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Departed BUT Not Forgotten

JBMAC

State Captain
As I was reading through these threads the thought occurred to me that not all of the Forum members have access to as much Cricket Lore as others do. I have decide to start a thread giving the History of certain players who have figured prominently in our game.

Under separate entries are three.

Your constructive comments are very welcome
 

Fiery

Banned
As I was reading through these threads the thought occurred to me that not all of the Forum members have access to as much Cricket Lore as others do. I have decide to start a thread giving the History of certain players who have figured prominently in our game.

Under separate entries are three.

Your constructive comments are very welcome
Sounds good mate. Kick it off
 

JBMAC

State Captain
Billy MURDOCH.Captain of Controversy

Willliam (Billy) Lloyd Murdoch (18 October 1854 – 18 February 1911) was an Australian cricketer, captaining the Australian tours to England in 1880, 1882 (when the Ashes legend was born), and 1884. Murdoch was born in Sandhurst (now Bendigo), Victoria to Gilbert Murdoch and his wife Susanna (née Fleigge). Early in the 1860s, the Murdochs moved to New South Wales, and Billy played for the Albert Club with Fred Spofforth. He made his first-class entry in 1875, at the time regarded as the finest wicketkeeper in Australia, and a highly-rated right-handed batsman. He played in the second Test match ever played, the 1877 clash against England at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG). Later that year, he qualified as a solicitor and opened up a practice, "Murdoch & Murdoch", with his brother Gilbert.

Murdoch established himself as one of the era's greatest batsmen over the next few years, leading Australia in several Test series against England.

Murdoch was never far from controversy. His omission as wicketkeeper in the very first Test resulted in Australia’s premier fast bowler, Fred Spofforth, boycotting the match. In 1884 as captain of Australia he was involved in the players' strike, where the Australian players refused to play unless they received a greater share of the gate takings. He was also the batsman whose contentious runout caused friction between New South Wales and a visiting English team led by Lord Harris which also caused a spectator riot.

His best Test performances more often occurred in England where both his Test hundreds were scored, 153 not out in the first Test in the old country in 1880 at The Oval and 211 at the same ground four years later. In both the 1880 and 1884 tours he headed the batting averages. In England he was regarded as a superb captain and enough of a gentleman to be invited to captain Sussex, which he did for several seasons. He was widely regarded the finest Australian batsman of his day, being bettered only by the English champion WG Grace.

Murdoch was more of an off side player whose drives and cuts were regarded as among the best of his day but his leg side play as well as his ability against good spin was not apparently as good. Also, he was believed to be lacking against top-class pace bowling on difficult wickets; if conditions, were perfect, however, his batting often followed suit.

Later in life Murdoch settled in England, and he and John Ferris became the first cricketers to represent two nations at Test level when the two former Australian team-mates represented England against South Africa in Cape Town in March 1892.

He again visited England in 1890, but though he was top in the averages he had not had time to regain his true form. He then settled in England, qualified for Sussex, and captained it for several seasons. His style of play did not favour him in wet seasons, but he made many good scores over a period of about 15 years. Among these may be mentioned 155 for London county against Lancashire in 1903, and in the following year 140 for gentlemen versus players, though he was then in his forty-ninth year.

Murdoch's standing as one of the greatest first-class batsmen of his era were strengthened by his statistics; 16,953 runs scored in 391 matches at the average of 26.86 at a time when batting averages were much lower than in modern times.

He died in Melbourne, Australia in 18 February 1911; present at the Test match between Australia and South Africa, he was seized with apoplexy during the lunch interval and died later in the afternoon. His body was embalmed and brought back to England for burial at Bethnal Green in the east end of London.
 

JBMAC

State Captain
The First Keeper

ohn ("Jack") McCarthy Blackham (11 May 1854 – 28 December 1932) was an Australian Test cricketer and captain, right-hand batsman and Australia's first Test wicket-keeper. He played first-class cricket for Victoria.

Early life

Blackham was born in Fitzroy North, Melbourne, Victoria and became a bank clerk, and held a position in the Colonial Bank of Australasia for many years. He was included in the first eleven of the Carlton Cricket Club when only sixteen.


