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Sunday, February 1

John Henry Wardle (1923-1985) Test Cap # 333

© The Cricketer International
Full name John Henry Wardle
Born January 8, 1923, Ardsley, Yorkshire
Died July 23, 1985, Hatfield, Doncaster, Yorkshire (aged 62 years 196 days)
Major teams England, Cambridgeshire, Yorkshire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox, Slow left-arm chinaman

Profile
Left-arm spinner Johnny Wardle shows a young,
 Yorkshire bowler how to grip the ball.
© Getty image
Johnny Wardle was one of the most skilful left-arm spinners the game has seen. Though he usually bowled in the orthodox tradition, as preferred by Yorkshire, he sometimes bowled wrist-spinners (with a bemusing googly - the `chinaman'), especially when on overseas duty for England. It was his misfortune that his career coincided with that of the more aggressive Tony Lock of Surrey, who was preferred to him for many Tests during the 1950s.

Still, Wardle played 28 times for England and took 102 wickets at only 20.39, five times taking five wickets in an innings. His best figures were 7 for 36 (12 for 89 in the match) at Cape Town during the tied 1956-57 series in South Africa, when he took 26 wickets in four Tests at a mere 13.81, missing the last Test through a cartilage operation. On the tour he took 90 wickets at a dozen runs apiece, and caused Jim Laker to remark some years later that Wardle had produced the best displays of spin bowling he had ever seen.Yet he played in only one further Test, at Lord's (where he played seven times), in 1957, against West Indies. A year later he was sacked by Yorkshire, wrote some scathing article for the Daily Mail, and had his invitation to tour Australia withdrawn by MCC.

Stewart Cathie Griffith (1914-1993) Test Cap # 332

.© The Cricketer International
Full name Stewart Cathie Griffith
Born June 16, 1914, Wandsworth, London
Died April 7, 1993, Felpham, Sussex (aged 78 years 295 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Surrey, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Other Administrator

Profile
The first draw for the Gillette Cup at Lord's, 1963.
Billy Griffith (left), Donald Carr and J Dunbar officiate.
© The Cricketer International
Stewart Cathie Griffith, CBE, DFC, TD, died aged 78 in a nursing home at Felpham in Sussex on April 7, 1993, after a long and trying illness. Batting as a makeshift opener in the Port-of-Spain Test of 1947-48, Billy Griffith became the first man to score his maiden first-class century for England and the only man to do so on debut. Later, he became secretary of MCC and guided the club from 1962 to 1974, during which time the club's role and the game itself changed profoundly. At Dulwich, in spite of making more than 1,200 runs during four years in the XI, Griffith lived in the shadow of his friend Hugh Bartlett, whose scoring was phenomenal. However, when he took up wicket-keeping, he found an identity of his own. He won his Blue in his second year at Cambridge, 1935. It is a long time since Cambridge had a better wicket-keeper, said Wisden.

He toured Australia and New Zealand with a young MCC team under Errol Holmes in 1935-36, but lost his Cambridge place the following year to Paul Gibb. Griffith returned to Dulwich as cricket master, moved from Surrey (for whom he had played once) to Sussex and became first-choice keeper in 1939. He had a heroic war as an officer in the Glider Pilot Regiment, along with Bartlett. As second-in-command he carried the commander of the 6th Airborne Division, Major-General Windy Gale, into Normandy, crash-landing after being caught in a storm.

Maurice Fletcher Tremlett (1923-1984) Test Cap # 331

© Wisden Cricket Monthly
Full name Maurice Fletcher Tremlett
Born July 5, 1923, Stockport, Cheshire
Died July 30, 1984, Southampton, Hampshire (aged 61 years 25 days)
Major teams England, Central Districts, Somerset
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
© Mike Atelski
Maurice Tremlett, who died in a Southampton hospital on July 30 at the age of 61, was Somerset's first professional captain (1956-59) and, it could be argued, the best they ever had. Despite that almost languid, easy-going persona, his cricketing mind was sharp and unwavering. His tactical sense was intuitive, unconsciously backed by a rare, accumulated knowledge of the technical flaws of most of the opponents he was likely to meet.He was born in Stockport but was as Somerset in approach as Bicknoller's Harold Gimblett, who was at times a little wary, even jealous some implied, of Tremlett's glamorous reputation as a hitter and pilferer of headlines from the county's marvellous opening batsman. In fact, they had much in common, even if the younger man never really acquired the skills and refinements of Gimblett. But they both agonised.When Tremlett suddenly lost everything as a bowler -- rhythm, line, length and, of course, confidence -- he visibly despaired. He was still impressive fast-medium in the nets; on the field he was an embarrassing wreck. He was desperately depressed, and insensitive bellows from the boundary from those who didn't understand his psycho-logical battle compounded the misery.

Gerald Arthur Smithson (1926-1970) Test Cap # 330

Geoffrey Keighley and Gerald Smithson.
© Getty image
Full name Gerald Arthur Smithson
Born November 1, 1926, Spofforth, Yorkshire
Died September 6, 1970, Abingdon, Berkshire (aged 43 years 309 days)
Major teams England, Leicestershire, Yorkshire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Gerald Arthur Smithson, who died suddenly on September 6, aged 43, played for Yorkshire in 1946 and 1947, his highest innings for the county being 169 against Leicestershire at Leicester in the second year. Conscripted as a Bevin Boy in the mines after the war, he received special permission, after his case had been debated in the House of Commons, to tour the West Indies with the MCC team of 1947--48, taking part in two Test matches.His picture appeared in Wisden 1948, page 38. In 1951 he joined Leicestershire, with whom he remained for six seasons, of which his best was that of 1952 when, by attractive left-hand batting and the aid of two centuries, he hit 1,264 runs, average 28.08. He afterwards served as coach, first at Caterham School and then at Abingdon School, and between 1957 and 1962 he also assisted Hertfordshire.

