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10 for 10

Page 15

by Chris Waters


  Born: 18 September 1892, Newstead Colliery, Nottinghamshire

  Died: 4 June 1950, Nottingham

  Role: Right-hand batsman, right-arm off-spin bowler

  First-class playing career: 1920–1934

  Test record: Matches 3, Innings 5, Not outs 0, Runs 65, Average 13.00, Highest score 39; Wickets 15, Average 29.00, Best bowling 3-50

  First-class record: Matches 385, Innings 475, Not outs 95, Runs 6, 470, Average 17.02, Highest score 110, 100s 1, 50s 19; Wickets 1, 331, Average 22.85, Best bowling 9-141, 5wi 72, 10wm 11; Catches 335

  What happened next: Like his younger brother, Staples retired due to sciatica and, in 1934, he became assistant coach at Nottinghamshire to Jimmy Iremonger. Staples had four years in the role before succeeding Jack Carlin as the club’s scorer. Staples, the fourth-highest wicket-taker in Nottinghamshire’s history behind “Topsy” Wass, Voce and William Attewell, left Trent Bridge in 1939 to take up a coaching position at Hampshire. He became a first-class umpire in 1949 but was forced to retire after one season due to ill health and died shortly afterwards.

  The Umpires

  Bill Reeves

  Full name: William Reeves

  Born: 22 June 1875, Cambridge

  Died: 22 March 1944, Hammersmith, London

  First-class umpiring career: 1920–1939

  Tests umpired: 5

  First-class matches umpired: 380

  What happened next: Having officiated three Tests in the mid-1920s, Reeves stood in two more in 1937 and 1939. The last of those, against West Indies at The Oval, was England’s final Test match before the war. Reeves had been due to preside over the Fourth Test of the 1938 Ashes at Old Trafford but the game was abandoned without a ball being bowled. He stood in first-class cricket for two decades and was a popular figure with players and crowds, while he had been coaching schoolboys at Lord’s just prior to his death, aged 68.

  Harry Baldwin

  Full name: Herbert George Baldwin

  Born: 16 March 1893, Hartley Wintney, Hampshire

  Died: 7 March 1969, Hartley Wintney, Hampshire

  First-class umpiring career: 1930–1962

  Tests umpired: 9

  First-class matches umpired: 639

  What happened next: Baldwin stood in nine Tests, the most famous of which was the last one of the 1948 Ashes series at The Oval, when Eric Hollies bowled Don Bradman for a second-ball duck. In 1938, Baldwin caused a stir by no-balling Australian pace man Ernie McCormick 19 times in three overs in the opening tour match at Worcester. McCormick apologised to Baldwin for causing him so much trouble. Baldwin enjoyed a prolific umpiring career that spanned over three decades, while his father, Harry, a former Hampshire player, was also a first-class umpire.

