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Saturday, January 31

Arthur Mitchell (1902-1976) Test Cap # 271

Full name Arthur Mitchell
Born September 13, 1902, Baildon Green, Yorkshire
Died December 25, 1976, Bradford, Yorkshire (aged 74 years 103 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
Arthur Mitchell, who died in hospital in Bradford on Christmas Day, aged 74, was a typical Yorkshire cricketer of one of the county's great periods, unpretentious, unspectacular, but immensely effective and always prepared to adapt himself to the needs of the side--a wonderful man at a crisis. No match was ever lost until the opposition had got him out. Spectators probably remember him primarily as a dour, on-side player, but if runs were wanted quickly he could get them and would start producing off-side strokes which they never dreamed he possessed: he was in fact an especially good cutter. On his one appearance for the Players at Lord's in 1934 he took two hours and five minutes over his first fifty and an hour later was out for 120.

Summoned from his garden at the last minute to take the place of Leyland, stricken by lumbago, in the Test against South Africa at Leeds in 1935, he took over three hours to score a valuable 58 in the first innings, but in the second, sent in first with D. Smith, made 72 in under two hours and helped in an opening stand of 128. In the final Test of the same series, again going in first, he made 40 in three hours. His third and last appearance in a Test in this country was against India at Lord's in 1936. As member of the MCC side in India, he had played in three Tests there in 1933-34.

Charles Stowell Marriott (1895-1966) Test Cap # 270

© The Cricketer International
Full name Charles Stowell Marriott
Born September 14, 1895, Heaton Moor, Lancashire
Died October 13, 1966, Dollis Hill, Middlesex (aged 71 years 29 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Kent, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
© The Cricketer International
Marriott, Charles Stowell, who died on October 13, aged 71, was one of the best legbreak and googly bowlers of his era. He learned his cricket in Ireland, where he was educated at St. Columba's, and gained a Blue at Cambridge in 1920 and 1921, meeting with remarkable success in the University matches. In 1920, when rain prevented play on the first two days, he took seven wickets for 69 runs and in the following season he played a leading part in a triumph for the Light Blues in an innings with 24 runs to spare by dismissing seven Oxford batsmen in the match for 111 runs.In all first-class cricket he took 724 wickets at an average cost of 20.04 runs and his bowling skill so far exceeded his ability as a batsman that his victims exceeded his aggregate of runs by 169. Cunning flighting, allied to the ability to turn the ball sharply, made him a menace to batsmen even on good pitches and when the turf gave him help, he could be well-nigh unplayable.

His action was high with a free, loose arm which he swung behind his back before delivery in a manner reminiscent of Colin Blythe. From 1919 to 1921 he appeared for Lancashire and when beginning a long association with Dulwich College as master-in-charge of cricket, he threw in his lot with Kent, whom he assisted during the school holidays from 1924 to 1937.

In his first season with the Southern county he distinguished himself by taking 5 for 31 and 6for 48 in the game with Lancashire at Dover and against Hampshire at Canterbury he returned figures of 5 for 66 and 5for 44, and he achieved many other notable performances in later years.He met with great success on the occasion of his one appearance in a Test match for England. That was at The Oval in 1933, when he so bewildered the batsmen that he took 5 for 37 runs in the first innings and, with second innings figures of 6 for 59, hurried the West Indies to defeat by an innings and 17 runs--a feat described by Wisden of the time as one of the best accomplished by a bowler when playing for England for the first time.

Father Marriott, as he was popularly known, engaged in two tours abroad. In 1924-25 he was a member of Lord--then the Hon. Lionel--Tennyson's side in South Africa and in 1933-34 he went with Douglas Jardine's MCC team to India, where, against Madras, he did the hat-trick for the only time in his first-class career. During the Second World War he served as an anti-aircraft gunner in the Home Guard.

Only Test England v West Indies at The Oval, Aug 12-15, 1933
First-class span 1919-1938

Charles John Barnett (1910-1993) Test Cap # 269

© PA Image
Full name Charles John Barnett
Born July 3, 1910, Fairview, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
Died May 28, 1993, Stroud, Gloucestershire (aged 82 years 329 days)
Major teams England, Gloucestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Charles John Barnett, who died in a nursing home at Stroud on May 28, 1993 aged 82, was one of the very best batsmen of the 1930s, an era of great batsmanship. He was a punishing right-hander who opened, for Gloucestershire once he became established and played in 20 Tests for England before and after the war. He came from a well-known Gloucestershire cricketing family - his father (C. S.) and two uncles all played for the county, as amateurs - and after going to Wycliffe College he began as an amateur (against Cambridge in 1927, when he was 16). Although he turned professional in 1929, Barnett retained a certain amateur hauteur in his cricket and his life; the supporters knew him as Charlie, but he always regarded himself as Charles. In the dressing-room he became known as The Guv'nor.In the early days Barnett made a lot of runs in the middle order, often at great speed. But for several years there was more talk of his promise than his achievements.

James Langridge (1906-1966) Test Cap # 268

Full name James Langridge
Born July 10, 1906, Chailey, Sussex
Died September 10, 1966, Withdean, Brighton, Sussex (aged 60 years 62 days)
Major teams England, Auckland, Sussex
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Coach

Profile
James Langridge, of Sussex and England fame, died at his home at Brighton on September 10, aged 60. An all-rounder in the truest sense of the word he could compare for both his left-hand batting and his slow left-arm bowling with the best in either field.He played for Sussex from 1924 until 1953, winning an England place on eight occasions. In his career he scored 31,716 runs, average 35.20, and took 1,530 wickets at 22.56 runs each, achieving the double feat of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets six times. He hit over 1,000 runs in twenty seasons, a total exceeded by only nine batsmen, and compiled forty-two centuries.James Langridge--his Christian name was always employed to distinguish him from his brother, John, who opened the batting for Sussex for many years--was born at Newick on July 10, 1906. His early cricket was played first at the local school and then for the local club, where he displayed such potential that in 1923 he went to the Sussex Nursery on the county ground. The coach, A. Millward, rapidly realised that he had in his charge a batsman of considerable ability, though at the time his bowling skill had yet to manifest itself. Langridge appeared three times for the county in 1924, but could not gain a regular place until 1927. In that season he missed by eight scoring 1,000 runs and fell four short of a maiden hundred against Middlesex at Brighton. Next season he managed both targets comfortably.