Test debut West Indies v England at Bridgetown, Jan 21-26, 1948
Last Test West Indies v England at Port of Spain, Feb 11-16, 1948
First-class span 1946-1956

Winston Place (1914-2002) Test Cap # 329

© The Cricketer International
Full name Winston Place
Born December 7, 1914, Rawtenstall, Lancashire
Died January 25, 2002, Burnley, Lancashire (aged 87 years 49 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
Winston & Washbrook open for Lancashire.
© The Cricketer International
Place, Winston, died in Burnley on January 25, 2002, seven weeks after his 87th birthday. He had been the second-oldest surviving England cricketer, having played three Tests on MCC's ill-planned tour of the West Indies in 1947-48. But it was his opening partnerships for Lancashire with Cyril Washbrook, in the seasons immediately after World War II, for which he was most fondly remembered. In their contrasting ways - Washbrook the flamboyant, consummate strokemaker; Place, taller and unassuming, reminiscent of Harry Makepeace in his studied defensive play - they provided a foundation that was the envy of other counties. Not that Place was dilatory or dull. He often outscored his partner on poor wickets and, by the time he left Old Trafford in 1955, he was Lancashire's 13th-highest runmaker with 14,605 runs at 36.69 for the county. Decisive footwork determined his game: he drove effectively through the off-side arc and at times back over the bowler's head, played the late-cut with a delicate touch, and pulled with real aplomb.

James Charles Laker (1922-1986) Test Cap # 328

© The Cricketer International
Full name James Charles Laker
Born February 9, 1922, Frizinghall, Bradford, Yorkshire
Died April 23, 1986, Putney, London (aged 64 years 73 days)
Major teams England, Auckland, Essex, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Ian Craig is trapped lbw by
 Jim Laker in the second innings.
© The Cricketer International
Jim Laker will always be remembered for his bowling in the Test match at Old Trafford in 1956, when he took 19 Australian wickets for 90, 9 for 37 in the first innings and 10 for 53 in the second. No other bowler has taken more than seventeen wickets in a first-class match, let alone in a Test match. The feat is unique and, rash though it may seem to say, may well remain so. Ten wickets in an innings, more than any other achievement in cricket, must contain a large element of luck: however well a man bowls, the odds must always be that his partner will pick up a wicket. In this case these odds were heavier than usual because Lock at the other end was, on such a wicket, as great a spinner as Laker and bowled superbly. What turned the scale was that Laker was bowling off-breaks whereas Lock relied on the left-armer's natural leg-break, and the Australians at that period were wholly inexperienced in playing off-breaks, especially on a wicket which, heavily marled and almost devoid of grass, might have been designed for an off-spinner.

Laker, James Charles (JIM), who died at Putney on April 23, 1986, aged 64, will always be remembered for his bowling in the Test match at Old Trafford in 1956, when he took nineteen Australian wickets for 90, nine for 37 in the first innings and ten for 53 in the second. No other bowler has taken more than seventeen wickets in a first-class match, let alone in a Test match. The feat is unique and, rash though it may seem to say, may well remain so. Ten wickets in an innings, more than any other achievement in cricket, must contain a large element of luck: however well a man bowls, the odds must always be that his partner will pick up a wicket. In this case these odds were heavier than usual because Lock at the other end was, on such a wicket, as great a spinner as Laker and bowled superbly. What turned the scale was that Laker was bowling off-breaks whereas Lock relied on the left-armer's natural leg-break, and the Australians at that period were wholly inexperienced in playing off-breaks, especially on a wicket which, heavily marled and almost devoid of grass, might have been designed for an off-spinner.

Dennis Brookes (1915-2006) Test Cap # 327

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Full name Dennis Brookes
Born October 29, 1915, Kippax, Leeds, Yorkshire
Died March 9, 2006, Northampton (aged 90 years 131 days)
Major teams England, Northamptonshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Coach, Administrator

Profile
© The Cricketer International
Future generations, accustomed to players pocketing a gold watch and parchment scroll after three years' loyal service to the same county cricket company, may not know what to make of Dennis Brookes. The quietly spoken, unostentatious Yorkshireman joined Northamptonshire as a teenager in 1933 and remained closely associated with the club for the rest of his long life. A special dinner to mark the 70th anniversary of his first trial match packed out Northampton's new Indoor School in July 2002, the guests passing through the Abington Avenue gates that bear his name.

© The Cricketer 
Between 1934 - when Hedley Verity trapped him for a single "playing back when I should have been forward" on his Championship debut at Bradford - and 1959 Brookes scored 28,980 first-class runs and 67 centuries in 492 matches for Northamptonshire, reaching 1,000 runs in a season 17 times and 2,000 on six occasions, all county records. The consummate batting craftsman, he gained high marks for artistic impression as well as technical merit; his former opening partner Peter Arnold reckons Brookes "the most graceful player you could find anywhere" while Frank Tyson relished his old skipper's "silky drives and subtle deflections". After that initial setback against Verity he attained grandmaster status when it came to handling spin and always rated an innings of 102 out of 185 against Kent's Doug Wright on a turning Northampton pitch in 1952 as his best ever.

John David Benbow Robertson (1917-1996) Test Cap # 326

© The Cricketer International
Full name John David Benbow Robertson
Born February 22, 1917, Chiswick, Middlesex
Died October 12, 1996, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk (aged 79 years 233 days)
Major teams England, Middlesex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Other Coach

Profile
© The Cricketer International
Polished and stylish, wristy and effortless: these were the words used time and again to describe innings played by Jack Robertson during his seasons with Middlesex. And at Test level, no more elegant pair than Len Hutton and Robertson ever opened England's batting. Unfortunately for the Southerner, and for impartial spectators, Hutton and Robertson opened together in only three Tests - two in West Indies in 1947-48, and at Lord's in 1949- because Lancashire's Washbrook was invariably seen as slightly superior against fast bowling.This led to the absurdity of Robertson's omission after scoring 121 against New Zealand in that Lord's Test (143 with Hutton for the first wicket), because the injured Washbrook recovered in time for the next Test. So Robertson had the rare distinction of a century in his final home Test: to which he added two half-centuries at Madras in his last England appearance, on the 1951-52 tour of India.

