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Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7

Derek Stirling (961– 2023) test cap#154


 

Martin David Crowe (1962-2016) Test Cap # 150

  
Full name Martin David Crowe 150
Born September 22, 1962, Henderson, Auckland
Died March 3, 2016, Auckland (aged 53 years 163 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Auckland, Central Districts, Somerset, Wellington
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Coach, Commentator
Relation Father - DW Crowe, Brother - JJ Crowe

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Martin David Crowe, MBE  was a New Zealand cricketer, commentator and author. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1985, and was credited as one of the "best young batsmen in the world".A right-handed batsman, Crowe represented New Zealand from the early 1980s until his retirement in 1996.Through the early part of his career he was also a medium-pace bowler. He captained New Zealand in the early 1990s, and during this period he brought many innovations, such as opening with spin bowlers and utilising pinch hitting batsmen.Crowe was born in September 1962 in Henderson, New Zealand, to Dave Crowe, a former New Zealand domestic cricketer. Crowe's brother, Jeff, also represented and captained New Zealand at international level, and both are cousins of actor Russell Crowe.Crowe represented four domestic cricket teams in his career, Auckland, Central Districts, Somerset and Wellington.He scored nearly 20,000 first-class runs, with 71 centuries.His average of 56.02 is one of the highest first-class averages of all time.

John Fulton Reid(1956-2020)Test Cap # 144

Full name:John Fulton Reid
Born:March 03, 1956, Auckland
Died:December 29, 2020 (aged 64y 301d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Central Districts
Batting style:Left hand Bat
Bowling Style:Legbreak
Relations:BA Reid (cousin)

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John Fulton Reid was a New Zealand cricketer. He was born in Auckland.Reid completed his education at Lynfield College, well known for its cricket. Reid house at Lynfield College is named after him. He worked as a high school geography teacher while playing cricket. Reid played in 19 Test matches and 25 One Day Internationals between 1979 and 1986. His Test average was 46.28 and included six Test centuries. His ODI average was 27.52. Despite having a very respectable batting average of 46.28, it was revealed by Cricinfo that Reid had the biggest difference in batting averages between first and second innings. He had a first innings average of 68.41, but a second innings average of only 12.09, a difference of more than 56 runs.

Neil Edwards(1955-2020)Test Cap # 139

Full name:Graham Neil Edwards
Born:May 27, 1955, Nelson, Nelson
Died:April 06, 2020 (aged 64y 315d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Central Districts
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Fielding Positions:Right arm Bowler

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Graham Neil Edwards  was a New Zealand cricketer. He played eight Test matches and six One Day Internationals for New Zealand.Edwards was born in Nelson, and attended Nelson College.He was a short, stocky wicketkeeper who was a good enough batsman to make his Test debut against Australia in 1976–77 as a specialist. He was brought back in 1977–78 as a wicketkeeper-batsman and made 55 and 54 on his comeback against England at Auckland. That won him selection for the England tour in 1978 where his performances were disappointing – one member of the BBC commentary team said that Edwards was "the worst wicketkeeper I've ever seen  he's made mistakes you'd have the 3rd XI 'keeper at school running round the pitch for". But the genial Edwards kept his spirits up and was a popular tourist. He returned for three home Tests against India in 1980–81 where he chipped in with useful runs, but the emergence of Ian Smith signalled the end of his international career.

Edwards played first-class and List A cricket for Central Districts from 1973–74 to 1984–85. His highest first-class score was 177 not out against Wellington in 1980–81, which was also his most successful season, with 812 runs at an average of 47.76. He was also a prominent player in the Hawke Cup for Nelson for many years, scoring 236 against North Canterbury in his last match, including six sixes and 29 fours.After retiring from cricket he ran a pub in Murchison, then worked as a gate-keeper at Port Nelson. He had several minor heart attacks before undergoing surgery for a triple bypass in 2007. He died on 6 April 2020.