Meanwhile his bowling made swift advances. His 35 wickets in 1928 proved expensive, but in the following year he took 81 wickets for less than 21 runs apiece. At the beginning of the 1930's his batting aggregate fell away, but his bowling proved immensely useful to Sussex, and in recognition of his promise as much as his achievements, Wisden chose him as one of the Five Cricketers of 1931. He amply justified the choice with a remarkable spell of bowling the following summer at Cheltenham, where he took seven Gloucestershire wickets for eight runs.

Cyril Frederick Walters (1905-1992) Test Cap # 267

© englandcricketplayers.blogspot.com
Full name Cyril Frederick Walters
Born August 28, 1905, Bedlinog, Glamorgan, Wales
Died December 23, 1992, Neath, Glamorgan, Wales (aged 87 years 117 days)
Major teams England, Glamorgan, Wales, Worcestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Cyril Walters, who died in Neath on Dec 23, at the age of 87, was a model of elegance at the crease, wrists well oiled, forearms brisk as a fencer's, feet nimble. In the 1930s there was no finer sight among batsmen; and his home ground was the aptly beautiful greensward of Worcester.He was Welsh-born, in Bedlinog, on Aug 28, 1905, and attracted early attention as a schoolboy at cricket around Neath and as a Swansea rugby player. His first-class debut for Glamorgan came in 1923, when he was only 17, but progress was slow. By 1928 he was averaging no more than 17, with two hundreds to his credit, and the announcement of his early retirement for `business reasons' was read with sadness.Immediately, however, he reappeared at Worcester as club secretary and amateur batsman, adopting a more natural style, and aspiring to the captaincy in 1931. That winter he toured Jamaica with Tennyson's side, and by 1933 he was ready for Test cricket.

It was a fruitful summer for Walters, and turned out to be the best of all for him, with nine centuries among his 2404 runs at 50.08, his career-highest score of 226 against Kent at Gravesend, and selection as opener in all three Tests against West Indies. His 51 at Lord's helped set England up for an eventual innings victory; 46 at Old Trafford was followed by 2 at The Oval. Those golden months earned him selection as one of Wisden's Cricketers of the Year.At the end of the season he went with Jardine's side to India, enchanting the crowds with his graceful strokeplay and finishing second to his captain in the overall averages. At Bombay's Gymkhana Ground he scored 78 and 14 not out as England won the opening Test; at Eden Gardens, Calcutta, again opening with Yorkshire's Arthur Mitchell, he made 29 and 2 not out in a drawn match; and in the final Test, at Madras,

Thomas Bignall Mitchell (1902-1996) Test Cap # 266

© The Cricketer International
Full name Thomas Bignall Mitchell
Born September 4, 1902, Creswell, Derbyshire
Died January 27, 1996, Hickleton, Doncaster, Yorkshire (aged 93 years 145 days)
Major teams England, Derbyshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
Tommy Mitchell, who died on January 27 at the age of 93, played for Derbyshire from 1928 to 1939, helping them to win the County Championship in 1936, and for England five times.Mitchell was a leg-spin bowler of exceptional ability and he played 10 full seasons for Derbyshire, taking 100 wickets or more in every season, including a Derbyshire record 168 in 1935 - and this on home pitches more suited to seam bowlers. He played 303 times for the county, taking 1,417 wickets at a cost of 20.2. For England he never quite produced his best, but at Brisbane he had the satisfaction of bowling the unbowlable Woodfull. It is ironic, incidentally, that Derbyshire with a predilection for fast bowlers should pro-duce the only slow bowler in an England team, committed to the intimidatory body-line. He spun the ball prodigiously with the help of a lively, twirling action, making full use of body, arm and exceptionally strong wrists and fingers. It is said that he learned his art on the snooker table and was certainly capable of consistently finger-spinning the white from the centre spot, round the stacked reds and into the bottom left-hand pocket.

William Eric Bowes (1908-1987) Test Cap # 264

© The Cricketer International
Full name William Eric Bowes
Born July 25, 1908, Elland, Yorkshire
Died September 4, 1987, Otley, Yorkshire (aged 79 years 41 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium, Right-arm medium
Height 6 ft 3 in

Profile
© Wisden Cricket Monthly
William Eric "Bill" Bowes, who died in hospital on September 5, 1987, aged 79, was one of the great bowlers of his day. He is often, for convenience, loosely classed as fast, but Robertson-Glasgow, writing in the early days of the war, described him, correctly, as the most difficult fast-medium bowler in England. It was, no doubt, partly because he never tried to acquire the extra yard or two of pace which would have put him indisputably in the ranks of the fast that he was such a fine bowler. And like most of the great, he came off the pitch faster than the batsman expected.