Richard Howorth (1909-1980) Test Cap # 325

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Full name Richard Howorth
Born April 26, 1909, Bacup, Lancashire
Died April 2, 1980, Worcester (aged 70 years 342 days)
Major teams England, Europeans (India), Worcestershire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
Dick Howorth was a slow left-arm bowler, who kept an immaculate length and could spin and flight the ball, an attacking left-handed batsman, who usually appeared in the middle of the order but was prepared to open if wanted, and a good field close to the wicket, he did great service for Worcestershire from 1933 to 1951, scoring for them 10,538 runs at an average of 20.20 taking 1,274 wickets at 21.36 and holding 188 catches. Three times, in 1939, 1946 and 1947 he achieved the double in all matches, and he played five times for England. Born at Bacup, he appeared for Worcestershire in 1933, against the West Indians while qualifying and in the first innings was top scorer with 68. Qualified in 1934,

John Albert Young (1912-1993) Test Cap # 324

© The Cricketer International
Full name John Albert Young
Born October 14, 1912, Paddington, London
Died February 5, 1993, St John's Wood, London (aged 80 years 114 days)
Major teams England, Middlesex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
The former Middlesex and England slow left-arm bowler Jack Young died at his St John's Wood home, within sight and sound of Lord's, on Feb 5. He was 80.John Albert Young, a short man with a low delivery not unlike Norman Gifford's of more recent vintage, joined the Lord's groundstaff and played occasionally for Middlesex before the Second World War, with little success. By 1945, though, he had improved, and took 8 for 71 against the RAF and 6 for 33 against the Army while guesting for Glamorgan.Back at Lord's in 1946 he immediately became an integral part of the powerful Middlesex side which was to win the Championship in 1947 and share it in 1949. Displaying what Wisden called `wholehearted endeavour', Young took 122 wickets (16.68) in 1946, his first full season, and a return of 8 for 31 against Yorkshire (following 4 for 41 in the first innings) won him his county cap. He showed his liking for the northern county's batsmen again later that season with 8 for 33 for MCC against Yorkshire (83 all out) in the Scarborough Festival. A hat-trick came his way at Northampton, but this achievement was dwarfed by Bill Edrich's allround efforts: he followed up an innings of 222 not out with 7 for 69 in Northants' first innings.

Harold James Butle r(1913-1991) Test Cap # 323

© nottsccc.co.uk
Full name Harold James Butler
Born March 12, 1913, Clifton, Nottingham
Died July 17, 1991, Lenton, Nottinghamshire (aged 78 years 127 days)
Major teams England, Nottinghamshire, Services
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Harold Butler had very big shoes to fill when he was brought into the Nottinghamshire team in 1933. Harold Larwood was still recovering from the damage wrought on his body by the hard Australian wickets during the bodyline series, and Butler was asked to fill his place. Butler was no Larwood, but developed into a fine pace bowler in his own right. Not overly elegant in his run-up and approach, everything came together in his delivery stride, and he bowled genuinely quickly. Due of the presence of Larwood and Voce, it was not until 1939 that he established himself as a regular for Nottinghamshire, despite performances such as 8-15 against Surrey in 1937, but then the next six years were lost to war. England were desperately short of pace bowlers after the war, and Butler, although undoubtedly past his best and carrying more weight than he should have been, was given a chance against South Africa in 1947.

Clifford Gladwin (1916-1988) Test Cap # 322

© Derbyshireccc.com
Full name Clifford Gladwin
Born April 3,1916, Doe Lea, Derbyshire
Died April 9,1988, Chesterfield,
Derbyshire (aged 72 years 6 days)
Major teams England, Derbyshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
© Derbyshireccc.com
Cliff Gladwin, who died in Chesterfield on April 10, 1988, aged 72 played in one match for Derbyshire in 1939. After the war, in thirteen consecutive seasons until his retirement in 1958, he proved to be among the most consistent of bowlers, a medium-fast in-swinger, who with his friend, Leslie Jackson, made up the best opening attack possessed by any of the counties in the decade after 1947. Gladwin, whose father had appeared in a few games for Derbyshire, was determined not to allow the interruption of the war to interfere with his development. He joined the ranks of the Bradford League, whose policy was to attract the best players from all parts of the country, and by 1945 he had taken plenty of wickets in the League's main competition. An analysis of eight for 41 against Yorkshire in a two-day match at Chesterfield was further evidence of his progress, and 1946 found him better prepared than most for a full Championship season.

His return of 109 wickets for an average of 18.36 soon attracted the attention of the selectors, and his chance came in the Third Test of 1947 against South Africa at Old Trafford, where he had to contend with much obdurate and defensive batting. In the tourists' first innings he conceded a mere 58 runs in 50 overs, a considerable feat of stamina in a high wind which was strong enough to overturn one of the sightscreens. He was picked for the final Test at The Oval, a match played in scorching weather and in front of large crowds sitting round the ring in the lightest permissible summer attire. In these unfamiliar surroundings, the big man from the Peak District obliged with 51 not out in England's first innings, but in 32 overs he did not take a wicket. Doubts were cast about his ability to break through at the highest level. In the meantime,

Kenneth Cranston (1917-2007) Test Cap # 321

© Lancashire CCC
Full name Kenneth Cranston
Born October 20, 1917, Aigburth, Liverpool, Lancashire
Died January 8, 2007 (aged 89 years 80 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Cranston toss with West Indies capt. George,
 Headley of the Guyana Test in Jan 1948.
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Plucked from the relative obscurity of Lancashire club cricket to captain his county in 1947, Kenneth Cranston made an immediate impression at first-class level, averaging close to 40 with the bat and 23 with the ball. Tall and lithe, he was a natural games player. An aggressive right hand bat, with three first-class centuries, he usually opened the bowling at a brisk fast-medium. He was rewarded with a Test cap against South Africa in 1947 after only 13 first-class appearances - in his second match at Headingley he polished off South Africa's second innings with four wickets in six balls.