Test Debut:New Zealand vs India at Christchurch - February 21, 1976
last test:New Zealand vs India at Hamilton - February 15, 1981
Span:1973/74 - 1984/85

Peter James Petherick (1942-2015) Test Cap # 136

© cricbuzz.com
Full name Peter James Petherick
Born September 25, 1942, Ranfurly, Otago
Died June 7, 2015, Perth, Western Australia (aged 72 years 255 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Otago, Wellington
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Peter James Petherick was an off-spinner who represented New Zealand in six Test cricketmatches between October 1976 and March 1977. He is one of two New Zealand bowlersto achieve a hat-trick in Test matches. He is one of only three players, along with Maurice Allom and Damien Fleming, to have taken a hat-trick on Test debut. Making his first-class debut at 33,he played for Otago from 1975-76 to 1977-78, and forWellington from 1978-79 to 1980-81. In his fifth match he took 9 for 93 in the first innings against Northern Districts,and he finished the 1975-76 season with 42 wickets at 20.13.After his retirement from cricket, Petherick took up lawn bowls, and skippered a two-man team to the final of the New Zealand national bowls championship in 2006.He died in 2015.

Test debut Pakistan v New Zealand at Lahore, Oct 9-13, 1976
Last Test New Zealand v Australia at Auckland, Feb 25-Mar 1, 1977
First-class span 1975/76 - 1980/81
List A span 1978/79 - 1980/81

Friday, February 6

Robert Anderson (1948-2025) Test Cap # 134


Andrew lenn Roberts (1947-1989) Test Cap # 133



Kenneth John Wadsworth (1946-1976) Test Cap #121

© The Cricketer International
Full name Kenneth John Wadsworth
Born November 30, 1946, Nelson, Nelson
Died August 19, 1976, Nelson, Nelson (aged 29 years 263 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Canterbury, Central Districts
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Dennis Amiss on his way to 138 against,
New Zealand in 1973 with,
Ken Wadsworth keeping...
© The Cricketer International
Profile
Kenneth John Wadsworth, died in Nelson, New Zealand, on August 19, aged 29. He had been New Zealand's regular keeper since 1969, playing in thirty-three Tests, the last of them against India at Wellington in February 1976: in these he dismissed 95 batsmen and made over a thousand runs. He toured England in 1969 and 1973. As a keeper, he was always brilliant and as time went on became more consistent: perhaps even when he died he had not reached his best. He was primarily an aggressive bat, whose impetuosity often cost him his wicket, but he could defend doggedly enough when the situation demanded. His highest Test innings was 80 against Australia at Melbourne in 1974: in the same season he made a century against them in the one-day Test at Christchurch.

Ken Wadsworth just fails to cling on to a G. Boycott edge,
© The Cricketer International
At Kingston, Jamaica, in 1972, coming in to join Turner at 108 for five, he helped to put on 220, still* a New Zealand Test record for the sixth wicket. Above all he was a determined cricketer who loved winning, meant to win and was sure he could, and who equally hated losing. His outlook was more typical of an Australian or a Yorkshireman than a New Zealander and this made proportionately more valuable to his side, who found his courage and confidence an inspiration. His early death is a tragic loss not only to New Zealand Cricket but to world cricket in general. Wisden Cricketers' Almanack *First broken a decade after Wadsworth's death, in 1986-87, by Jeff Crowe and Richard Hadlee, who put on an unbroken 246 against Sri Lanka at Colombo's CCC

Test debut England v New Zealand at Lord's, Jul 24-28, 1969
Last Test New Zealand v India at Wellington, Feb 13-17, 1976 
ODI debut New Zealand v Pakistan at Christchurch, Feb 11, 1973
Last ODI New Zealand v India at Auckland, Feb 22, 1976
First-class span 1968-1976

Hedley John Howarth (1943-2008) Test Cap #120

Telegraph.co.uk
Full name Hedley John Howarth
Born December 25, 1943, Grey Lynn, Auckland
Died November 7, 2008, Auckland (aged 64 years 318 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Auckland
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