No man has ever worked harder at his art. He was constantly practising, constantly experimenting, but throughout he remained content with the ten yards to which that great coach, Walter Brearley, had cut his run when he first went to Lord's. He concentrated on control of length and direction and on moving the ball. He could always bowl a late in-swinger, but Brearley told him that he would never reach the top class unless he could make the ball run away as well. This it would occasionally do by a fluke, as at the Scarborough Festival in 1929, for example. George Hirst was persuaded to play and Bowes bowled him with one that pitched on the leg stump and took the off bail. Hirst, typically, said: Well bowled. That would have been too good for me when I was good. Yet by the middle of 1931,

Edward Paynter (1901-1979) Test Cap # 263

© The Cricketer International
Full name Edward Paynter
Born November 5, 1901, Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire
Died February 5, 1979, Keighley, Yorkshire (aged 77 years 92 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Eddie Paynter hits out during his heroic 83 at Brisbane
© The Cricketer International
Eddie Paynter, who died at Keighley on February 5 aged 77, was a left-handed batsman who averaged 84.42 for his seven Tests against Australia, a figure which no other Englishman can approach. This in itself would entitle him to a place among the great, but his figures become even more remarkable if his innings are analysed. In three of these matches he came to the rescue at a grave crisis. On the first occasion, the third Test in 1932-33, he came in at 186 for 5, not a good score by the standards of Tests in Australia in those days, and made 77, adding 96 with Verity for the eighth wicket. In the fourth Test at Brisbane, he was taken to hospital with tonsillitis and doubtless, had all gone well with England, would not have batted. But all did not go well, and at 216 for 6 he emerged from the pavilion, refused Woodfull's offer of a runner, was still there at the close, and returned to bed in hospital. Next morning, he was not out until he had scored 83 in nearly four hours. On this occasion he and Verity put on 92 for the ninth wicket. Normally quick on his feet and a fine driver, he had conserved energy by waiting for opportunities to hit the ball to leg, preferably to the boundary. Few innings in history have so captivated the imagination of the public. Moreover, Paynter insisted on fielding for a couple of hours before retiring and then, as if to show that he was none the worse, in a brief second innings he finished the match with a 6.

Hedley Verity (1905-1943) Test Cap # 262

© Getty image
Full name Hedley Verity
Born May 18, 1905, Headingley, Leeds, Yorkshire
Died July 31, 1943, Caserta, Italy (aged 38 years 74 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
© The Cricketer International
Hedley Verity, Captain, The Green Howards, died of wounds a prisoner of war in Italy on July 31, 1943, some two months after his thirty-eighth birthday. He had been reported wounded and missing, and the news of his death came on September 1, exactly four years after he had played his last match for Yorkshire and, at Hove, taken seven Sussex wickets for nine runs in one innings, which finished county cricket before the war.He received his wounds in the Eighth Army's first attack on the German positions at Catania, in Sicily. Eye-witnesses, who were a few yards from Verity when he was hit, have told the story. The objective was a ridge with strong points and pillboxes. Behind a creeping barrage Verity led his company forward 700 yards. When the barrage ceased, they went on another 300 yards and neared the ridge, in darkness. As the men advanced, through corn two feet high, tracer-bullets swept into them. Then they wriggled through the corn, Verity encouraging them with "Keep going, keep going." The moon was at their back, and the enemy used mortar-fire, Very lights and fire-bombs, setting the corn alight. The strongest point appeared to be a farm-house, to the left of the ridge; so Verity sent one platoon round to take the farm-house, while the other gave covering fire. The enemy fire increased, and, as they crept forward, Verity was hit in the chest. "Keep going," he said, "and get them out of that farm-house." When it was decided to withdraw, they last saw Verity lying on the ground, in front of the burning corn, his head supported by his batman. So, in the last grim game, Verity showed, as he was so sure to do, that rare courage which both calculates and inspires.

Frederick Richard Brown (1910-1991) Test Cap # 261

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Frederick Richard Brown
Born December 16, 1910, Lima, Peru
Died July 24, 1991, Ramsbury, Wiltshire (aged 80 years 220 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Northamptonshire, Surrey
Playing role Allrounder
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Legbreak googly
Other Administrator

Profile
kiwi captain W. Hadlee watches as England
captain Brown toss the coin © Getty Image 
Frederick Richard Brown, CBE, who died on July 24, 1991, aged 80, was all-rounder of exceptional skill and achievement who will always be remembered for the courage and determination of his leadership of England in the 1950-51 Test series in Australia. Few visiting captains have been received with so much acclaim by the crowds of Melbourne and Sydney. Although England lost the series by four matches to one, it was soon appreciated that the 40-year-old Brown had almost single-handedly, and against every forecast, done a huge amount to revitalise English cricket, which had been humbled in turn by Australian speed and West Indian spin. What is in many ways a romantic story started when Brown was offered the captaincy of Northamptonshire early in 1949.

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
He called his new charges back for three weeks training before the season began and went on to lead them to sixth place in the Championship--after two years at the bottom of the table. In addition, he was invited to captain England in the last two Tests against New Zealand and, crucially, a year later, the Gentleman at Lord's. A sudden first-innings collapse, the presence of the selectors, and his sense of the occasion put Brown on his mettle. In a wonderful innings of 122, made in 110 minutes, he hit a six and sixteen fours, scoring all but 9 of the runs put on while he was at the wicket. The selectors had no need to look further for the man they wanted in Australia, and he was recalled to lead England at the Oval in the last Test against West Indies.Indifferent form against the states did little to suggest that England would make a fight of it in the Tests; but they defied the critics by bowling out Australia for 228 on the opening day of the First Test at Brisbane. Although torrential overnight rain subsequently turned a losing score into a winning one, it was generally felt that England were superbly led and had played the better cricket.