That winter he toured the West Indies under Gubby Allen as vice-captain. Allen was injured on board ship, and Cranston captained the side in the first Test, which was drawn. Injury-hit and by no means a full-strength touring party, England struggled on this tour, and Cranston dropped out of contention in 1948, playing just once against the all-conquering Australian tourists. At the end of the 1948 season Cranston resigned as captain of Lancashire, unable to balance the commitments of first-class cricket and his dental practice. Apart from a few appearances in festival matches, it was the end of a very promising first-class career.

Ken Cranston was matched only by CB Fry and Wilson of The Wizard for the breadth of his achievements in addition to his performances as a first-class cricketer. In a startlingly brief career he captained his county and his country at cricket and played 51 times for Lancashire at hockey. For 11 days, following the death of Mandy Mitchell-Innes, Cranston was England's oldest surviving Test cricketer.Selected to play cricket for Liverpool University, he completed an exam on the morning of the match, then hurried to the ground to find that Birmingham University had reduced his side to 82 for 6.

George Henry Pope (1911-1993) Test Cap # 320

© shared.knights.co.uk
Full name George Henry Pope
Born January 27, 1911, Tibshelf, Derbyshire
Died October 29, 1993, Spital, Chesterfield, Derbyshire (aged 82 years 275 days)
Major teams England, Derbyshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
George Henry Pope , who died at Chesterfield on October 29, 1993, aged 82, played 169 matches for Derbyshire and somehow came to seem the embodiment of the county's professionals: hard, rough-hewn, under-appreciated. As a bowler, he could move the ball sharply both ways and took 677 wickets at 19.92; as a batsman he was good enough to have a career average of 28.05 and tough enough to take Larwood and Voce on the chest. He missed most of Derbyshire's Championship season in 1936 through injury, but improved steadily as both batsman and bowler before the war and came close to a Test place (he was in the party for Trent Bridge in 1938 and was chosen for the abortive tour of India in 1939-40).

John William Martin (1917-1987) Test Cap # 319

© kentcricket.co.uk
Full name John William Martin
Born February 16, 1917, Catford, London
Died January 4, 1987, Woolwich, London (aged 69 years 322 days)
Major teams England, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast

Profile
Jack Martin was a dapper, right-arm fast bowler and a capable lower-order batsman who made three appearances for Kent before the war. His outings were limited to the time he could get off from his work as a manager for Legal & General Assurance. In 1947 a shortage of genuine quick bowlers led to his call-up for the first Test against South Africa - he had just taken nine wickets in his first Championship appearance of the summer. Opening the attack with Alec Bedser, he took 1 for 111 as South Africa amassed 533. England were skittled out for 208 and, following on, were facing possible defeat when he added 51 for the 10th wicket with Eric Hollies.

Horace Edgar Dollery (1914-1987) Test Cap # 318

© The Cricketer International
Full name Horace Edgar Dollery
Born October 14, 1914, Reading West, Berkshire
Died January 20, 1987, Edgbaston, Birmingham, Warwickshire (aged 72 years 98 days)
Major teams England, Warwickshire, Wellington
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
Tom with his wife & child on 17 Nov 1950.
© mp.natlib.govt.nz

Horace Edgar Tom Dollery, died in hospital in Birmingham on January 20, 1987, aged 72. Few players have done more for Warwickshire cricket. For twenty years he was one of the mainstays of their batting, usually top or second in the averages: he never had a bad season and seldom a bad patch. He was a tireless fieldsman and in the latter part of his career became the county's first official professional captain. When, under him, Warwickshire won the Championship for the first time in 40 years, Wisden described him as the most skilful of all the county captains.

He was born at Reading next door to the Berkshire county ground, where the groundsman at the time was the father of Arthur Croom, of Warwickshire. Dollery was constantly on the ground, taking every opportunity to practise, and quite naturally, as he began to show promise, he conceived the ambition of playing for Warwickshire himself. He was five years in the XI at Reading School and captain in 1930 and 1931. In 1930 he made 101 out of 140 against MCC, but he put this completely in the shade next year when he carried his bat right through the innings for 104 not out in a total of 115, the next highest score being 3. Even admitting that the bowling was not strong, this is an almost incredible performance. To be able to keep the bowling over such a long period comes normally from years of experience, and many players never acquire the art. Moreover, the difficulty is multiplied when all the batsmen are schoolboys, who are as a race notoriously bad runners between the wickets.

Cecil Cook (1921-1996) Test Cap # 317

© shop.sportsworldcards.com
Full name Cecil Cook
Born August 23, 1921, Tetbury, Gloucestershire
Died September 5, 1996, Tetbury, Gloucestershire (aged 75 years 13 days)
Major teams England, Gloucestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Umpire

Profile
It was a familiar loudspeaker announcement at the county ground in Bristol during the late'40s. With his plummy voice and wavering degrees of optimism, Colonel Henson, the Gloucestershire secretary, would ask over a crackling line: `Is anyone going Tetbury way? Cook would be grateful for a lift.'Grateful was indeed an apposite word. The slow left-arm bowler would probably have sent down 40 overs during the day. He had no car and couldn't rely on any bus heading in the direction of the Cotswold contours at that time of night. Sam Cook must have been county cricket's only regular hitch-hiker. `I wasn't always lucky - if I was still in the field at half past six, then I reckoned I'd had it,' he used to say.But friends didn't often let him down. And few players had more of those.

Thomas Peter Bromley Smith (1908-1967) Test Cap # 316

© The Cricketer International
Full name Thomas Peter Bromley Smith
Born October 30, 1908, Ipswich, Suffolk
Died August 4, 1967, Hyères, France (aged 58 years 278 days)
Major teams England, Essex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
Thomas Peter Bromley Smith, who died in France as a result of a brain haemorrhage following a fall while on holiday on August 4, aged 58, played with distinction as a professional all-rounder for Essex from 1929 to 1951. In that time he made 10,170 runs, average 17.98, and took 1,697 wickets--more than any other Essex bowler--for 26.63 runs each. A capital leg-break and googly exponent, he never lost his length even when at times receiving heavy punishment, as when H. T. Bartlett hit him for 28 in an over in the Gentlemen v. Players match at Lord's in 1938.

