attended St Mary’s Grammar School in Darlington. He first played for Leicestershire Juniors in 1965 and progressed to the Second XI in 1966, playing regularly over the next three years.However, he was ultimately released by the county.Hendrick later made his first-class debut for Derbyshire in June 1969 against Oxford University, when he took a wicket in each innings but did not have a chance to bat. He played one County Championship match in the season, and also took part in the Player's County League.Hendrick played five first-class games in 1970. From 1971, he became a more regular first team player, and in 1973 played in a One Day International against the West Indies.He was Cricket Writers' Club Young Cricketer of the Year in 1973.One year later, Hendrick played in three Test matches against India and two against Pakistan.

In the winter of 1974/75, Hendrick toured with the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) to Australia and New Zealand, playing in three Test matches. He played for England in two matches against the West Indies in 1976 and, in 1977, played in the third, fourth and fifth Test against the Australians. In February 1978, he played one match against New Zealand in New Zealand, and later in the summer played two Test matches against the New Zealanders in England. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1978. He toured Australia in the winter of 1978/79, and played in five Ashes Test matches, taking nineteen wickets in the series. In the summer of 1979, he played for England against India in four matches and, in 1980, against the West Indies and a single match against Australia. He played his last Test matches against Australia in 1981, and in the same season, helped Derbyshire win the National Westminster Bank Trophy. He left Derbyshire at the end of the season, and moved to Nottinghamshire, where he played until 1984. He also elected to go on the first rebel tour to South Africa in 1981–82, which incurred a three-year ban from Test cricket and effectively ended his international participation.

Hendrick lacked express pace but was hazardous on a green wicket, as his command of seam bowling was considered to be excellent. He could make the ball do "disappearing acts" on cloudy days, but he came to "curse clear skies and sunshine".Dennis Lillee once described him as a good bowler in the "right conditions".His best Test bowling figures of 4–28 came against India in 1974. He holds the record for taking the highest number of wickets in Test cricket amongst bowlers without having a five wicket haul in a Test innings.After retiring from playing, Hendrick was popular on the after-dinner speech circuit, in the radio commentary box, and in a short spell as an umpire. He became the coach at Trent Bridge in 1992.

Hendrick was diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2019.In an interview two years later on the 40th anniversary of the 1981 Ashes series, he said that he was "in the departure lounge, but the flight has not quite left yet".He died on 27 July 2021, at age 72.

Debut:England vs India at Manchester - June 06 - 11, 1974
Last:England vs Australia at The Oval - August 27 - September 01, 1981
FC Span:1969 - 1984


Graham Richard James Roope (1946-2006) Test Cap # 457

© Getty image
Full name Graham Richard James Roope
Born July 12, 1946, Fareham, Hampshire
Died November 26, 2006, Grenada (aged 60 years 137 days)
Major teams England, Berkshire, Griqualand West, Minor Counties, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
© Getty image
"I ain't no square with my corkscrew hair," declared that bopping elf Marc Bolan. Nor, assuredly, was that genial chatterbox Graham Roope, another beloved curly-locked entertainer whose sudden death of a heart attack during a 60th birthday trip to Grenada robbed the game of one of its more charismatic figures.

Eyebrows were hoisted in the 1970s when England's selectors repeatedly picked a batsman whose first nine Test knocks begat 137 runs. Roope, happily, had other rabbits up his sleeve. So ragged was English slip fielding between the decline of Colin Cowdrey and emergence of Ian Botham that two county stalwarts who might have stayed in the margins found opportunity knocking: 'Roopey' and Phil Sharpe. If Sharpe's anticipation was marginally superior, the Hampshire-born Roope was the more athletic.

Reactions sharpened by goalkeeping stints for Wimbledon, Kingstonian and Corinthian Casuals, he took 602 catches, a haul surpassed among exclusively postwar players by only Graeme Hick (668) and Keith Fletcher (644), who both put in many more seasons than the 19 in which Roope served Surrey from 1964 to 1982. Geoff Arnold, that arch-seducer of outside edges, rates him among the best half-dozen slips he has seen.