© Getty image
Profile
stuff.co.nz
Hedley John Howarth was an international cricketer who played 30 Tests and nine One Day Internationals for New Zealand. The elder brother of Geoff Howarth, former New Zealand captain, he was born and died in Auckland.Howarth was an orthodox left-arm bowler who made his first class debut in 1962. Between the years 1969 and 1977, Howarth played 30 tests for New Zealand, capturing a total 86 wickets at an average of 36.95. Justin Vaughan chief executive of New Zealand Cricket credited Howarth with playing a significant role in New Zealand's international cricket history, crediting Howarth's "five-wicket bag against India at Nagpur in 1969 was a match winner that helped give New Zealand its first ever test win on the sub-continent".India were chasing 277 in the fourth innings but it was Howarth's 5 for 34 that gave New Zealand the lead, highlighted by a catch off his own bowling, ending a 167-run win. Howarths's other five-wicket haul was in a Test against the Pakistan national cricket team in Karachi, when he picked up 5 for 80.

Brian Frederick Hastings (1940–2024) Test Cap # 116


Keith Thomson (1941-2023) Test Cap # 115

Full name:Keith Thomson
Born:February 26, 1941, Methven, Canterbury
Died:January 26, 2023, Christchurch, New Zealand, (aged 81y 334d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Canterbury
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling Style:Right arm Bowler
Relations:WA Thomson (brother)
Other:Umpire

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Keith Thomson was a New Zealand sportsman who represented his country at both cricket and hockey. He played two cricket Tests in 1968, and 28 hockey Tests between 1961 and 1971, and was later an umpire in both sports.A middle-order batsman, Thomson was stoutly built and batted with a crouching stance, but hit the ball hard. He played first-class cricket for Canterbury from 1959–60 to 1973–74. In the Plunket Shield in 1966–67 he hit two centuries and was selected for all four matches for New Zealand against the touring Australian XI.

Thomson made his Test debut against India in the 1967–68 season at Christchurch where he scored 69 (adding 119 for the fifth wicket with Graham Dowling) and 0 not out in what was New Zealand's fourth victory in Tests. His second, and final, Test came a week later at Wellington where he scored 25 and 0.His highest score in first-class cricket was 136 not out for Canterbury against Northern Districts in 1968–69. He was a fine fieldsman, a good catcher close to the wicket.Thomson later became an umpire, standing in 13 first-class matches and 11 List A matches between 1983–84 and 1986–87.

Bruce Alexander Grenfell Murray (1940-2023)Test Cap # 114

Full name:Bruce Alexander Grenfell Murray 114
Born:September 18, 1940, Johnsonville, Wellington
Died:January 10, 2023 (aged 82y 114d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Wellington
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling Style:Legbreak
Relations:AC Kerr(granddaughter),JF Murray(daughter)

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Bruce Alexander Grenfell Murray was a Test cricketer for New Zealand who played 13 Tests as a right-handed opening batsman between 1968 and 1971. He was a school principal in the Wellington area from 1981 to 2002, and the author of several geography textbooks. After retiring from teaching he was a cricket administrator in Wellington and a historian. Born in Johnsonville, a northern suburb of Wellington, Bruce Murray attended Hutt Valley High School, then went to Victoria University of Wellington studying geography. He completed a Master of Arts degree in geography at the University of Canterbury. His masters thesis was on the geography of Tawa.

A stroke-playing opening batsman and specialist slips fieldsman, Murray played his first first-class match at the age of 18 for Wellington against Central Districts at Wellington in 1958–59, scoring 49 in the first innings. He scored his first first-class century in 1961–62, 133 against Central Districts in a match that Wellington won by an innings.His highest first-class innings came in 1968-69 when he scored 213 out of a total of 392 for 5 declared for Wellington against Otago in Dunedin. He was the leading scorer in the Plunket Shield in 1969–70, and had the highest average: in four matches he made 430 runs at an average of 61.42, with five fifties.

Murray faced the first ball in the first List A match in New Zealand, bowled by Ken Shuttleworth. It was a match of 40 eight-ball overs a side, between Wellington and the touring MCC at the Basin Reserve in February 1971. Shuttleworth dismissed him for 6, but Murray later took three catches, and Wellington won.