Thomas Godfrey Evans (1920-1999) Test Cap # 315

© Getty image
Full name Thomas Godfrey Evans
Born August 18, 1920, Finchley, Middlesex
Died May 3, 1999, Northampton (aged 78 years 258 days)
Major teams England, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

profile
© The Cricketer International
Thomas Godfrey Evans CBE  was an English cricketer who played for Kent and England.Described by Wisden as 'arguably the best wicket-keeper the game has ever seen', Evans collected 219 dismissals in 91 Test match appearances between 1946 and 1959 and a total of 1066 in all first-class matches. En route he was the first wicket keeper to reach 200 Test dismissals and the first Englishman to reach both 1000 runs and 100 dismissals and 2000 runs and 200 dismissals in Test cricket. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1951.Evans made his Test debut in 1946 against India when he was chosen for the third Test at The Oval, replacing Paul Gibb. In a largely rain affected contest he didn't bat or take any dismissals.Evans was selected as a member of Wally Hammond's side to tour Australia in 1946/47.After Gibb had played the first Test, Evans got his chance in the second at Melbourne. Australia won the match by an innings having scored 659/8 declared in their first innings, in 173 overs of English bowling Evans failed to concede a single bye, with Wisden commenting he 'kept wicket magnificently'.Evans didn't concede a bye in Australia's first innings of 365 at Adelaide in the third Test either, this took the tally past 1,000 runs before he conceded his first bye in Ashes Tests.In the Fourth Test at Adelaide, Evans shared in a vital ninth wicket partnership with Denis Compton,

England were in danger of losing the Test at 255/8 but Evans played a fine defensive innings, scoring 10 not out in 133 minutes, this enabled Compton to complete his second century of the match and Hammond the chance to declare. Evans took 97 minutes before scoring his first run, a Test record which stood until 1999 when beaten by Geoff Allott.A short tour of New Zealand followed the Ashes series, rain heavily affected the only Test match but in the MCC's tour match against Otago Evans completed his maiden first-class century. His innings of 101 came from 170 runs which were scored while he was at the wicket with Jack Ikin.In the 1947 home series with South Africa, Evans played in all five Tests scoring 209 runs at 41.80 and taking 14 dismissals. In the first Test at Trent Bridge he scored his maiden Test fifty with an innings of 74 that contained 14 fours.In the fifth Test at The Oval, Evans had scores of 45 and 39 not out, the second innings came in 29 minutes as England looked to score quick runs before a declaration.

Richard Pollard (1912-1985) Test Cap # 314

  
Full name Richard Pollard
Born June 19, 1912, Westhoughton, Lancashire
Died December 16, 1985, Westhoughton, Lancashire (aged 73 years 180 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Richard Pollard was an English cricketer born in Westhoughton, Lancashire, who played in four Tests between 1946 and 1948. A fast-medium right-arm bowler and a lower-order right-handed batsman who made useful runs on occasion, he played for Lancashire between 1933 and 1950, taking 1,122 wickets in 298 first-class matches; he is 10th highest wicket-taker for Lancashire A big and heavy man, he was known as a hard worker and, according to his obituary in Wisden in 1986, "his reputation as a great trier commended him to the Lancashire public".Season after season, Wisden referred to Pollard's accuracy and reliability, and his ability to bowl long spells without apparently tiring.

Pollard made his first-class debut for Lancashire in August 1933 against Nottinghamshire; while batting at number 11 he scored 16 not out, and took the wicket of Nottinghamshire captain Arthur Carr.In Lancashire's County Championship-winning side of 1934, he was seen as a medium-paced reserve to the front-line bowlers, but injuries, particularly to Frank Sibbles, meant that he played 11 matches in the last two months of the season, and took 38 wickets in them at an average of 19.31.In the second innings of a match against Gloucestershire, Pollard took 6 wickets for 21 runs. Wisden reported that "He kept a fine length and made the ball turn quickly with great effect".[5] It was his best bowling at the time, beating his previous best of 2/31.In Championship games, he made only 14 runs in total, but in the end-of-season Champion County v The Rest match at The Oval, he scored 27 not out in the first innings and 28 in the second.The Rest were made of players from counties other than the current champions.

Injuries to Sibbles and to Frank Booth gave Pollard an opportunity to play 23 matches in 1935, and was awarded his county cap.Wisden noted how well he compensated for the loss of the senior bowlers: "With length, fair pace and swerve, Pollard proved so successful that, no doubt, he would have taken a hundred wickets for the County had not tonsilitis caused his retirement from the Somerset match."In fact, by playing for The Rest against the new County Champions, Yorkshire and taking three wickets in the game, he reached exactly 100 wickets for the season.Earlier in the season, in the match against Kent at Dover, he had improved his best innings figures to 7/87 and taken 10 wickets in a match for the first time, finishing with 11/176.wickets for seven runs in five overs. In the innings as a whole, which ended with India all out for 170, he finished with 5/24 off 27 overs, 16 of which were maidens.In the second innings he took two further wickets for 63 runs.

The 1948 tour of England by the Australian team captained by Donald Bradman, and subsequently labelled The Invincibles, provided convincing evidence of the weakness in international terms of English cricket at the time. Two heavy defeats in the first two Test matches led to a recall for Pollard, then 36 years old, for the third match, which was played at Old Trafford. The move was a success, for England were well on top until rain intervened and the match ended in a draw. Pollard's most significant contribution as a batsman in Tests was a "full-blooded pull" from the off spin of Ian Johnson, which caught the Australian opening batsman Sid Barnes, who was fielding at short leg on the edge of the pitch, under the ribs. Barnes was carried off on a stretcher, batted low in the Australian order and then had to retire hurt. He spent 10 days in hospital after the match and missed the next Test.The Australians were made uncomfortable by the accuracy of Alec Bedser and Pollard. Pollard's three wickets included Bradman, leg before wicket for just seven runs.The draw at Old Trafford encouraged the selectors to persevere with the same fast-medium combination in the fourth Test, at Leeds, but in a high scoring match on a good pitch the lack of spin bowling was decisive. Pollard's contribution was to take, in the space of three balls in the first innings, the wickets of Hassett and Bradman, the latter bowled for 33. But that was the extent of his success, and Australia made 404 for three wickets to win the match, at the time the highest total to win a Test match.For the final match of the series at The Oval, on what was seen as very definitely a pitch that was more suited to spin than quick bowling, Pollard was the bowler dropped to make way for an extra spin bowler.He did not play Test cricket again, but there was a short codicil 54 years later. In 2002, the ball used by Pollard to bowl Bradman for 33 in the fourth Test in 1948 was sold for £1,700 at auction.