Tony Greig (1946-2012) Test Cape # 452

  


Full name Anthony William Greig (Tony Grieg)
Born October 6, 1946, Queenstown, Cape Province, South Africa
Died December 29, 2012, St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney (aged 66 years 84 days)
Major teams England, Border, Eastern Province, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak
Other Commentator
Height 6 ft 6 in
Relation Brother - IA Greig, Nephew - WG Hodson

Profile
© Getty Images
At 6 feet 6 inches, Tony Greig stood head-and-shoulders above team-mates on the field, and had the confidence and charisma to go with it, making up for shortcomings of technique with the bat and pace with the ball by sheer personality and an irrepressible love of the contest. The controversial conclusion of his career, as one of the first and firmest disciples of Kerry Packer, have tended to obscure his all-round accomplishments: in the mid-1970s, there was no more complete cricketer, and he bequeathed to his successor as England's captain, Mike Brearley, a thoroughly professional and close-knit side.

John Jameson (1939-2005) Test Cap # 451


Robert George Dylan Willis (1949-2019) Test Cap # 448


Full Name:Robert George Dylan Willis
Born:May 30, 1949, Sunderland, Co Durham
Died:December 04, 2019 (aged 70y 188d)
Also Known As:birth registered as Robert George Willis
Nicknames:Goose, Dylan, Harold, Swordfish
Batting Style:Right hand bat
Bowling Style:Right arm fast
Height:6ft 6in
Education:Royal Grammar School, Guildford
Other:Commentator
Teams:England,Northern Transvaal,Surrey,Warwickshire

Profile
Robert George Dylan Willis MBE was an English cricketer, who played for Surrey, Warwickshire, Northern Transvaal and England. A right-handed and aggressive fast bowler with a notably long run-up, Willis spearheaded several England bowling attacks between 1971 and 1984, across 90 Test matches in which he took 325 wickets at 25.20 runs per wicket, at the time second only to Dennis Lillee.He is England's fourth leading wicket taker as of 2019, behind James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Ian Botham.Willis took 899 first-class wickets overall, although from 1975 onwards he bowled with constant pain, having had surgery on both knees. He nevertheless continued to find success, taking a Test career-best eight wickets for 43 runs in the 1981 Ashes series against Australia, one of the all-time best Test bowling performances.He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year for 1978.

In addition to the Test arena, Willis played 64 One Day International matches for his country, taking 80 wickets, and was a prolific List-A (one-day) cricketer with 421 wickets overall at 20.18. As a tail-ender, Willis made little impression with the bat, with a top Test score of 28 not-out (*); however, he managed two half-centuries at first-class level, and for a time held a record number of Test not-outs. Willis captained the England team in 18 Tests and 28 ODI matches between June 1982 and March 1984. Under Willis's captaincy England won seven, lost five and drew six Tests, and won 16 of the ODIs. Botham recalled Willis as "a tremendous trier.. a great team-man and an inspiration",as well as the "only world-class fast bowler in my time as an England player".The editor of Wisden wrote of him in similar terms: "His indomitable service to England is handsomely reflected in his great collection of Test wickets. Although often beset with aches and pains, he never spared himself when bowling for his country.

Peter Lever (1939-2005) Test Cap # 447


Ken Shuttleworth (1944-2005) Test Cap # 446


Brian William Luckhurst (1939-2005) Test Cap # 445

© The Cricketer International
Full name Brian William Luckhurst
Born February 5, 1939, Sittingbourne, Kent
Died March 1, 2005, Kent (aged 66 years 24 days)
Major teams England, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
Brian Luckhurst sweeps,
© Getty Images
Brian Luckhurst shrewdly worked out what he could and could not do, and would have had an even better Test average if the selectors had assessed his ability as thoroughly. He was robbed of one tour he should have made - to India and Pakistan in 1972-73 - where his quick-footedness against spin and reliable close catching would have been invaluable, and chosen for one (Australia 1974-75) for which, aged 35, he was ill-suited. He was overwhelmed by Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson, and was never picked again. A well-built, square-shouldered figure always immaculately turned out, his most productive stroke was the square-cut, which he hit with crippling force, while his prime asset was unblinking concentration. He died in March 2005, aged 66, after suffering from cancer of the oesophagus.

In the late summer of 1953, two 14-year-old boys took the last bus from Sittingbourne to London and slept outside The Oval to make certain of seeing the final Test of the series between England and Lindsay Hassett's Australians. Seventeen years later, one of these cricket-mad boys, Brian William Luckhurst, returned to The Oval as one of England's opening batsmen against The Rest of the World. Alas! -- for Luckhurst and England -- the fates were in an unromantic mood and did not allow him even one celebratory run!Yet Luckhurst had done more than enough in the four previous Tests, and for Kent, the Champions, to ensure his place in the MCC party to tour Australia. He was one of the season's outstanding batsmen, and, as ever, a superb fielder in any position.Cricket has been Luckhurst's life. The Medway towns and Canterbury were within cycling distance to follow Kent, and, as a boy, he was particularly fascinated by Arthur Fagg and Leslie Todd, the openers of the day.