In 1874, Blackham became the wicket-keeper of the Victorian state team and held that position for over twenty years. He was a member of the first eight Australian teams to visit England.

Blackham was one of the first wicket-keepers to stand up close to the stumps, even to the fastest bowlers, wearing gloves that Jack Pollard describes as "little more than gardening gloves". He also eliminated the need for a long-stop, and Pollard says that "in England on one of his trips there a group of clergymen complained that he was a danger to the wellbeing of cricket, encouraging as he did the abolition of long-stop, the clergy's traditional fielding spot in village teams."

Blackham began with Victoria in 1874-75, and was selected for the very first Test match, held at Melbourne in March 1876/77. Australia’s Demon Bowler Fred Spofforth refused to play in this match because Blackham was preferred to Spofforth's New South Wales team-mate Billy Murdoch. In this match, he took three catches and the first Test-Match stumping.

Described by team-mates as the "prince of wicket-keepers" and one of Australia's first cricketing heroes, "Black Jack" Blackham (nicknamed for his dark beard) was Australia's regular wicket-keeper from 1877 to 1894.

His final Test

As a right-hand batsman, Blackham was a useful lower-order player. At the age of forty, he played his last Test Match at the SCG against Stoddart's Englishmen. As Blackham spun the coin on that opening morning, "Stoddy" remarked, "Someone will be swearing directly, Jack. I hope it's you."

It was not: Blackham won the toss and elected to bat, and he himself made 74 in a partnership of 154 with Syd Gregory, who scored 201. This helped Australia on its way to a massive (and apparently unassailable) 586, and, after England followed on, Blackham's men were eventually left to make just 176 in the final innings. They had scored 113 of them for the loss of just two wickets at the close of play on the fifth evening, but it rained hard during the night.

Blackham's veteran team-mate George Giffen, however, slept right through the storm and was blissfully unaware of it when he got up the following morning, a bright and sunny one. Giffen greeted his captain cheerily at breakfast but was met with a face as "long as a coffee-pot". Blackham told him what had happened and forecasted ominously the danger as the Australian team travelled to the ground, the carriage leaving deep furrows in the moist turf. Blackham was right to be so concerned: on a horrific "sticky dog", his side eventually collapsed to 166 all out, losing the match by ten runs. At the close, with the Englishmen celebrating, "Blackham walked up and down the balcony like a caged tiger, muttering 'Cruel luck - cruel luck'.... In short, the team were thoroughly cut up seeing victory thus snatched away.... 'The rain beat us,' said some of them."

"No!" retorted the Prince of Wicketkeepers. "The sun beat us" - which was probably closer to the mark.

Blackham injured himself in this match and never played Test cricket or kept wickets again.

Summary

In his 35 Tests, Blackham made 800 runs at an average of 15.68 (highest score of 74), and dismissed 60 batsmen (36 caught, 24 stumped). In 45 matches for Victoria he scored 1600 runs at 22.85, with one century (109 in 1884), and dismissed 451 batsmen. His value as a bat, however, cannot be judged by averages, as he was often at his best when the game was at a critical stage. He was not a success as a captain as he worried too much when off the field. After his retirement in 1895 a match for his benefit was arranged and an annuity was bought with the proceeds.

He captained Australia in eight matches, winning three. His nervous temperament meant that he worried over small setbacks, and could not bear to watch close finishes.

Blackham later invested his earnings from his tours of England, without success. He died in Latrobe, Melbourne, Victoria.
 

JBMAC

State Captain
The LION of Kent

LION of Kent
Alfred Mynn: The Lion of Kent
FOR ANYONE even faintly intrested in history of the game of cricket, Alfred Mynn remains a towering personality. But it comes as a surprise that thousands of websites and even more webpages devoted on cricket hardly have any mention of the man who stands as the single most important cricketer in the nineteenth century.

He dominated his era like WG Grace did in the later part of the century. But today the mother of all search engines, Google, hardly finds any information about Alfred Mynn. Seems that the connoissuers of cricket have failed to acquaint themselves with the technological change.

Mynn (b. 1807) was a fighter to the core. A powerful batsman who was rivalled only by Fuller Pilch in the arts of batsmansip, Mynn was a deadly bowler. Nicholas Wanostrocht Felix and Fuller Pilch were the other exiciting cricketers of the era. While bookmakers made money on his performance, he got bankrupt at times and even went to jail once.