Alfred Harry Bakewell (1908-1983) Test Cap # 260

Full name Alfred Harry Bakewell
Born November 2, 1908, Walsall, Staffordshire
Died January 23, 1983, Westbourne, Dorset (aged 74 years 82 days)
Major teams England, Northamptonshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Alfred Harry Fred Bakewell, who died at Westbourne, Bournemouth, on January 23, 1983, aged 74, was, from the spectator's point of view, one of the most exciting batsmen of his generation and the car smash which ended his career was as disastrous as that which finished Milburn's years later. While, as the vicissitudes of some of our modern Test match batsmen demonstrate, it is impossible to exaggerate the importance of a sound orthodox method, it is salutary that just now and again a player emerges who can defy some of what are normally considered the cardinal principles and yet completely confound the critics. Bakewell's stance was one of the most two-eyed ever seen, with the right shoulder so far round that it seemed almost to be facing mid-on: it was not helped by a slight crouch and he gripped the bat throughout with one hand at the top and the other at the bottom of the handle. Seeing this for the first time, one would have diagnosed a dull and ugly player who would score, if at all, by nudges and deflections. Yet there was in him some natural genius which enabled him to be one of the most brilliant drivers and cutters in the world, nor did he have any difficulty in getting right down the pitch to hit the ball. Naturally he was also strong on the leg side and, if in his early years his defence was a trifle suspect, especially on his off stump, he soon improved it.

John Arnold (1907-1984) Test Cap # 259


Full name John Arnold
Born November 30, 1907, Cowley, Oxford
Died April 4, 1984, Southampton, Hampshire (aged 76 years 126 days)
Major teams England, Hampshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow

Profile
A Hampshire stalwart for over 18 years, John Arnold played a single Test for England early in his career. In 1931 he was selected to open the batting against New Zealand in just his second full season in the absence of Hobbs and Sutcliffe, but a modest performance led to a return to the county ranks. Arnold usually opened, but often dropped down the order for Hampshire, and was by nature an aggressive bat, particularly strong on the leg side, but also a good driver. He represented his country in soccer, and used his speed to good effect in the field. The vagaries of form led him to adopt a more defensive approach in the middle part of his career, but after a break for the Second World War he reverted to his former style with considerable success. Originally from Oxford he moved to Hampshire, and after qualification rarely was out of the county side. He made over 21,000 runs and 37 centuries for the county until retirement was forced upon him by illness. He later became a first-class umpire

Henry William Lee (1890-1981) Test Cap # 258

© The Cricketer International
Full name Henry William Lee
Born October 26, 1890, Marylebone, London
Died April 21, 1981, Westminster, London (aged 90 years 177 days)
Major teams England, Maharaja of Cooch-Behar's XI, Middlesex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Other Umpire, Coach

Profile
HL Dales and HW Lee open the
innings © The Cricketer International
The eldest of the three Lee brothers, Harry William Lee, who died in Middlesex Hospital on April 21, was the second-oldest surviving England cricketer at the time of his death. At 90, he was 112 days younger than Andrew Sandham. Lee was also the last of the famous 1920 Middlesex team which won the Championship with a thrilling victory over Surrey at Lord's. Lee and his partner C.K.L. Skeet made centuries in an opening stand of 208 in the second innings, Sandham scoring 167 not out for the losers. Born in Marylebone on October 26, 1890, and proud to be one of the relatively few Middlesex players over the years to have been born in the district, Lee learnt the game in the street, a lamp-post serving as the wicket. Although he continued to help his father, who was a greengrocer and coal merchant, young Harry, inevitably known as 'Ginger' for the colouring of his hair, joined the ground staff at Lord's in 1906, and, having absorbed advice from E.G. Wynyard and others, he developed his allround play to such an extent that Middlesex offered him an engagement in 1911.Three years passed before he made any true impression. This was a fortnight after war had broken out, in August 1914. Promoted to open, he accompanied the brilliant Frank Tarrant to the middle and scored 139. Pasty Hendren and J.W. Hearne also made centuries in that match against Notts, a pointer to the future, for the pair were to bring repeated glories to Middlesex batting, with Lee a valuable regular support. It was a minor miracle that Lee was able to resume cricket at all. Soon after enlisting, he was shot in the leg during the hostilities at Neuve Chapelle and lay for three days between the lines.

William Farrimond (1903-1979) Test Cap # 257

Full name William Farrimond
Born May 23, 1903, Daisy Hill, Lancashire
Died November 15, 1979, Westhoughton, Bolton, Lancashire (aged 76 years 176 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
William Farrimond, who died at home at Westhoughton, near Bolton, on November 14, 1979, aged 76, had the rare experience of being an England wicket-keeper who had been playing for fourteen years for his county before getting a regular place in the side. This was the more exasperating as for 35 years Lancashire had hardly had a reliable professional'keeper, merely a succession of men who had to give way when a competent amateur was available. In 1923 they found that great'keeper, Duckworth, and in 1924 Farrimond appeared. It was only Duckworth's premature retirement at the end of 1937 that gave him an assured place, and after two seasons his career was ended by the war. It speaks volumes for Farrimond's loyalty that during this long period he never accepted any of the offers he received to qualify for another county.

Thomas William John Goddard (1900-1966) Test Cap # 256

© Martin Williamson
Full name Thomas William John Goddard
Born October 1, 1900, Gloucester
Died May 22, 1966, Gloucester (aged 65 years 233 days)
Major teams England, Gloucestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
 Goddard bowls for G.shire © PA Photos
Tom Goddard, who died at his home in Gloucester on May 22, aged 65, was one of the greatest off-break bowlers the game has known. A big man, standing six feet three, with massive hands, he spun the ball to a remarkable degree and on a helpful pitch was almost unplayable. He bowled mostly from round the wicket and had such a command of length and flight that even on easy surfaces he kept batsmen apprehensive. His height enabled him to make the ball lift more than most spinners and the Gloucestershire combination of Goddard and the slow left-hander, Charlie Parker, was probably the most feared in Championship cricket.