Test debut England v India at Manchester, Jul 20-23, 1946
Last Test England v Australia at Leeds, Jul 22-27, 1948
First-class span 1933 - 1952

Thomas Francis Smailes (1910-1970) Test Cap # 313

Full name Thomas Francis Smailes
Born March 27, 1910, Ripley, Yorkshire
Died December 1, 1970, Starbeck, Harrogate, Yorkshire (aged 60 years 249 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

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Thomas Francis Smailes, who died in a Harrogate hospital on December 1, aged 60, did admirable work for Yorkshire as a professional right-arm medium pace bowler and an enterprising left-handed batsman from 1932 to 1948. He had been in poor health for several years. Yorkshire won the County Championship seven times during Frank Smailes's first-class career, in which he took 802 wickets for them for 20.72 runs each and hit 5,683 runs, average 19.19. In each of four seasons he took over 100 wickets, achieving the cricketers' double in 1938, when he hit the highest of his three centuries--116 against Surrey at Sheffield. That summer, too,

John Thomas Ikin (1918-1984) Test Cap # 312

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Full name John Thomas Ikin
Born March 7, 1918, Bignall End, Staffordshire
Died September 15, 1984, Bignall End, Staffordshire (aged 66 years 192 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly
Other Coach

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Jack Ikin played in eighteen Test for England between 1946 and 1955, scoring 606 runs with an average of 20.89 and taking three wickets at 118 runs each. These figures naturally suggest the question, why was he picked so often and so long?The answer is that, though at the time England had such bats as Hutton, Washbrook, Compton and Edrich and, at the end of the period, May and Cowdrey, there was not the depth of batting there had been before the war: two or three reliable players ere wanted to support the stars and crises were frequent. One gets the impression that the selectors, at a loss to fill the gap, constantly fell back on Ikin.

Alec Victor Bedser (1918-2010) Test Cap # 311

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Full name Alec Victor Bedser
Born July 4, 1918, Reading, Berkshire
Died April 4, 2010, London (aged 91 years 274 days)
Major teams England, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast

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Bedser is knighted at Buckingham Palace.
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Bedser, Sir Alec Victor, CBE, died on April 4, 2010, aged 91. In his playing days, Alec Bedser was the epitome of the English seam bowler, the role that represents the nation's often underestimated cricketing virtues more than anything else. In the half-century of retirement that followed - almost all of it devoted to the game he loved - he became something more: the epitome of the spirit of English cricket itself, its values, its history and its perpetual sense of decay.

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Hitler's war meant that Bedser did not make his Test debut until he was nearly 28. But he made up for lost time, taking 11 wickets in each of England's first two Tests after the war. For the next decade, he was the engine-room of the team: unflagging in the defeats that came all too often in the 1940s, before emerging triumphant at Melbourne in 1950-51 when England beat Australia for the first time in 15 post-war Tests. And he remained a crucial figure in the Surrey team throughout their triumphant sequence of seven Championships in the 1950s. Later, he spent an unprecedented 24 seasons as an England selector, 13 of them as chairman.His celebrity went far beyond cricket, because he was not just Alec but one of a pair. His identical twin Eric, not quite an England player himself, was a Surrey stalwart and, by default, a national figure too. In the 1950s, just about everyone in Britain could identify "Alec and Eric" without benefit of their surnames; everyone in cricket had a story about the mystical connections and coincidences that seemed to attend them. Both were bachelors, though the word does their situation no justice: they were virtually inseparable until Eric died in 2006, a relationship that would be hard for even the most devoted spouse to imagine. Modern doctors now urge mothers to let monozygotic twins (the preferred term) develop their own separate personalities. Alec and Eric - peas in a pod from birth to old age - knew no other way and wanted nothing else: they had each other. (For more on this aspect of Alec's life, see Eric's obituary in Wisden 2007, page 1541). They also had cricket.

Norman Oldfield (1911-1996) Test Cap # 310

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Full name Norman Oldfield
Born May 5, 1911, Dukinfield, Cheshire
Died April 19, 1996, Cleveleys, Blackpool, Lancashire (aged 84 years 350 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire, Northamptonshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Other Umpire, Coach

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Called up for his Test debut in August 1939, Norman Oldfield scored an attractive 80 against West Indies at The Oval, and 19 in the second innings. He never represented his country again. The Second World War started a few days later, and when it ended Oldfield, then 35, could not agree terms with his county, Lancashire, and went off to play league cricket. Eighty men have played one Test, and one only, for England. None scored as many runs as did Oldfield.

William Henry Copson (1908-1971) Test Cap # 309

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Full name William Henry Copson
Born April 27, 1908, Stonebroom, Derbyshire
Died September 13, 1971, Clay Cross, Derbyshire (aged 63 years 139 days)
Major teams England, Derbyshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Other Umpire

Profile
Red-headed seamer Bill Copson was a coal-miner before he turned his hand to cricket. As a boy he showed no interest in the game, but during the General Strike of 1926 he was persuaded to play for his local side to fill in time while the pits were shut. He was an immediate success, with his nagging line and length, and in 1931 he was given a trial with Derbyshire, and by 1932 he was a virtual regular in the side. With the first ball he bowled in first-class cricket, he dismissed Andrew Sandham, and from then on he made steady progress, thanks to his pace and late swing.