Test Debut:New Zealand vs India at Dunedin - February 15 - 20, 1968
last test:New Zealand vs England at Christchurch - February 25 - March 01, 1971
Span:1970/71 - 1970/71

Narotam Puna (1929-1996) Test Cap # 111

  
Full name Narotam Puna
Born October 28, 1929, Surat, Gujarat, India
Died June 7, 1996, Hamilton, Waikato (aged 66 years 223 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Northern Districts
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Narotam "Tom" Puna (born 28 October 1929, Surat, India, died 7 June 1996, Hamilton, Waikato) was a New Zealand cricketer who played in 3 Tests in 1966.Playing as an off-spinner for Northern Districts, he had taken 34 wickets at 13.70 in the Plunket Shield in the 1965-66 season,and was selected as New Zealand's principal spinner in all three Tests against the visiting England team, but achieved little.He was a fixture in the Northern Districts side from 1956-57 to 1968-69, beginning as a middle-order batsman but descending the order as his bowling developed. His best innings figures were 6 for 25 against Otago in Hamilton in 1966-67 (match figures of 59-29-66-9).His family migrated from India to New Zealand when he was eight.His sons Ashok and Kirtialso played for Northern Districts.

Test debut New Zealand v England at Christchurch, Feb 25-Mar 1, 1966
Last Test New Zealand v England at Auckland, Mar 11-15, 196
First-class span 1956-1969

Bruce Richard Taylor (1943-2021) Test Cap # 108

Full name:Bruce Richard Taylor 108
Born:July 12, 1943, Timaru, Canterbury
Died:February 06, 2021 (aged 77y 209d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Canterbury,Wellington
Batting style:Left hand Bat
Bowling Style:Right arm Bowler
Playing Role:Allrounder

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Bruce Richard Taylor was a New Zealand cricketer who played 30 Test matches and two One Day Internationals between 1965 and 1973. He is the only cricketer to score a century and take a five-wicket haul on debut in a Test match.Taylor scored 105 and took 5–86 for New Zealand on Test debut against India at Calcutta in 1964–65, becoming the first man to have completed this all-round feat on debut. Taylor, who had never scored a first-class century before, and had played only three first-class matches, came in at No. 8 and slammed 105 in 158 minutes with 14 fours and three sixes and helped Bert Sutcliffe (151 not out) add 163 for the seventh wicket

Peter Bennetts Truscott (1941-2025) Test Cap # 105


Bevan Ernest Congdon (1938-2018) Test Cap # 103

  
Full name Bevan Ernest Congdon
Born February 11, 1938, Motueka, Tasman
Died February 10, 2018, Auckland (aged 79 years 364 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Canterbury, Central Districts, Otago, Wellington
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Bev Congdon was one of the finest allround cricketers ever produced by New Zealand, and was a model professional both on and off the field. Congdon was a technically correct batsman with tremendous powers of concentration - as evidenced by his back-to-back big hundreds against England in 1973 - but was also able to play in a cavalier manner when the occasion demanded. He supplemented this with sound fielding and medium-pace in and outswingers. He led New Zealand with distinction to their first Test win over Australia (after putting Australia in), and but for dropped catches would probably have recorded a momentus win over England at Lord's in 1973. Unlike many, he thrived on the captaincy and his batting seemed the better for the responsibility. Under his tenure New Zealand emerged from Test cricket's perennial losers into a side to be respected.

Test debut New Zealand v Pakistan at Wellington, Jan 22-26, 1965
Last Test England v New Zealand at Lord's, Aug 24-28, 1978
First-class span 1960/61 - 1977/78

Robert Smith Cunis (1941-2008) Test Cap # 101

© Getty image
Full name Robert Smith Cunis
Born January 5, 1941, Whangarei, Northland
Died August 9, 2008, Whangarei, Northland (aged 67 years 217 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Auckland, Northern Districts
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Other Coach