The early days of Goddard's career gave no hint of the success he was later to achieve. Born on October 1, 1900, he first played for Gloucestershire in 1922 as a fast bowler. Despite his strong physique he made little progress and in six years took only 153 wickets at a cost of 34 runs each.

At the end of the 1927 season he left the county and joined the M.C.C. ground staff at Lord's. There he decided to experiment with off-breaks and his long, strong fingers were ideally suited to this type of bowling. Beverley Lyon, the Gloucestershire captain, saw him in the nets at Lord's and, immediately struck by Goddard's new-found ability, persuaded Gloucestershire to re-engage him. The effect was immediate and dramatic. In 1929 Goddard took 184 wickets at 16 runs apiece and he never looked back.

George Oswald Browning Allen (1902-1989) Test Cap # 255

© The Cricketer International
Full name George Oswald Browning Allen
Born July 31, 1902, Bellevue Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Died November 29, 1989, St John's Wood, London (aged 87 years 121 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Middlesex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast

Profile
© The Cricketer International
© The Cricketer International
Sir George `Gubby' Allen died at his London home overlooking Lord's during the night of November 29. He had been in poor health for some time after a major stomach operation during the summer. He was 87.

Sir George Oswald Browning Allen - known to almost 70 years of cricketers across the world as `Gubby'- has died, at the ripe age of 87; indeed he was taking his regular game of golf as lately as last June. He was brought to England at the age six after having been born in Australia, where his family for long practiced law; indeed, his uncle, Reginald Charles Allen, played for Australia in a Test Match against England in 1886-87. As an active cricketer `Gubby' was a genuine and considerable allrounder; Remarkably for one of his relatively slight build, he was a genuinely fast bowler, whose sharpest weapon was the outswinger; a correct, of the tenacious batsman, and a sure-handed close field. He played for Eton- where he was coached by George Hirst and C. M. `Father' Wells- Cambridge University, Middlesex and England. His county career lasted from 1921 to 1950, but he was outstandingly active in the councils of the game until virtually the end.

© The Cricketer International
Sir George lived for much of his life in a house only a wall's thickness away from Lord's (he had his own private gate into the ground), whence he wielded immensely powerful influence in the affairs, especially, of MCC and Middlesex. He was a genuine amateur, prevented by his career in business and on the Stock Exchange from playing fulltime cricket. For that reason, capable allrounder that he was, he never scored 1000 runs nor took 100 wickets in a season. Indeed, in his entire career he played only 376 innings; notably, 33 of them were in his 25 Test for England; his batting average overall was 28.67, while he took 788 wickets (81 in Test) at 22.23. Somewhat surprisingly for one who lived to such a good age, from his Eton days he was dogged by injuries; in later life he needed six hip operations - three on each side.

He was `blooded' in Test cricket against Australia in 1930 but, although he scored 57, his bowling was unsuccessful and he was dropped for the remainder of the series. He made his mark, though, in 1931, with a quite remarkable innings of 122 against New Zealand at Lord's, coming in at No. 9. He And Leslie Ames set a Test record, which still Stands, with their partnership of 246 for the eighth wicket. In the next match of the series he took 5 for 14; he did not need to bat in that Test, nor in the third.

He was taken in Douglas Jardine's side for what has become known as the Bodyline series. Allen, however, disagreed with that version of leg-theory and his captain, meeting a character as determined as his own, did not press his only amateur fast bowler. However, Allen took 21 wickets in that Test series- more than any other English bowler except Harold Larwood. Back home again in 1933, business claimed him for all but one Test against West Indies. Then, in the following season, 1934, the after-effects of a hernia operation restricted him to two Test, in which he made useful but unremarkable contributions. At Old Trafford, in his attempts to avoid the pit dug by Bill O'Reilly's followthrough, Allen bowled a most remarkable first over of 13 deliveries, which included four no-balls three wides - and two unaccepted chances of catches.

Gubby Allen at this age of 45, just prior to captaining England in West Indies. Allen led England in 11 of his 25 Tests, before retiring to even greater influence behind the scenes in the MCC committee-room,He was captain against India in 1936 When England took the three-match rubber by two to one, and his opponent, the Maharaj Kumar of Vizianagram, was Knighted between the first two Tests.

Test debut England v Australia at Lord's, Jun 27-Jul 1, 1930
Last Test West Indies v England at Kingston, Mar 27-Apr 1, 1948
First-class span 1921-1950

Leslie Fletcher Townsend (1903-1993) Test Cap # 254

Full name Leslie Fletcher Townsend
Born June 8, 1903, Long Eaton, Derbyshire
Died February 17, 1993, Richmond, Nelson, New Zealand (aged 89 years 254 days)
Major teams England, Auckland, Derbyshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Leslie Fletcher Townsend, one of the best all-round cricketers to appear for Derbyshire, was born at Long Eaton on June 8, 1903, so that his most successful season--that of last summer--came to him rather later in life than it does to the average first-class player in modern days. Curiously enough, he did not play any cricket when as a boy he attended the local Council School, but he was always a faithful attendant at the matches in which his local club engaged and, living as he did not seven miles from Trent Bridge, he took every opportunity possible to watch county matches on that enclosure.