Born in 1807 in Kent, Mynn's most memorable innings was a fighting 125 at Leicster in 1836. it was just a year ago that the round arm bowling was legalised (until then underarm bowling was in vogue).

He was hit on the ankle and the injury late worsened. Still, he batted against the fiery Lillywhite. Though he could barely walk, Mynn put a great fight. Speedster Redgate repeatedly hit him on the sour leg in front of thousands of spectators. And on every hit Mynn writhed in pain but batted until he brought his team to the doors of victory.

It was a batting of highest order. Later Redgate admitted that the harder he bowled, Mynn hit it even harder.Laying flat on the roof of a stagecoach on the uneven roads, he was transported to London. But the condition of his leg got worse and the doctors considered amputation to save his life.

Mercifully, he was somehow saved. Though he played subsequently but the Lion of Kent had lost some of his spark. Still, he went on to become the national champion of the single wicket cricket in the country. Mynn died in 1861. It was the injury of Mynn that is said to have brought leg-guards in the game.

Six feet tall and weighing 19 stones (1 stone=6 kg), Mynn was a hero in the era. Along with Reverend Frederick Beauclerk, Nicholas Wanostrocht 'Felix' who invented the catapulta (the first bowling machine), Fuller Pilch and Redgate, the galaxy of cricketers turned the game from the pastime of gentlemen to the people's sport.

Mynn played for MCC, Kent, Hampshire and a few other teams. In his 213 matches, Mynn played 395 innings scoring 4,955 runs. He took 1038 wickets at an average of 10.22. Also, he had 125 catches to his credit.

Alfred Mynn, the first cricketer to be described as 'champion' was unbeaten in single-wicket tournament for almost a decade. Described as 'Kind and manly', Mynn was the first and finest of the 'fast and ripping' round-arm bowlers as well as a fierce hitter, great catcher and a gentleman above all .
 

JBMAC

State Captain
So, There is the first three...The sources are many and varied...some 210 cricketing books, old newspaper articles and club newsletters and of course the internet..That last one amused me some ...if you "google" Cricket there are some 53 million entries for same..

Your comments welcome and even disscussion on these players.

If you feel it worthwhile then more will be forthcoming...if not, then maybe you will be a little better informed about this game of ours.:cool:
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
Hmm, you probably should be giving references to where you're taking this from. It is generally accepted internet practice.
 

Fiery

Banned
I sent you an email JBMAC. Just want to know if you are aware that Cricinfo has a profile like these on virtually every test player and many 1st class players.
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Good Reads. Well done for posting some interesting stuff, keep it going, put only 2 players a day ...that's enough read for a day , IMO.

But keep it going , great idea....
 

Swervy

International Captain
I always like to read about Mick Malone and Shaun Graf.

Anyone know of any good books? :)
 

archie mac

International Coach
I always like to read about Mick Malone and Shaun Graf.

Anyone know of any good books? :)
Nothing coming to mind, as in bios, but Ken Piesse just released a book about the history of the St. Kilda cricket team. I have the book and when I unpack them, I will let you know, but as Graf was the captain I imagine there will be quite a bit about him:)

Can't think of one involving MM
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
And I am sure he will be very upset to be put in this thread under "Departed", being very much alive ...:laugh:
 

stumpski

International Captain
Going back to Alfred Mynn - 'the single most important cricketer of the 19th century?' I think the good Doctor might have had something to say about that.

No doubt Mynn was among the best of his time though - the period 1830-50. Almost the Dark Ages in cricketing terms as there was no international competition to speak of.
 
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JBMAC

State Captain
Schofield Haigh (born March 19, 1871, Berry Brow, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England, died February 27, 1921, Taylor Hill, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England) was a Yorkshire and England cricketer who was probably the most lethal bowler on a sticky wicket ever known.

He played club cricket for Keighley Cricket Club and made his debut for Yorkshire County Cricket Club in 1895, playing for the Tykes until 1913. He played sporadically for England from the 1898/99 tour to 1912 and was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1901.

