free counters

Tuesday, February 3

Sorabji H.M Colah (1902-1950) Test Cap # 2

The 1932 All-India side which toured England © ESPNcricinfo Ltd
© livecricket.onepakistan.com

Full name Sorabji Hormasji Munchersha Colah
Born September 22, 1902, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died September 11, 1950, Ahmedabad, Gujarat (aged 47 years 354 days)
Major teams India (Test: 1932-1933/34); Parsees (1922/23-1939/40); Bombay (1926/27-1933/34); Western India (1934/35-1935/36); Nawanagar ( 1936/37-1941/42);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
An attacking batsman, Colah was one of the automatic choices for the first tour of England in 1932. He did fairly well in the first-class matches but made 22 and 4 in the only Test. A brilliant fielder, he picked up two catches. He also played against England at Bombay, India's next Test and the first to be played on Indian soil. Going in late in the order, he made 31 and 12 and that remained the extent of his Test career. Colah remained a pillar for Western India, Nawanagar and Bombay during a first-class career that stretched from 1922 to 1942, making 3578 runs at an average of almost 29.08 including six centuries

Test debut England v India at Lord's, Jun 25-28, 1932
Last Test India v England at Mumbai, Dec 15-18, 1933
First-class span 1922-1942

Ladhabhai Nakum Amar Singh (1910-1940) Test Cap # 1

© En.wikipedia.org
Full name Ladhabhai Nakum Amar Singh
Born December 4, 1910, Rajkot, Gujarat
Died May 21, 1940, Jamnagar, Gujarat (aged 29 years 169 days)
Major teams India (Test: 1932-1936); Patiala (1932/33-1935/36); Western India (1933/34-1935/36); Hindus (1934/35-1939/40); Nawanagar (1936/37-1939/40)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Douglas Jardine edges a ball from Amar Singh past slips  
©pa fotos
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
"There is no better bowler in the world today than Amar Singh,'' said Len Hutton in an informal chat with pressmen at Madras in 1970. It was 34 years since the legendary England opening batsman had faced the Indian medium pace bowler while playing for Yorkshire. And it is the perfect tribute to Amar Singh that Hutton still remembered the hard time that the Indian, then a member of the 1936 Indian team, gave him. Another England great Wally Hammond described Amar Singh's bowling as "he came off the pitch like the crack of doom". Indeed, Amar Singh, along with Md Nissar was the first great Indian bowler for his accuracy, stamina and ability to make the ball move alarmingly off the air or cut it devastatingly off the pitch.

Benjamin Caine Hollioake (1977-2002) Test Cap # 588

© Getty image
Full name Benjamin Caine Hollioake
Born November 11, 1977, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Died March 23, 2002, Perth, Western Australia, Australia (aged 24 years 132 days)
Major teams England, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Michael Atherton awards Test caps to brothers Adam (left) Ben Hollioake.
© Getty image
Ben Hollioake died when his Porsche 924 left a freeway exit road, made slippery by light rain, and crashed into a brick wall. He had been driving home from the customary family dinner that preceded his and his brother Adam's return to Surrey for the English season, having spent much of the winter with England's one-day squad in Zimbabwe, India and New Zealand. Ben was just 24 years and 132 days old: no England Test cricketer had died so young.The England captain, Nasser Hussain, flew from the Test series in New Zealand for his funeral, which was attended also by Surrey colleagues and Australian players, testimony to his immense popularity. "Ben was the most naturally gifted cricketer that I have ever played alongside," said Alec Stewart, who captained him for Surrey and England. Everyone recalled his easy-going approach to life and the friendships he fostered with his gentle nature and whimsical sense of humour; Adam, in his funeral address, described him as "a beautiful work of art, a classic sculpture". And in the game's collective memory, the picture of Ben Hollioake remained fixed on a spring afternoon in 1997 when, making his England debut at 19, this tall, loose-limbed allrounder set Lord's alight with 63 in 48 balls against Australia to take the Man of the Match award.