William Voce (1909-1984) Test Cap # 253

© Getty image
Full name William Voce
Born August 8, 1909, Annesley Woodhouse, Nottinghamshire
Died June 6, 1984, Lenton, Nottinghamshire (aged 74 years 303 days)
Major teams England, Nottinghamshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm fast-medium

Profile
Bill Voce bowling for
 Nottinghamshire in 1934
© The Cricketer International
Bill Voce, who died at Nottingham on June 6, 1984, aged 74, is largely thought of in these days as the junior in one of the great bowling partnerships, Larwood and Voce, and for the contribution that he made to the bodyline attack in Australia in 1932-33. Although he was somewhat slower than Larwood, his line, from left-arm over the wicket, and the steeper bounce that he obtained from his height, made him formidable enough and the batsmen got no relief when facing him. His job in that 1932-33 series was to maintain the pressure and he did it nobly, taking, besides, fifteen wickets in four matches: he missed the fourth Test owing to injury. The controversy which this tour excited and the amount that has been written since has diverted attention from his performances in the first two Tests in 1936-37.

No English side in this century had had such a bad press before the tour started: it was popularly regarded as having no chance whatever. Its captain, G. O. Allen, the third fast bowler on the previous trip, had been irredeemably opposed to bodyline and had refused to bowl it: it is worth recording that he himself had by orthodox methods taken eight for 131 in the third Test. So before the selection of the team was completed the Chairman arranged a meeting between Allen and Voce at which Allen insisted on an undertaking being given that bodyline tactics would not be employed. Voce demurred at first, but finally agreed to fall in with his captain's wishes and throughout the tour bowled over the wicket to an off-side field. In the first Test he took six for 41 and four for 16: Australia lost by 322 runs and the critics were confounded. The second was even more sensational.
Stan McCabe cuts inches wide of Bill Voce on his way to a brilliant 187
not out © The Cricketer International
 Allen declared (a step almost unprecedented in a timeless Test) at 426 for six in order to get Australia in on a wet wicket, and with the seventh ball of the first over Voce had O'Brien, a left-hander, caught at slip: from the next ball Bradman was caught at short-leg. A maiden followed and off the second ball of his next over McCabe was caught. Australia were three wickets down for 1 run and Voce had taken them all in four balls. The side was out for 80 and, though they got 324 in their second innings, they lost by an innings, Voce's figures being four for 10 and three for 66. In addition Chipperfield had been missed off his bowling in the first innings. In this match the weather had helped England, in the next it helped Australia, who won by 365 runs. Voce was in no way to blame: though his six wickets cost him 169 runs, he maintained, according to Wisden, his concentration and deadliness right throughout both innings.

Frederick Somerset Gough Calthorpe (1892-1935) Test Cap # 252

Full name Frederick Somerset Gough Calthorpe
Born May 27, 1892, Kensington, London
Died November 19, 1935, The Home Green, Worplesdon, Surrey (aged 43 years 176 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Sussex, Warwickshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
The Hon Freddie Calthorpe died on November 19 aged 43 after about a month's illness from which recovery was impossible. Born on May 27, 1892, he was one of the best all-round players of his time at Repton, being described in 1911 as the backbone of a strong side's bowling. Going up to Jesus College, Cambridge, he obtained his Blue as a Freshman and remained in the side for the following two seasons.During the War he served in the Royal Air Force and would have captained Cambridge in 1919 had not the letter of invitation miscarried. As it was, he played under J. S. F. Morrison in his fourth University match which Oxford won by 45 runs. The game revived the best traditions of cricket at Lord's which during the preceding four summers had been given over in various ways to the amelioration of War service.

Thomas Stanley Worthington (1905-1973) Test Cap # 251

Full name Thomas Stanley Worthington
Born August 21, 1905, Bolsover, Derbyshire
Died August 31, 1973, King's Lynn, Norfolk (aged 68 years 10 days)
Major teams England, Derbyshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Other Coach

Profile
© The Cricketer International
Thomas Stanley Worthington, who died in hospital on September 1, aged 68, while on holiday at King"s Lynn, was a fine all-rounder for Derbyshire between 1924 and 1947. He took part in nine Test matches for England, five of them when a member of G. O. Allen"s team in Australia in 1936-37. He distinguished himself at the Oval in 1936 when scoring 128, he and W. R. Hammond (217) adding 266 and setting up a fourth wicket record against India which still stands.

During his career, Stan Worthington, as he was always known, scored as a firm-hitting right-handed batsman, 19,221 runs, average 29.07; hit 31 centuries-two in the same match against Nottinghamshire at Ilkeston in 1938; with bowling of splendid length at above medium pace, took 682 wickets at a cost of 29.22 runs apiece and held 326 catches.Unlike several Derbyshire players of his time, he did not begin his working life as a miner. At the age of 17 he became an electrician with the Bolsover Colliery Company and achieved much success for their cricket club in the Bassetlaw League. He did not play for the county with any regularity till 1926, but soon proved his value.

Maurice Joseph Lawson Turnbull (1906-1944) Test Cap # 250

Full name Maurice Joseph Lawson Turnbull
Born March 16, 1906, Cardiff, Glamorgan, Wales
Died August 5, 1944, near Montchamp, France (aged 38 years 142 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Glamorgan, Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
The cover of a biography of Maurice Turnbull,
(published by Tempus Publishing, Oct 2001)
© Glamorgan County Cricket Club
To Maurice batting was a gay adventure. He was a gifted right-hander who made runs when they were wanted and whose value could not always be assessed on figures. Initially as an on-side player, he developed all the recognised strokes and added some of his own, and he was also a fine short-leg fielder. Always associated in the public minds with Glamorgan, he first appeared for them as a schoolboy in 1924. he captained Cambridge in 1929 and Glamorgan from 1930 until 1939. He passed 1000 runs in a season ten times and three times hit double-centuries, the highest being 233 against Worcestershire at Swansea in 1937, a season in which Glamorgan finished higher than ever before thanks to his bold leadership and devoted example. For ten years he was an outstanding secretary to the club. He toured Australia in 1929-30 and South Africa in 1930-31 and with Maurice Allom wrote a lighthearted account of each tour. At home he represented England against West Indies and India; and he was an English selector in 1938 and 1939. A Major in the Welsh Guards, he was killed in action in Normandy. A brilliant allround sportsman, he also played for Wales at rugby and hockey.