Michael Henry Denness (1940-2013) Teast Cap # 444

© telegraph.co.uk
Full name Michael Henry Denness
Born December 1, 1940, Bellshill, Lanarkshire, Scotland
Died April 19, 2013 (aged 72 years 139 days)
Major teams England, Scotland, Essex, Kent
Nickname Haggis
Batting style Right-hand bat
Other Referee
Height 5 ft 11 in
Education Ayr Academy

Profile
© telegraph.co.uk
Few contemporary batsmen were more stylish than Mike Denness at his peak, in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Tallish and slim, well-balanced, immaculately dressed on and off the field, possessed of a fine array of strokes and an excellent cover fieldsman to boot, Denness looked a model cricketer in every way. It was his misfortune that when those qualities won him the England captaincy, after Ray Illingworth's dismissal, he lacked the support of one of the players on whom he was most dependent. Geoff Boycott, who made no secret of how acutely he coveted the captaincy himself, played only the first six of Denness's 19 Tests as captain, which fatally holed England's prospects against Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson in Australia in 1974-75. Deposed when Australia won the first Test of 1975 at Edgbaston, Denness took his medicine with typical graciousness. He later became an ICC match referee but, at Port Elizabeth in 2001-02, his decision to sanction six Indian players, including Sachin Tendulkar, caused such a furore that the Indian and South African boards barred Denness from officiating in the next match, at Centurion. The ICC responded by withdrawing Test status from the game. He died in April 2013 after a battle with cancer during his final days as president of Kent.
© PA Photos

© commons.wikimedia.org
Michael Henry Denness OBE was a Scottish cricketer who played for England, Scotland, Essex and Kent. Scotland did not have a representative international team at the time of Denness' career, so he could only play for England at Test and ODI level. Denness was the second Scotsman to captain England, the first having been Douglas Jardine.[1] Denness later became an ICC match referee. He was one of the inaugural inductees into the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame and was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1975. Denness died of cancer on 19 April 2013.

Denness was born in Bellshill, North Lanarkshire, Scotland.He captained England on nineteen occasions, winning six, losing five and drawing eight matches. He stepped down from the captaincy after the first Test of the 1975 series against Australia. Throughout his career, he suffered a lack of support from Geoffrey Boycott, which contributed to his downfall as a skipper – Boycott's absence costing England during matches against Australia.Once while in Australia, Denness received an envelope that had been sent with the address "Mike Denness, cricketer". The letter inside read, "Should this reach you, the post office clearly thinks more of your ability than I do.Denness played in twenty eight Tests overall, scoring 1,667 runs including four centuries. His best of 188 came against Australia on 8 February 1975.[6] His seven accompanying half-centuries helped to leave him with a Test batting average of 39.69. His ODI career was less successful, playing only 12 matches and scoring 264 runs at 29.33, with a best of 66.
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
In domestic cricket, Denness played for both Essex and Kent between 1959 and 1980, making 501 appearances in first-class cricket and 232 more in one day matches. He scored over 30,000 domestic runs in all, including 33 first class hundreds and a best of 195; and six one day centuries with a top score of 188 not out. He also took two wickets with his occasional bowling.

In his capacity as an ICC match referee, Denness caused controversy after the Port Elizabeth Test between South Africa and the visiting Indians when he sanctioned six Indian players. At first, India refused to accept the sanctions and named the players for the following Test match. The International Cricket Council responded by stripping the game of Test match status. Soon after both the BCCI and ICC decided to establish a referee committee to verify Denness's conclusions. The match referee was heavily criticised for failing to explain his actions at a press conference, thus infuriating the Indian cricket establishment.[7] The BCCI later decided to forget the incident on humanitarian grounds, after Denness underwent heart surgery.In March 2002, Denness' role as a match referee came to an end, when the ICC failed to select him for their newly formed Elite Panel of Referees, although he had been put forward by the ECB as a candidate.He died at the age of 72 after a battle with cancer.A president of Kent County Cricket Club, Denness was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2013 New Year Honours for services to sport.