He bowled right-hand medium pace, but could vary it with slower or faster deliveries very well, and when the pitch helped him he made the ball spin back from the off so much that not even the most skilful batsmen could play him. Indeed, studying county cricket one notices how no batsman ever mastered Haigh in form on a drying pitch, not even men of such skill as possessed by Hobbs, Abel, J.T. Tyldesley, or MacLaren. The deadliness of Haigh's break-back can also be seen in the over 74 percent of his wickets were gained without assistance from fieldsmen - the highest of any bowler with over 500 wickets.

However, because he was of very slight build, Haigh was not able to undertake arduous spells of bowling and his output of overs was always very low for a frontline bowler. Moreover, he lacked the pace to be truly threatening against top batsmen on a good pitch. This explains why Haigh was never even considered for a tour of Australia, and also why his record in Test cricket - apart from one match on matting in South Africa - was modest compared to his prolific exploits in the county game.

The fact that Haigh was not flogged by his captains on good pitches explains his seemingly extraordinary record in first-class cricket. He has the lowest average of any bowler taking 1000 wickets since 1895 except for Hedley Verity. Haigh was also a determined batsman, who hit 1000 runs in 1904 and scored a hundred before lunch in 1901, and a keen fieldsman.

Strangely, Haigh began with Yorkshire as a distinctly fast bowler with a difficult slower ball. Using such methods, combined with a deadly break-back, Haigh was seen in 1896 as the hard-wicket bowler Yorkshire were looking for. He took 84 wickets for just over 15 runs each and took 8 for 78 on a good wicket against the Australians.

However, the following year the strain on his slight frame of bowling fast began to tell on Haigh, and though his 91 wickets at 18.75 placed him in the top twenty of the national averages, he was already noticed to be less formidable than Yorkshire's other bowlers on firm pitches, but quite unplayable after rain - as in the home games with Surrey and Derbyshire. Although he produced a superb, skilful performance against Middlesex at Lord's on a hard pitch the following year, Haigh did comparatively little of note except on sticky wickets. However, just how irresistible he was under those conditions were shown when his bowling beat Hampshire in a day's cricket with 14 for 43. From that point onwards, Haigh was a reliably deadly force on sticky wickets and though his batting developed so well that he averaged 26 in 1901 and saved Yorkshire from defeat at Worcester in 1900. That year, Haigh took 163 wickets for just over 14 each, and in 1902 he was so deadly that 158 wickets fell to him in only 799 overs.

Called to the Test side with a sticky wicket expected in 1905, Haigh had a surprising off-day and was not picked again until 1909. However, so deadly was his bowling on the many sticky wickets of Yorkshire that he came very close to heading the averages for five successive seasons - being only shaded out by Albert Hallam in 1907, in which year he took 13 for 40 against Warwickshire. In these years, Haigh could be relied on to take four or five wickets for fewer than twenty runs every time there was a bad wicket. He was not a bowler for marathon spells, but with such bowlers as Wilfred Rhodes and George Hirst to do the 'donkey work' Haigh could be saved for the kill. After a poor season by his own high standards in 1910, Haigh returned to form in 1911 despite unfavourable pitches and was as irresistible as ever in the dreadful summer of 1912. His 96 wickets for 11.41 was decisive in Yorkshire's Championship win, but another unsuccessful Test appearance and the fact that he was already a veteran at forty-one made him decide to move into coaching at the end of 1913. Strangely enough, he retained his place for Yorkshire primarily as a batsman with a long series of useful - though never large innings, whilst his bowling lapsed into decline.

After 1913 Haigh was a coach at Winchester School, where he was responsible for the emergence of Douglas Jardine. He also umpired several first class matches at the Scarborough Festival after he retired. He died prematurely in early 1921 as a result of a stroke.
 