  Ten Wickets in an Innings in First-Class Cricket

  10-10 Hedley Verity, Yorkshire v Nottinghamshire, Leeds, 1932

  10-18 George Geary, Leicestershire v Glamorgan, Pontypridd, 1929

  10-20 Premangsu Chatterjee, Bengal v Assam, Jorhat, 1957

  10-26 Bert Vogler, Eastern Province v Griqualand West, Johannesburg, 1906

  *10-28 Albert Moss, Canterbury v Wellington, Christchurch, 1889

  10-28 Bill Howell, Australians v Surrey, The Oval, 1899

  10-28 Naeem Akhtar, Rawalpindi B v Peshawar, Peshawar, 1995

  10-30 Colin Blythe, Kent v Northamptonshire, Northampton, 1907

  10-32 Harry Pickett, Essex v Leicestershire, Leyton, 1895

  10-35 Alonzo Drake, Yorkshire v Somerset, Weston-super-Mare, 1914

  10-36 Hedley Verity, Yorkshire v Warwickshire, Leeds, 1931

  10-36 Tim Wall, South Australia v New South Wales, Sydney, 1933

  10-37 Alex Kennedy, Players v Gentlemen, The Oval, 1927

  10-37 Clarrie Grimmett, Australians v Yorkshire, Sheffield, 1930

  10-38 Samuel Butler, Oxford University v Cambridge University, Lord’s, 1871

  10-40 Edward Dennett, Gloucestershire v Essex, Bristol, 1906

  10-40 Billy Bestwick, Derbyshire v Glamorgan, Cardiff, 1921

  10-40 Gubby Allen, Middlesex v Lancashire, Lord’s, 1929

  10-41 Jack Bannister, Warwickshire v Combined Services, Birmingham, 1959

  10-41 Pramodya Wickramasinghe, Sinhalese Sports Club v Kalutara Physical Culture Centre, Colombo, 1991

  10-42 Albert Trott, Middlesex v Somerset, Taunton, 1900

  10-43 Edward Barratt, Players v Australians, The Oval, 1878

  10-43 Tom Rushby, Surrey v Somerset, Taunton, 1921

  10-44 Ian Brayshaw, Western Australia v Victoria, Perth, 1967

  10-45 Tom Richardson, Surrey v Essex, The Oval, 1894

  10-45 Richard Johnson, Middlesex v Derbyshire, Derby, 1994

  10-46 William Hickton, Lancashire v Hampshire, Manchester, 1870

  10-46 Debasis Mohanty, East Zone v South Zone, Agartala, 2001

  10-47 Frank Smailes, Yorkshire v Derbyshire, Sheffield, 1939

  10-47 Ottis Gibson, Durham v Hampshire, Chester-le-Street, 2007

  10-48 Cyril Bland, Sussex v Kent, Tonbridge, 1899

  10-49 W. G. Grace, MCC v Oxford University, The Parks, 1886

  10-49 Ted Tyler, Somerset v Surrey, Taunton, 1895

  10-49 Eric Hollies, Warwickshire v Nottinghamshire, Birmingham, 1946

  10-49 Ian Thomson, Sussex v Warwickshire, Worthing, 1964

  10-51 Harry Howell, Warwickshire v Yorkshire, Birmingham, 1923

  10-51 Jack Mercer, Glamorgan v Worcestershire, Worcester, 1936

  10-53 Bart King, Gentlemen of Philadelphia v Gentlemen of Ireland, Haverford, Pennsylvania, 1909

  10-53 “Tich” Freeman, Kent v Essex, Southend, 1930

  10-53 Jim Laker, England v Australia, Manchester, 1956

  10-54 George Wootton, All England Eleven v Yorkshire, Sheffield, 1865

  10-54 Tony Lock, Surrey v Kent, Blackheath, 1956

  10-55 Johnny Briggs, Lancashire v Worcestershire, Manchester, 1900

  10-58 Shahid Mahmood, Karachi Whites v Khairpur, Karachi, 1969

  10-59 George Burton, Middlesex v Surrey, The Oval, 1888

  10-59 Stephen Jeffries, Western Province v Orange Free State, Cape Town, 1987

  10-61 Peter Allan, Queensland v Victoria, Melbourne, 1966

  10-64 Tommy Mitchell, Derbyshire v Leicestershire, Leicester, 1935

  10-65 George Collins, Kent v Nottinghamshire, Dover, 1922

  10-65 Mario Oliver, Warriors v Eagles, Bloemfontein, 2007

  10-66 George Giffen, Australian XI v Combined XI, Sydney, 1884

  10-66 Arthur Mailey, Australians v Gloucestershire, Cheltenham, 1921

  10-66 Ken Graveney, Gloucestershire v Derbyshire, Chesterfield, 1949

  10-66 Ken Smales, Nottinghamshire v Gloucestershire, Stroud, 1956

  10-67 Eddie Watts, Surrey v Warwickshire, Birmingham, 1939

  10-69 Sammy Woods, Cambridge University v C. I. Thornton’s XI, Cambridge, 1890

  10-73 Alfred Shaw, MCC v North, Lord’s, 1874

  10-74 Vyell Walker, England v Surrey, The Oval, 1859

  10-74 Anil Kumble, India v Pakistan, Delhi, 1999

  10-76 Jack White, Somerset v Worcestershire, Worcester, 1921

  10-78 Fergie Gupte, Bombay v Pakistan Combined Services and Bahawalpur XI, Bombay, 1954