Profile
© En.wikipedia.org
Robert Smith Cunis played 20 Test matches for New Zealand as a pace bowler between 1964 and 1972, and was later coach of the New Zealand national team from 1987 to 1990. His son Stephen (born 1978) played cricket for Canterbury between 1998 and 2006.A sturdily-built fast-medium bowler, Bob Cunis played for Auckland from 1960-61 to 1973-74, and for Northern Districts in 1975-76 and 1976-77.On his first-class debut he took 6 for 72 and 2 for 26 against Northern Districts to help Auckland to an eight-wicket victory.In 1961-62 he took 27 wickets at 14.18, including 2 for 31 and 7 for 29 in the victory over Central Districts.In the first match of the 1963-64 season he took 6 for 44 and 7 for 41 in a one-wicket victory over Canterbury.He played his first Test against the visiting South Africans at the end of the 1963-64 season, taking two wickets (Graeme Pollock and Denis Lindsay) in a drawn match.He had a moderate season in 1964-65 and was not selected for any of the home Tests against Pakistan or the tour that followed. In 1965-66 he took 22 wickets at 17.45 in the Plunket Shield and played in all three Tests against England, taking seven wickets at 35.43 off 121.5 overs.In the First Test, when New Zealand were 32 for 8 in the second innings, "Cunis, a well-built Rugby centre-threequarter, saved the day by defending successfully through the last thirty-five minutes" in a partnership with Vic Pollard.His 16 not out was the top score.

Wynne Pennell Bradburn (1938-2008) Test Cap # 100

Full name Wynne Pennell Bradburn
Born November 24, 1938, Thames, Waikato
Died September 25, 2008, Hamilton (aged 69 years 306 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Northern Districts
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Wynne Bradburn started his career with Northern Districts as a middle-order batsman but his success came after he switched to opening. His call-up against South Africa in 1963-64 came as something of a surprise, given his form that season had not been outstanding and he had yet to score his maiden first-class hundred. He made 32 in his first Test and 2 and 14 in the second. By the time the side came to be chosen for the 1965 England tour he was out of the reckoning. The following summer he had his only hundred, 107 against Auckland. His son, Grant, also played Test cricket for New Zealand, one of only seven father-and-son pairings to do so.

Test debut New Zealand v South Africa at Dunedin, Feb 28-Mar 3, 1964
Last Test New Zealand v South Africa at Auckland, Mar 13-17, 1964
First-class span 1957-1969

John Thomas Ward (1937-2021)Test Cap # 99

Full name:John Thomas Ward
Born:March 11, 1937, Timaru, Canterbury
Died:January 12, 2021, Timaru, South Canterbury, (aged 83y 307d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Canterbury,
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Fielding Position:Right arm Bowler
Relations:BJ Ward(son),JW Burtt(cousin),NV Burtt(uncle)

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John Thomas Ward  was a New Zealand cricketer who played as a wicket-keeper in eight Test matches between 1964 and 1968. Ward's Test captain John Reid said that he was "easily the best wicketkeeper in New Zealand in his time, but was plagued by injury." Ward made his first-class debut for South Island against North Island in a trial match for the 1958 tour of England. He took five catches in the first innings, and was selected as Eric Petrie's deputy on the tour. He made his Plunket Shield debut for Canterbury in 1959–60, and was selected to tour South Africa in 1961-62, where he served as deputy to Artie Dick.

He finally made his Test debut in 1963–64 in the First Test against the South African touring team, but then lost his place to Dick, who was a superior batsman. He replaced Dick for the Third Test against Pakistan in New Zealand in 1964–65, and went on the tour of India and Pakistan in 1965 as the sole wicket-keeper. He made his highest Test score of 35 not out in the First Test against India, when he and Richard Collinge put on 61 for the last wicket, but injury forced him out after the Indian leg of the tour, and Dick again replaced him. Later that year, in England, Ward returned to the side, replacing Dick for the Third Test. His last Test was the Fourth Test against India in 1967-68.Ward continued to play for Canterbury until the end of the 1970–71 season. He scored his only first-class fifty against Wellington in 1969-70 when, batting at number five, he made 54 not out. He represented South Canterbury in the Hawke Cup from 1960 to 1976.

His son Barry kept wicket for Canterbury in the 1986–87 season. Ward died in Timaru on 12 January 2021 after a short illness, aged 83.

Test Debut:New Zealand vs South Africa at Wellington - February 21 - 25, 1964
last test:New Zealand vs India at Auckland - March 07 - 12, 1968
Span:1957/58 - 1970/71