Test debut England v New Zealand at The Oval, Aug 21-26, 1969
Last Test England v Australia at Birmingham, Jul 10-14, 1975
ODI debut England v West Indies at Leeds, Sep 5, 1973
Last ODI England v Australia at Leeds, Jun 18, 1975
First-class span 1959-1980
List A span 1963-1980

John Harry Hampshire (1941-2017) Test Cap # 442

  
Full name John Harry Hampshire
Born February 10, 1941, Thurnscoe, Yorkshire
Died March 1, 2017 (aged 76 years 19 days)
Major teams England, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Tasmania, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Other Umpire

Profile
John Harry Hampshire also known as Jack Hampshire, was an English cricketer and umpire, who
played eight Tests and three One Day Internationals (ODIs) for England between 1969 and
1975.He played first-class cricket for Yorkshire from 1961 to 1981,and for Derbyshire from
1982 to 1984. Overseas, he was a successful captain of Tasmania in the period before the
state was included in the Sheffield Shield.He was also appointed President of Yorkshire
County Cricket Club in 2016, serving until his death.
Cricket writer Colin Bateman remarked, "Hampshire thrilled English cricket supporters when
he scored a century at Lord's on his Test debut – a unique achievement for an England
player. An attractive middle-order stroke-player, Hampshire looked one for the future but
he was dropped after one more match".

Born on 10 February 1941 in Thurnscoe, Hampshire came from a cricketing family.His father, John, played for Yorkshire in 1937.His younger brother, Alan, also played for the Yorkshire in 1975.Hampshire made his debut for his native Yorkshire at the age of 20 in 1961,where he had a twenty-year career with the club.Between 1969 and 1975 he played 8 Tests for England, scoring 403 runs.On his debut against the West Indies at Lord's, he made a dashing 107 and he appeared set for a glittering Test career. He was the first Englishman to score a Test hundred on debut at Lord's.Strangely, he was dropped after the next match, and faded away from the Test arena, making just half-a-dozen more Test appearances for England.

Donald Victor Smith (1923-2021) test cap # 438

Full Name: Donald Victor Smith
Born:June 14, 1923, Broadwater, Sussex
Died:January 09, 2021, Adelaide, (aged 97y 209d)
Batting Style:Left hand bat
Bowling Style:Left arm medium
Teams:England,Sussex

Profile
Don Smith was a useful allrounder for Sussex in the post-war period, a left-hand opening batsman and left-arm medium-pacer (he started at a spinner but found that he had the ability to swing the ball). His county career started hesitantly, but once he had secured his place in the side he remained an ever present. In 1949 as an opener he scored his maiden hundred - a double against Nottinghamshire - and made 1500 runs, but when David Sheppard came down from Cambridge he found himself dropped down the order, although he was restored from the mid 1950s. Nevertheless, he ended the year with 2088 runs. He took nine wickets in his first nine years at Hove, but in 1955 Robin Marlar suggested he switch to left-arm medium over the wicket and he ended the summer with 73 wickets. His Indian summer came in 1957 when he was 34, and a series of high scores resulted in him being drafted into the England side for the Lord's Test against West Indies. He played three Tests that season, but managed only 25 runs in four innings and took one wicket. Against Gloucestershire, Sussex were set a target of 277 in 195 minutes, and Smith smashed 166 (nine sixes, 11 fours), and he followed with 147 against the West Indians. He retired in 1962, and subsequently was appointed coach and groundsman at Lancing School, a position he held for more than 20 years before becoming Sri Lanka's coach in their early years as a Test-playing country. He subsequently emigrated to Australia.

Debut:England vs West Indies at Lord's - June 20 - 22, 1957
Last:England vs West Indies at Leeds - July 25 - 27, 1957
FC Span: 1946 - 1962

Robin Hobbs (1942–2024) Test Cap # 435


Derek Underwood (1945–2024) Test Cap # 433


Basil Lewis D'Oliveira (1931-2011) Test Cap # 432

© Getty image
Full name Basil Lewis D'Oliveira
Born October 4, 1931, Signal Hill, Cape Town, Cape Province, South Africa
Died November 19, 2011, England (aged 80 years 46 days)
Major teams England, Worcestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Coach

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© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
© PA Photos
One of broadcaster-writer John Arlott's most worthy deeds was saving Basil D'Oliveira from half-life as a Cape Colored in South Africa by persuading Middleton, the Central Lancashire League club, to take him on as their professional in 1960. This led to Worcestershire (in 1964) and England (in 1966) acquiring a readymade allrounder of formidable physical and mental strength, which was never better illustrated than when England were in trouble. Arlott's initiative was the making of D'Oliveira, and a source of joy to all who loathed apartheid. When you watched "Dolly" flaying the opposition's bowlers with meaty back-foot clumps, or frustrating their batsmen with outward-drifting medium-pace of cloying accuracy (his economy rate in Tests was 1.95 runs per over) there was one sharp regret ... if only he'd been spotted at 19 rather than 29. Then D'Oliveira would have put the runs and wickets in the book that would have shown future generations what he unmistakably was - one of cricket's greats.