JBMAC

State Captain
DEFINITELY a Forgotten Hero!
McLEOD CHARLES, born October 24, 1869, died November 26. While Wisden was passing through the press the news came from Melbourne by mail that Charles McLeod died on the 26th of November at his time at Toorah. Though never a great force in Australian cricket he was an excellent all-round man, good enough for a place in almost any eleven. He came to England with the great Australian team of 1899, and paid us a second visit in 1905. In both tours, without doing anything startling, he justified his selection. In 1899 he was overshadowed by the many finer batsmen on the side, but he scored 545 runs, with an average of 17. The Australians were so strong that he was given a chance in only one of the five Test matches, but against England at the Oval he scored 31 not out and 77. He was always a batsman of the ultra-careful school, very strong in defence, but undistinguished in style. Bowling fairly well in 1899 he took eighty-one wickets at a rather heavy cost. The tour of 1905 found him much the same cricketer as before; he scored 722 runs and took ninety-one wickets. This time he played in all five Test matches, but did little or nothing. For many seasons-- 1893 to 1905-- McLeod was a member of the Victorian eleven in the inter-State matches. He played an innings of 112 against England at Melbourne in 1898 and scored 100 against New South Wales in 1896.
 

JBMAC

State Captain
Could have been one of the Greats!
Full name Archibald Jackson
Born September 5, 1909, Rutherglen, Lanarkshire, Scotland
Died February 16, 1933, Clayfields, Brisbane, Queensland (aged 23 years 164 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Also known as Archibald Alexander Jackson
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile

There are those who argue to this day that had he lived, Archie Jackson would have rivaled Don Bradman as the greatest batsman off all time. Jackson's death from tuberculosis at the tragically young age of 23 - no Test cricketer has died younger - meant that he gave only glimpses of what might have been. Jackson was a graceful batsman, his innings punctuated by delicate leg-glances, wristy flicks through the covers and exquisite footwork. He made his debut for New South Wales at the age of 17, and within a year was touring New Zealand with Australia, although he had to wait until the fourth Ashes Test of 1928-29 to make his Test debut. In it he hit 164 and a remarkable career beckoned. He struggled for form on the 1930 tour of England, his courageous 73 at The Oval when he added 243 for the fourth wicket with Bradman a rare highlight. But his successes were made against the backdrop of his failing health, and his appearances grew rarer. He died on February 16, 1933, the day that England regained the Ashes in the Bodyline series.
Martin Williamson

Wisden obituary
JACKSON, MR. ARCHIBALD, the New South Wales and Australian Test cricketer, died at Brisbane on February 16, the day that England defeated Australia and regained the Ashes, at the early age of 23. His passing was not only a very sad loss to Australian cricket in particular but to the cricket world in general. A native of Scotland, where he was born on September 5, 1909, he was hailed as a second Victor Trumper--a comparison made alike for his youthful success, elegant style and superb stroke play. Well set up, very active on his feet, and not afraid to jump in to the slow bowlers and hit the ball hard, he accomplished far more in big cricket than Trumper had done at his age. He first attracted attention when at school at Balmain, Sydney, and later at the Roselle School. So quickly did he mature that, at the age of seventeen, he gained an assured place in the New South Wales team. In his first season of Sheffield Shield cricket he scored 464 runs at an average of 58; next year he achieved a feat no other batsman of his age had performed, by making two centuries in a match--131 and 122 against South Australia. For a time Jackson had something of a reputation of being a second innings batsman, for often he failed at his first attempt and then made a good score in the second innings. This weakness, however, he overcame and he soon established himself as an opening batsman for New South Wales. Given his place in the Australian team when the M.C.C. side, under the captaincy of Mr. A. P. F. Chapman, toured Australia in 1928-29, Jackson, on his first appearance in Test cricket against England, made a hundred--the youngest player to do so. This was at Adelaide where in the Fourth Test Match, which England won by 12 runs, he scored 164. For sheer brilliance of execution his strokes during this delightful display could scarcely have been exceeded. He reached three figures with a glorious square drive off Larwood in the first over after lunch and was one of the very few Australian batsmen who during that tour could successfully jump in and drive J. C. White. An innings of 182 in the Australian Test Trial--regarded as the finest he ever played--made certain of his inclusion in the team which visited England in 1930. Unfortunately, English cricket lovers did not in that tour see Jackson at his best, for although he scored over 1,000 runs he failed to reveal his true form until towards the end of the summer. Then, in the final Test Match at the Oval, he put together a score of 73 and helped Bradman in a partnership of 243 for the fourth wicket which still stands as a record in a Test Match between Australia and England. Jackson, of course, never saw Trumper play, but Kippax, in style and stance and in some strokes, was not unlike Trumper; and Jackson, consciously or unconsciously, and while giving full play to his natural tendencies, took Kippax as his model. He had a splendid return from the deep field and, if not so fast a runner as Bradman, covered ground very quickly. His later years were marred by continued ill-health and his untimely end was not unexpected. While lying in hospital on what was to prove his death-bed he was married*.
 