Reginald Thomas David Perks (1911-1977) Test Cap # 308

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Full name Reginald Thomas David Perks
Born October 4, 1911, Hereford
Died November 22, 1977, Worcester (aged 66 years 49 days)
Major teams England, Worcestershire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

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Reginald Thomas David Perks, who died on November 22, aged 66, was by many good judges considered an under-estimated bowler. In 1939 he had played twice for England, in the notorious timeless Test at Durban and against the West Indies at The Oval, and had performed respectably without meeting with spectacular success. He was then twenty-eight. When cricket was resumed he was thirty-five and had missed the years when a bowler of his type would naturally be in his prime. Now he was perhaps just past it and had moreover Bedser to compete with.

A tall man who made full use of his height, he bowled fast-medium right-hand, swinging the ball both ways, and was very steady, a great trier, endlessly cheerful and quite tireless. A left-handed bat, he started as a poor player but made himself into a useful tail-end hitter. Born at Hereford, he first appeared for Worcestershire in 1930 and his first victim was Jack Hobbs. By 1931 he had made a sufficient reputation to be picked for the Players at Lord's. He continued to play for the county until 1955 and, when he retired, had taken more wickets for them than any other bowler, 2,143 at an average of 23.73. In all first-class cricket his tally was 2,233 and in sixteen consecutive seasons he had taken over 100 wickets.

The respect in which he was held was shown when in his last season he was appointed the first professional captain of Worcestershire. Later he was a valuable and outspoken member of the Committee. He had no warmer admirer than his old county captain, Lord Cobham, who only a couple of months before his own unexpected death, hearing of Perks's illness, drove at once twenty-five miles through the snow to visit him.

Perks twice performed the hat-trick--against Kent at Stourbridge in 1931, and against Warwickshire at Edgbaston in 1933 and twice he took nine wickets in an innings--against Glamorgan at Stourbridge, 1939 and against Gloucestershire at Cheltenham, 1946.

Test debutSouth Africa v England at Durban, Mar 3-14, 1939
Last Test England v West Indies at The Oval, Aug 19-22, 1939
First-class span 1930-1955

Norman Walter Yardley (1915-1989) Test Cap # 307

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Full name Norman Walter Yardley
Born March 19, 1915, Gawber, Barnsley, Yorkshire
Died October 3, 1989, Lodge Moor, Sheffield, Yorkshire (aged 74 years 198 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Administrator, Commentator, Author

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 F.Trueman and B.Appleyard receive county caps from N Yardley.
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England's captain in succession to Wally Hammond, Norman Yardley, who died on Oct 4 after suffering a stroke, was the kindliest of men, gentle of demeanour, and one of the sadder casualties of Yorkshire's second ` Boycott revolt' in the mid-1980s, when he resigned as president in the wake of the no-confidence vote.Yardley's distinguished sporting life displayed many facets in his earlier days. At Cambridge he won Blues at cricket, squash, rugby fives and hockey, and was North of England squash champion six times. Having made a name as a schoolboy cricketer as St Peter's, York, he went on to play in the Varsity matches of 1935 to 1938, scoring 90 in the second match and 101 in the third. His great friend Paul Gibb made 122 in the fourth, when Yardley was skipper.

Leonard Litton Wilkinson (1916-2002) Test Cap # 306

Full name Leonard Litton Wilkinson
Born November 5, 1916, Northwich, Cheshire
Died September 3, 2002, Barrow-in-Furness, Lancashire (aged 85 years 302 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

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Wilkinson, Leonard Litton, died in Barrow-in-Furness on September 3, 2002, aged 85. For one August he sparkled brilliantly, then just as suddenly his star waned. "The only thing I can think of," Len Wilkinson told the cricket writer Brian Bearshaw, "is that I tried to be too perfect, particularly with the googly. I had an England cap and as an England player I had to be good." He hadn't taken up leg-spin bowling until he was 15, yet a month after turning 22 he was playing Test cricket in South Africa. The selectors could hardly ignore him. In 1938, his first full season with Lancashire, he had taken 151 wickets at 23.28 in 36 games, bowling thoughtfully, delivering the ball from a full height, often getting sharp turn and rarely dropping short.

Paul Antony Gibb (1913-1977) Test Cap # 305

  
Full name Paul Antony Gibb
Born July 11, 1913, Acomb, York
Died December 7, 1977, Guildford, Surrey (aged 64 years 149 days)
Major teams England, Scotland, Cambridge University, Essex, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Other Umpire

Profile
Paul Anthony Gibb, who died suddenly at Guildford on December 7 at the age of 64, was a cricketer who should be judged by the figures he achieved. It would have needed a shrewd critic to discern, when watching him play a long innings, that he was more than a determined and solid University and County batsman. Never did one catch a glimpse of that spark of genius which normally marks the Test player. The figures tell a very different story. In his first innings for Yorkshire he made 157 not out. For his four University matches he averaged 54, making a century in his last year and in the previous year being stupidly run out for 87. His average for his eight Tests was 44.69. In his first, against South Africa, he scored 93 and 106; in the final Test of that series 120. In the first Test after the War, against India, he made 60 and helped Hardstaff to add 182 badly needed runs for the fifth wicket. In his early days a tendency to overdo the hook was often fatal, but once he had conquered this it was indeed a problem to get him out. He was quite happy to rely on his immensely strong back play and to let the runs come at their own rate: his patience seemed inexhaustible. Two Gibbs on a side could have been difficult and three intolerable: one often invaluable.

With his wicket-keeping it was different: not even his best friends would have claimed that he was anywhere near the best of his day. Yet after playing purely as a batsman for Cambridge in his first year while S. C. Griffith, a far better performer, kept and keeping himself in his second year when Griffith was injured, in his third year he was given the preference completely and Griffith did not play at all. This aroused considerable criticism, but not as much as when in the next season, Ames being injured, Gibb was selected for the third and fourth Tests over the heads of a number of better keepers including Arthur Wood, who was almost always preferred to him by Yorkshire. In fact the third Test was completely washed out by rain and by the fourth Gibb was injured and so had to wait for the South African tour that winter before actually taking the field for England.On that tour he was second-string to Ames, but in 1946 he kept in the first two Tests against India and the following winter in the First Test in Australia, before on each occasion making way for Evans.