Joseph Emmanuel Benjamin (1961-2021) Test Cap # 570

 

Name:Joseph Emmanuel Benjamin
Born:February 02, 1961, Christ Church, St Kitts
Died:March 08, 2021, Reigate, Surrey, (aged 60y 34d)
Batting Style:Right hand bat
Bowling Style:Right arm medium fast
Teams:England,Surrey,Warwickshire

Profile
Joseph Emmanuel Benjamin was a St Kitts–born English cricketer who played in one Test and two ODIs from 1994 to 1995. He also played county cricket for Warwickshire and Surrey from 1988 to 1999.Benjamin was born in Christ Church, Saint Kitts, on 2 February 1961.His family relocated to the United Kingdom when he was 15 years old and resided at first in the Midlands. He played in the Birmingham League, where his performances in sporadic fixtures for Staffordshire drew initial attention.

Benjamin signed his first county contract for Warwickshire in 1988, when he was 27.He was unable to receive regular playing time, with Gladstone Small, Tim Munton, and Allan Donald starting ahead of him. Benjamin ultimately featured in 25 first-class matches in his four years with the team.Benjamin went on to play with Surrey from 1992 until 1999. He was honored as the team's Player of the Year in 1993. He claimed 64 wickets at 27.85 that year and took 6 for 19 against Nottinghamshire, the best in his career. He managed to better those numbers the following season, with 80 wickets at 20.72, and received his first international call-up that same year. He had 53 wickets at a decent rate of 25.01 in 1995, but he began to lose playing time from that season onwards. In his final season with Surrey in 1999, the club won the County Championship, though he only played in two of the matches. He was subsequently released by the team.For his career, Benjamin took 387 wickets in first-class cricket between 1988 and 1999, at an average of 29.94.His best effort with the bat was a first-class 49 while his average stood at 11.38, leading ESPNcricinfo to describe his batting as "the hit-and-miss variety".

A One-Test wonder, Benjamin's single Test match appearance for England came in 1994 when he was selected for the final Test of the series against South Africa at The Oval, his home ground. He performed well in the match taking four wickets in the first innings.However, his effort was overshadowed by Devon Malcolm's spectacular nine-wicket haul in the second innings. He was 33 at the time, and did not play any more Test matches for England as the national selectors preferred to concentrate on younger seam bowlers like Angus Fraser and Chris Lewis.After retiring from cricket, Benjamin remained in Surrey.There, he coached at Reigate Grammar School and Reigate Priory Cricket Club.Benjamin died of a heart attack on 8 March 2021. He was sixty years old

Only:England vs South Africa at The Oval - August 18 - 21, 1994
FC Span:1986 - 1999

Graham Thorpe (1969-2024) Test Cap # 564


Hugh Morris (1963-2025) Test Cap # 552


Neil FetzGerald Williams (1962-2006) Test Cap # 546

© Getty image
Full name Neil FetzGerald Williams
Born July 2, 1962, Hopewell, St Vincent
Died March 27, 2006, London, England (aged 43 years 268 days)
Major teams England, Cornwall, Essex, Middlesex, Tasmania, Windward Islands
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
© Getty image
Neil Williams, a medium-fast bowler who played one Test for England in 1990, died in hospital on March 27 after a short battle against pneumonia. He was 43. He suffered a stroke at his St Vincent home three weeks earlier from which he never recovered.Williams' one cap came when he was drafted into the England side for the final Test against India at The Oval in 1990 after Chris Lewis withdrew with a migraine. India amassed 606 for 9 and Williams took 2 for 148 - but the victims were Sachin Tendulkar and Mohammad Azharuddin. Sent in as a nightwatchman on the second evening, he made 38 in a second-wicket stand of 74 with Graham Gooch, an achievement he rated higher than his two wickets. He was not considered for that winter's Ashes or England B tours and, when he was not even summoned when injuries hit, it was clear that at 28 his chance had come and gone.

Williams was born in St Vincent and emigrated to Britain when he was 13. He joined Middlesex after a season and a half as an MCC Young Professional, during which time he had also been playing for Hornsey.

Alan Igglesden (1964-2021) Test Cap # 540


David Lawrence (1964-2025) Test Cap # 534


Robin Smith (1963-2025) Test Cap # 530


David Capel (1963-2020) Test Cap # 526