© PA Photos
Basil D'Oliveira, the South Africa-born former England allrounder, died early on Saturday, aged 80, after a long battle with Parkinson's disease.In 1968, D'Oliveira, a Cape Coloured, was at the heart of one of cricket's greatest controversies, when the England tour of South Africa had to be called off since the government there refused to accept his presence in the visiting squad. The incident marked the beginning of South Africa's isolation from international cricket.

"Dolly", as he was affectionately called, couldn't establish a cricket career in South Africa due to the lack of opportunities for non-white players during the apartheid era. In 1960, the broadcaster and writer John Arlott persuaded him to move to England, where D'Oliveira initially played in the Lancashire leagues. .
Basil D'Oliveira is caught and,
bowled by Clive Lloyd for 110.
© Getty Images
He went on to play 44 Tests for England and made a name for himself as an allrounder, scoring 2484 runs at an average of 40, and picking up 47 wickets with his medium-pace bowling. His most famous Test innings was in the final Test of the 1968 Ashes, a 158 at The Oval that helped set up a thrilling series-levelling victory.

That innings came on the back of a summer of intense speculation over whether D'Oliveira would be picked for the South Africa series that followed the Ashes. South African politicians had made it abundantly clear that he would not be welcome due to his racial origins; despite the century at The Oval, D'Oliveira was left out of the England squad. He was later named as a replacement for the injured Tom Cartwright, a move that eventually caused the series to be cancelled. It was the cancellation of the series over D'Oliviera's selection which exposed the iniquities of South Africa's apartheid regime to the cricketing world.

Book On Basil D'Oliveira / Peter Oborne,
© Little, Brown
Gerald Majola, the CEO of Cricket South Africa, led the tributes to D'Oliveira. "He was a man of true dignity and a wonderful role model as somebody who overcame the most extreme prejudices and circumstances to take his rightful place on the world stage," Majola said. "One can only imagine what he might have achieved had he made his debut as he should have done at the age of 20 on South Africa's tour of England in 1951."
Former Worcestershire and England team-mate Tom Graveney paid tribute to his close friend on Sky Sports. "He was a very good allrounder," he said. "He bowled medium pace, with a few off-spinners in amongst them. But his batting was the thing. He was tremendously strong. I can remember batting with him when the pitches were turning a bit because we played on wet wickets in those days and he was just terrific.D'Oliveira had a lengthy career with Worcestershire, playing for them between 1964 and 1980, before taking over as the county's coach for a decade. In all first-class matches he scored 19,490 runs at 40.26 and took 551 wickets at 27.45. His son, Damian, also turned out for Worcestershire, representing them between 1982 and 1995.

Test debut England v West Indies at Lord's, Jun 16-21, 1966
Last Test England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 10-16, 1972
ODI debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Jan 5, 1971
Last ODI England v Australia at Birmingham, Aug 28, 1972
First-class span 1964-1980

Colin Milburn (1941-1990) Test Cap # 431

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Full name Colin Milburn
Born October 23, 1941, Burnopfield, Co Durham
Died February 28, 1990, Aycliffe Village, Co Durham (aged 48 years 128 days)
Major teams England, Northamptonshire, Western Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Fred Trueman, Basil D'Oliveira, Garry Sobers and Colin Milburn,
at Heathrow as they leave to take part in the Doubles Wicket contest,
in Australia © PA Photos 
There's no way of telling what difference it made to England's batting potential when Colin Milburn lost his left eye in a car accident and abruptly ended his brief Test career. England were well-stocked with opening batsmen at the end of the 1960s and, wonderful natural player as he was, Milburn would have had to score consistently heavily for Northants to become an automatic choice. What can be said with total certainty, however, is that that fateful car smash cost cricket one of its ripest characters of any generation - an 18-stone Durham lad with a smile for everyone and a drink with not a few - and spectators hours of joyous entertainment. "Ollie" - after the rotund American comedian Oliver Hardy - was far from just a hitter. In defence his head was still and his bat straight; and his off-side strokes, from either foot, were sweetly timed. But from long leg to long-on, whether hooking or pull-driving, he gave the ball such a mighty wallop that many times it was never seen again. A brief comeback with Northants found him sadly diminished.