To summarise his career, he was in the XI at St Edward's, Oxford, played for Cambridge from 1935 to 1938 and for Yorkshire from 1935 to 1946. After returning that winter from Australia, he was seen no more in first-class cricket until 1951 when he appeared for Essex as a professional, the first cricket blue ever to turn professional. Though now no longer a candidate for Tests, playing for Essex for six seasons he made a thousand runs in four of them, besides proving a serviceable keeper. He dropped out of the Essex side in 1956 and from 1957 to 1966 was a first-class umpire. At the time of his death he had for some years been a bus-driver in Guildford.

Test debut South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Dec 24-28, 1938
Last Test Australia v England at Brisbane, Nov 29-Dec 4, 1946
First-class span 1934 - 1956

Arthur Wood (1898-1973) Test Cap # 304

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Full name Arthur Wood
Born August 25, 1898, Fagley, Bradford, Yorkshire
Died April 1, 1973, Middleton, Ilkley, Yorkshire (aged 74 years 219 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

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Bill Bowes, a former fellow Yorkshire and England player and now cricket correspondent to the Yorkshire Evening Post, writes: Arthur Wood, born August 25, 1898, died April 2, 1973, was the regular Yorkshire wicketkeeper from the time Arthur Dolphin retired at the end of the 1927 season until war was declared in 1939. His benefit in the season realised £2563. For Yorkshire he scored 8461 runs average 21-3 and he claimed 848 victims, 603 caught and 245 stumped. Ten of the catches and one stumping came in Test cricket.Remarkably free from injury, he kept wicket in 222 consecutive county games until, at Brighton in 1935, captain Brian Sellers heard him boast of his record (since beaten by Jimmy Binks) and said, `If that's the case, Arthur, you deserve a rest.' He gave the job to Paul Gibb. It was the only thing that marred Arthur's most successful season, when he scored 1000 runs and scored his only century, against Worcestershire at Sheffield.

Wilfred Frederick Frank Price (1902-1969) Test Cap # 303

  
Full name Wilfred Frederick Frank Price
Born April 25, 1902, Westminster, London
Died January 13, 1969, Hendon, Middlesex (aged 66 years 263 days)
Major teams England, Middlesex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Other Umpire

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Fred Price, the former Middlesex and England wicket-keeper and Test match umpire, died in hospital on January 12, aged 66. A skilled performer behind the stumps, Fred Price held 648 catches and brought off 316 stumpings during a first-class career extending from 1926 to 1947. In 1937 he set up a record, since equalled but not surpassed, when he took seven catches in the Yorkshire first innings at Lord's.

Douglas Vivian Parson Wright (1914-1998) Test Cap # 302

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Full name Douglas Vivian Parson Wright
Born August 21, 1914, Sidcup, Kent
Died November 13, 1998, Canterbury, Kent (aged 84 years 84 days)
Major teams England, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Legbreak googly
Other Coach

Profile
© The Cricketer International
Doug Wright was the finest English leg-spinner, perhaps the most dangerous of all English bowlers, in the years just before and after the war. A Kentishman, from Sidcup, he made his debut for the county in 1932 aged 17, but did not become a regular for another four years until Tich Freeman's final season. By 1938, he was in the Test team against Australia, and at Leeds came close to bowling them to a remarkable victory, dismissing Bradman, McCabe and Hassett as Australia sought a mere 105 for victory. For most of his 34 Tests, he was bowling in difficult circumstances with little support. Often he was the spin attack, as in Australia in 1946-47 when he and Bedser bowled almost 500 eight-ball overs between them. Against South Africa at Lord's in 1947, he took ten for 175, but there were many more days of abject frustration.

Wright began as a quick bowler who liked to turn his wrist and slip in the odd spinner; later he reversed the proportions. But his quicker ball remained so fast that Godfrey Evans had to signal the slips to move deeper, and even his stock ball had a rare fizz to it. Everyone agreed - and Bradman and Hammond were among his chief admirers - that on his day Wright was unplayable. But he gave the batsmen a chance to score too. With his technique, wrote David Frith, running in from over 15 yards, hopping and skipping as he went, and whipping over a wristy and finger-spun ball that would dip, bounce and deviate crazily off the pitch, to expect long-term accuracy was to display a dismal ignorance of physics. He never ever bowled a ball defensively, said Lord Cowdrey, his team-mate at Kent. Every ball was bowled to take a wicket.He took seven hat-tricks, more than anyone else in history, and 100 wickets in a season ten times.

In 1954, Doug Wright became Kent's first professional captain, though his natural diffidence did not obviously lend itself to leadership and, as so often in his career, he had a weak team around him: Kent slid nearer the bottom each season. At the end of each day, he would take his shoes and socks off and apologise to his poor old feet. "Sorry, boys," he would say, "but you're going to be needed again tomorrow." He retired aged 43, and in 1959 succeeded George Geary as coach at Charterhouse. Everyone liked Doug Wright. Cowdrey remembers him being asked about the best over he ever bowled. "Bowling to the Don at Lord's, he said. Every ball came out of my hand the way I wanted and pitched where I wanted. I beat him twice. It went for 16."

Test debut England v Australia at Nottingham, Jun 10-14, 1938
Last Test New Zealand v England at Wellington, Mar 24-28, 1951
First-class span 1932-1957

Reginald Albert Sinfield (1900-1988) Test Cap # 301

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Full name Reginald Albert Sinfield
Born December 24, 1900, Benington, Stevenage, Hertfordshire
Died March 17, 1988, Ham Green, Bristol (aged 87 years 84 days)
Major teams England, Gloucestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow
Other Coach

Profile
This is a Hand Signed
Sinfield, Reginald Albert, was born on December 24, 1900, and died on March 17,1988. At the time of his death he was England's oldest surviving Test cricketer, a distinction which then fell to R. E. S. Wyatt. His single appearance for England at Trent Bridge in the First Test of 1938 was the climax to a career which extended from 1921 to 1939 and was a fitting reward for years of loyal service to Gloucestershire. Sinfield was the epitome of the old type of English professional cricketer. In him were combined all those qualities which contributed so much to the development of the game at a time when its leadership was very much under the control of the amateur.