JBMAC

State Captain
Bobby Peel-For those who want to know
Robert ("Bobby") Peel (born February 12, 1857 in Leeds, died August 12, 1943 in Leeds) was a Yorkshire and England cricketer: a left-arm spinner who ranks as one of the finest bowlers of the 1890s. His record in Test matches, though flattered by the primitiveness of the pitches, is still remarkable. He was also a capable batsman, who once hit 210 not out (out of a record County Championship total of 887 against Warwickshire). However, he is well remembered for being the first player in Test cricket history to have been dismissed four times in succession without scoring (in 1894/1895).

Peel emerged in first-class cricket for Yorkshire in 1882 and quickly established himself as a skillful left-arm spin bowler with extraordinary accuracy of pitch and the ability to bowl a fast ball that obtained many wickets. His ability was considered so highly by 1884 that, even though he was relatively inexperienced, Alfred Shaw took him to Australia in 1884/1885, where he appeared in all three Tests. He took 21 wickets, but played disappointingly in the dry summer of 1885. Despite recovering his form, Peel did not play in the three 1886 Tests, but in 1887/1888 he played superbly at the Sydney Cricket Ground, taking nine wickets for 58 runs and being England's match-winner.

In the extremely wet summer of 1888, Peel took 100 wickets for the first time and, on a series of sticky wickets, took 24 wickets for less than eight runs each in three Tests against Australia, including 11 for 68 in the deciding match at Old Trafford. He accomplished many bowling feats that year, the most remarkable of which was 8 for 12 and 6 for 21 against Nottinghamshire. This saw Peel named among the first batch of Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1889 (it was actually titled Six Great Bowlers Of The Year).

In the following years, Peel took over 100 wickets every year, except in 1891 when he took only 99 (a disappointing record, given the exceptionally helpful pitches of the time and the wetness of that summer). Peel equalled his 1888 haul of 171 wickets in 1890, and came close to a thousand runs in 1889 and 1891, scoring in the former year 158 against Middlesex. However, owing to competition from bowlers such as Johnny Briggs, Peel did not make consistent appearances in the England Test team playing in only one out of three Tests in both 1890 and 1893. Whilst his batting declined somewhat for a few seasons between 1892 and 1895, Peel headed the first-class bowling averages in 1893 and took a career-best 180 wickets in 1895, when after a slow start on much-improved wickets in very dry weather, his spin and guile made him almost unplayable when the weather broke up in July. His 15 for 50 against Somerset and 10 for 59 against Gloucestershire were both match-winning performances.

Meanwhile, Peel's excellent bowling on generally very hard and true Australian pitches in the tour of 1894/1895 had seemed to cement his place as the best slow bowler in the world. Though this tour is best remembered for his then-record four successive ducks, Peel did bat well on a couple of other occasions during a close and at times gruelling series.

The summer of 1896 saw Peel, aided by the remarkably rapid improvement in pitches that occurred during the 1890s, develop so much as a batsman that he hit three centuries during one of England's driest Mays on record. The excellent pitches did nullify his spin and his average at one point was twice his 1895 average, but he was as effective as ever when rain-affected pitches returned and, chosen because of a soft wicket for the last Test, he was so unplayable that Australia lost their first nine wickets for 25 runs.

However, in 1897, during a disappointing season by his own standards, Peel's behaviour saw him disciplined by the Yorkshire club's committee over disagreements concerning pay and other occasions when he had to be helped from the pitch. There is a famous story about him bowling in the wrong direction and even urinating on the pitch. These issues were never reconciled, and Peel, still bowling and batting well, never played county cricket again. In fact, apart from one match for an England XI in 1899, he never played first-class cricket again. Unlike the more sober Johnny Briggs, his main competitor for an England place, he lived a long life. Peel died on August 12, 1941.
 

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