Morris Stanley Nichols (1900-1961) Test Cap # 249

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Morris Stanley Nichols
Born October 6, 1900, Stondon Massey, Essex
Died January 26, 1961, Newark, Nottinghamshire (aged 60 years 112 days)
Major teams England, Essex
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast

Profile
Morris Stanley Nichols, who died on January 26, aged 60, was, in an era of a good many all-rounders, one of the best. An Essex player from 1924 to 1939, he scored 17,789 runs, average 26.39, as a left-handed batsman strong in strokes in front of the wicket and with right-arm fast bowling took 1,834 wickets for 21.66 runs apiece. Of his 20 centuries the highest was 205 against Hampshire at Southend in 1936. He was first recommended to Essex solely as a batsman, but Percy Perrin, observing his height and strong physique, encouraged him as a pace bowler. How successful this proved is shown by the fact that in each of eleven seasons Stan Nichols dismissed over 100 batsmen, his best being that of 1938 when he took 171 wickets at a cost of 19.92 runs each. He could bowl for long spells without fatigue or loss of accuracy.

He enjoyed perhaps his greatest triumph as an all-rounder in 1935 when at Huddersfield he played the leading part in the overthrow by an innings and 204 runs of Yorkshire, the ultimate Champions, whose one defeat in the competition this was. In the two innings he gained an analysis of 11 wickets for 54 runs and he hit 146. Three years later at Gloucester, he played an innings of 159 and gained full bowling figures of 15 wickets for 165 runs, his first-innings analysis being nine wickets for 37 runs in 15.2 overs. On three other occasions he took nine wickets in an innings--for 59 runs v. Hampshire at Chelmsford in 1927; for 32 runs v. Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in 1936 and for 116 runs v. Middlesex at Leyton in 1930. Twice he disposed of four batsmen in four deliveries--v. Sussex at Horsham in 1929 and v. Lancashire at Chelmsford in 1935--and he also achieved the hat-trick against Yorkshire at Leeds in 1931.

Alfred Herbert Harold Gilligan (1896-1978) Test Cap # 248

Full name Alfred Herbert Harold Gilligan
Born June 29, 1896, Denmark Hill, London
Died May 5, 1978, Stroud Common, Shamley Green, Surrey (aged 81 years 310 days)
Major teams England, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Relation Brother - FW Gilligan, Brother - AER Gilligan, Son-in-law - PBH May

Profile
Harold Gilligan was the youngest of three brothers all of whom played first-class cricket. Although Frank, the eldest, played for Essex before emigrating to New Zealand, the name of Gilligan became synonymous with Sussex cricket for a decade and more following the First World War (during which Harold was awarded the AFC).Alfred Herbert Harold Gilligan played regularly from 1919 until 1930 and in his last year he captained the Sussex side. In the winter of 1929-30 he captained the MCC team which toured New Zealand and which played the first official Test matches against that country. He proved himself not only an astute captain but also a diplomat of considerable ability. His charming and likeable personality was, in large measure, responsible for this tour being remembered to this day with affection by many New Zealanders.After the last War his interest in cricket moved to The Oval and the Surrey club. Here he served with distinction as a member of the committee. For a time he was the club's honorary treasurer and at the time of his death was a vice-president of the club. He also served for a number of years on the cricket sub-committee of MCC.

Harold was, like his brother Arthur, an all-round sportsman, a keen golfer and an ardent skier. He was a man of integrity, one who was never afraid to speak his mind yet always appreciating the other man's point of view.To one like myself, who had known him for so many years, he never changed and remained a stalwart friend, always ready to give help and advice, when asked to do so, or to welcome one into his hospitable and charming home. The warmth of his personality created for him a wide circle of friends who will remember him with great affection.

Test debut New Zealand v England at Christchurch, Jan 10-13, 1930
Last Test New Zealand v England at Auckland, Feb 21-24, 1930
First-class span 1919-1931

Walter Latter Cornford (1900-1964) Test Cap # 247

© sportspages.com
Full name Walter Latter Cornford
Born December 25, 1900, Hurst Green, Sussex
Died February 6, 1964, Elm Grove, Brighton, Sussex (aged 63 years 43 days)
Major teams England, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
Walter Latter Tich Cornford, who died in a Brighton hospital on February 6, aged 63, was one of the smallest wicketkeepers to play in first-class cricket, for he stood not much more than five feet. Born on Christmas Day, 1900, he was a regular professional for Sussex from 1921 till 1939 and was recalled in an emergency to play against Essex at Brentwood in 1947 when coach at Brighton College. In all, he helped to dismiss 953 batsmen for his county--639 caught and 314 stumped--and he scored 6,327 runs, average 14.61. His highest innings was 82 against Yorkshire at Eastbourne in 1928, when, sharing in partnerships of 83 with James Langridge and 111 with K. S. Duleepsinhji, he enabled Sussex to save the game after following on 298 behind.

Maurice James Carrick Allom (1906-1995) Test Cap # 246

Full name Maurice James Carrick Allom
Born March 23, 1906, Northwood, Middlesex
Died April 8, 1995, Dene Park, Shipbourne, Tinbridge, Kent (aged 89 years 16 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast
Other Administrator

Profile
© The Cricketer International
With one sensational over at Lancaster Park, Christchurch in Jan 1930, Maurice Allom joined the immortals. England, led by Harold Gilligan (while another England team played Tests in West Indies that extraordinary winter), were playing in New Zealand in that country's inaugural Test, and Allom, the tall, strongly-built Cambridge and Surrey amateur, aged 23, was on Test debut.