Kenneth Higgs (1937-2016) Test Cap # 430

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Full name Kenneth Higgs
Born January 14, 1937, Kidsgrove, Staffordshire
Died September 7, 2016 (aged 79 years 237 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire, Leicestershire, Staffordshire
Nickname Higgsy
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium, Right-arm medium
Height 6 ft 0 in

© Getty Images
Kenneth "Ken" Higgs was an English fast-medium bowler, who was most successful as the opening partner to Brian Statham with Lancashire in the 1960s. He later played with success for Leicestershire.Cricket writer, Colin Bateman, noted, "Higgs was a fine medium-fast bowler with an impressive pedigree, who suddenly went out of fashion with the selectors after one Test of the 1968 Ashes series".In his junior days concentrating on football with Port Vale, Higgs did not take seriously to cricket until his late teens.He was signed to the club from July 1954 to 1959, but never made a first team appearance. Making progress during military service, he began playing for his native county, Staffordshire, taking 46 wickets for 13.13 each in 1957. Jack Ikin, a Staffordshire native, recommended Higgs to Lancashire and he began playing for them in 1958.

Higgs caused instant notice taking 7 for 36 against Hampshire in his first County Championship match. He took over 100 wickets in each season from 1959 to 1960, but was one of the few cricketers to take 100 wickets in a season at over thirty runs each in 1961, and he ceased to be an automatic choice.In 1965, a wet summer, he took 102 wickets in County Championship matches, and formed a formidable partnership with Statham. His best performance was 7 for 19 against Leicestershire. He was selected for the last Test at The Oval and took 8 for 143 against a formidable South African batting line-up, and was selected for MCC tour of Australia in 1965-66, where he had a modest time, but took 17 wickets (9.24) in three Tests in New Zealand.

In 1966, against the West Indies, Higgs established himself as England's first-choice opening bowler with 24 wickets for under 26 runs. At the Oval Higgs, only a tail-end left-hand batsman, made 63, then his highest first-class score and helped England effect a recovery from 166 for 7 to 529 all out. His partnership with John Snow for the tenth wicket of 128, is a record for England at home.It also remains as the all-time Test match record partnership between batsmen 10 and 11.

Despite injury keeping out of two Tests against India, Higgs had a good season in 1967, taking 95 wickets at 16.92. He was named one of Cricketers of the Year by Wisden. In that year, he took 17 wickets in the Test series against Pakistan. Despite this, he did not play in England's next Test series, their tour to the West Indies. He was later selected for one match of the Ashes series the following year, but was never selected again. Higgs retired from County cricket at the end of the 1969 season, and played for Rishton in the Lancashire League.In the twelve seasons for Lancashire Higgs took 1,033 wickets, a figure which had then been exceeded by only eight players.

After two years in the Lancashire League, the Leicestershire captain, Ray Illingworth called Higgs out of first-class cricket retirement because of Graham McKenzie's expected unavailability with the 1972 Australians. Higgs played regularly until the end of the 1979 season, for which he was appointed captain. He was the fifth-highest Englishman in the bowling averages that season at the age of forty-two. In one-day cricket, Higgs played in Leicestershire's 1972 and 1974 successes in the Benson & Hedges Cup, taking a hat-trick in the 1974 final. All together, Higgs took 308 List 'A' wickets for his adopted county. He was also, on his day, a solid and reliable tail-end batsman, who scored over 300 runs in a season six times. His highest first-class score of 98 was part of Leicestershire's record 228 run last wicket partnership with Ray Illingworth against Northamptonshire in 1977.

After 1979, Higgs seldom played in first-class cricket, and he retired from one-day cricket after 1982. In 1986, he returned in an emergency at the age of 49, taking 5 for 22 against Yorkshire.He played once more, against Somerset, witho
ut taking a wicket. In all he took 100 wickets in a season five times, and over 90 twice. He took 42 List A wickets in both 1975 and 1977.

Test debut England v South Africa at The Oval, Aug 26-31, 1965
Last Test England v Australia at Manchester, Jun 6-11, 1968
First-class span 1958 - 1986
List A span 1963 - 1982