His eighth over saw Roger Blunt narrowly escape being lbw to the first ball (a leg-bye was taken); Stewart Dempster was bowled by the next; Tom Lowry, the large Kiwi skipper, played and missed at the third ball and was lbw to the fourth; Ken James was caught by wicketkeeper Tich Cornford, standing up at the stumps; and the sixth ball bowled Ted Badcock, giving Allom a hat-trick and four wickets in five balls.New Zealand, now 21 for 7, recovered to 112 but lost in just under two playing days, and Allom was aglow after taking 5 for 38 and 3 for 17, including the 10th hat-trick in Test history, which was watched by Hugh Trumble, then 62, who had taken two hat-tricks for Australia early this century.

Edward Winchester Clark (1902-1982) Test Cap # 245

Full name Edward Winchester Clark
Born August 9, 1902, Elton, Huntingdonshire
Died April 28, 1982, West Winch, King's Lynn, Norfolk (aged 79 years 262 days)
Major teams England, Northamptonshire
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm fast

Profile
Edward Winchester Clark, inevitably known as Nobby, who died on April 28, 1982, near King's Lynn, aged 79, possessed every qualification of a great bowler except temperament. With a lovely loose left arm, which almost brushed his ear as it came over, he had a classic action, his right shoulder pointing straight at the batsman. He was at his best really fast and, though he was well capable of bowling, like Voce, to a leg-side field, was probably most effective round the wicket when the ball, swinging in and breaking away, would produce catches in the slips if the batsman was good enough to touch it. But he was a perfectionist and anything outside his control which interfered with that perfection - a dropped catch, an insecure foothold, a tactless word from his captain or one of his companions - was quite sufficient to put him off. It was his misfortune that his county, Northamptonshire, was throughout his career one of the weakest sides that has ever played in the Championship: not only did he have to do more than his fair share of bowling, but perhaps no fast bowler since Buckenham of Essex had so many chances dropped off him.

Leslie Ethelbert George Ames (1905-1990) Test Cap # 244

© Wisden Cricket Monthly
Full name Leslie Ethelbert George Ames
Born December 3, 1905, Elham, Kent
Died February 27, 1990, Canterbury, Kent (aged 84 years 86 days)
Major teams England, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
The England XII for the Lord's Test of 1932 against India
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Leslie Ethelbert George Ames, CBE, who died suddenly at his home in Canterbury on February 26, 1990, aged 84, was without a doubt the greatest wicketkeeper-batsman the game has so far produced; and yet, at the time he was playing, it used to be said there were better wicketkeepers than Ames, and that he was in the England team because of his batting. If this was so, would Jardine, for example, have preferred him to Duckworth in Australia in 1932-33? Surely not. When fully fit, Ames was England's first-choice wicketkeeper from 1931 to 1939, when he virtually gave up the job. For Kent, he was an integral part of their Championship side from 1927 to the first match of 1951, when a sharp recurrence of back trouble, which had dogged him for so long, brought his career to an end while he was actually at the crease. By this time he had amassed 37,248 runs, average 43.51, made 102 hundreds, including nine double-hundreds, and passed 1,000 runs in a season seventeen times, going on to 3,000 once and 2,000 on five occasions. He had had a direct interest in 1,121 dismissals, of which more than 1,000 were effected when he was keeping wicket. His total of 418 stumpings is easily a record.

Fred Barratt (1894-1947) Test Cap # 243

© trialx.com
Full name Fred Barratt
Born April 12, 1894, Annesley, Nottinghamshire
Died January 29, 1947, Standard Hill, Nottingham (aged 52 years 292 days)
Major teams England, Nottinghamshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast

Profile
© collections.delcampe.com
Fred Barratt, fast bowler and powerful hitter, died in Nottingham General Hospital on January 29, aged 52. Playing first for the county at Lord's in 1914 against M.C.C., he took eight wickets for 91 runs, but did not bowl when the club followed-on 194 behind. He finished that season with 115 wickets at 21.80 runs apiece. After the war he was slow in finding his old form, but in 1923 he dismissed 101 men at an average of 18.54 and also became a very free scorer. In 1928 he did the double with 1,167 runs, average 29.17, and 114 wickets at 25.18 each.The first Nottinghamshire man to accomplish this feat since John Gunn in 1906, he punished all kinds of bowling with great freedom, thanks largely to sure driving.He excelled against Glamorgan at Trent Bridge, hitting up 110 in eighty-five minutes; and at Coventry 139, also not out, off the Warwickshire bowlers. W. Walker helped to add 196 in eighty-five minutes, a short boundary giving Barratt such an opportunity to exercise his strength that he hit seven 6's and eighteen 4's. Nottinghamshire declared with 656 for three wickets, then the highest total for the loss of so few men.

He reached Test honours in 1929 at Old Trafford against South Africa, but did little, two wickets for 38 runs being his reward while men of less pace were supreme. Going on tour with M.C.C. side, captained by A. H. H. Gilligan, in the winter of 1930, Barratt, with nine wickets for 93, helped to beat South Australia by 239 runs, and seven Victoria batsmen fell to him for 105, among his victims being W. H. Ponsford and H. L. Henry, both dismissed very cheaply in each innings. He was not effective in the four Test matches in New Zealand. Altogether in first-class cricket he took 1,126 wickets at 24.27 runs apiece and scored 6,347 runs, average 15.25.

Test debut England v South Africa at Manchester, Jul 27-30, 1929
Last Test New Zealand v England at Auckland, Feb 21-24, 1930
First-class span1914-1931