  10-78 Tony Pearson, Cambridge University v Leicestershire, Loughborough, 1961

  10-78 Pradeep Sunderam, Rajasthan v Vidarbha, Jodhpur, 1985

  10-79 Charlie Parker, Gloucestershire v Somerset, Bristol, 1921

  10-79 “Tich” Freeman, Kent v Lancashire, Manchester, 1931

  10-88 Jim Laker, Surrey v Australians, The Oval, 1956

  10-90 Arthur Fielder, Players v Gentlemen, Lord’s, 1906

  10-90 Jim Sims, East v West, Kingston-upon-Thames, 1948

  10-90 Trevor Bailey, Essex v Lancashire, Clacton-on-Sea, 1949

  10-92 Imran Adil, Bahawalpur v Faisalabad, Faisalabad, 1989

  10-102 Bob Berry, Lancashire v Worcestershire, Blackpool, 1953

  10-104 Vyell Walke
r, Middlesex v Lancashire, Manchester, 1865

  10-113 Tom Goddard, Gloucestershire v Worcestershire, Cheltenham, 1937

  10-127 Vallance Jupp, Northamptonshire v Kent, Tunbridge Wells, 1932

  10-129 James Lillywhite junior, South v North, Canterbury, 1872

  10-131 “Tich” Freeman, Kent v Lancashire, Maidstone, 1929

  10-143 Zulfiqar Babar, Multan v Islamabad, Multan, 2009

  10-175 Eddie Hemmings, International XI v West Indies XI, Kingston, 1982

  **10-? Edmund Hinkly, Kent v England, Lord’s, 1848

  **10-? John Wisden, North v South, Lord’s, 1850

  In addition, the following instances were achieved in 12-a-side games:

  10-36 Fitz Hinds, A. B. St Hill’s XII v Trinidad, Port-of-Spain, 1901

  10-69 E. M. Grace, Gentlemen of Marylebone Cricket Club v Gentlemen of Kent, Canterbury, 1862

  10-92 W. G. Grace, Gentlemen of Marylebone Cricket Club v Kent, Canterbury, 1873

  * On first-class debut

  ** There is no record of the runs conceded by Edmund Hinkly and John Wisden

  (Statistics correct at time of writing).

  Bibliography

  Ashley-Cooper, F. S., Nottinghamshire Cricket and Cricketers, Henry B. Saxton, 1923

  Bailey, Philip; Thorn, Philip; Wynne-Thomas, Peter, Who’s Who of Cricketers, Newnes Books, 1984

  Boothroyd, Derrick, Half a Century of Yorkshire Cricket, Kennedy Brothers Ltd., 1981

  Bowes, Bill, Express Deliveries, Stanley Paul, 1949

  Cardus, Neville, Cardus on Cricket, Sportsman’s Book Club, 1949

  Cardus, Neville, Play Resumed with Cardus, Souvenir Press, 1979

  Carr, A. W., Cricket with the Lid Off, Hutchinson & Co, 1935

  Carr, J. L., Carr’s Dictionary of Extra-Ordinary Cricketers, The Quince Tree Press, 1977 (new edition, Aurum, 2005)

  Chalke, Stephen, Five Five Five: Holmes and Sutcliffe in 1932, Fairfield Books, 2007

  Davidson, Max, We’ll Get ’Em in Sequins: Manliness, Yorkshire Cricket and the Century that Changed Everything, John Wisden & Co., 2012

  Davis, Sam, Hedley Verity: Prince with a Piece of Leather, The Epworth Press, 1952

  Douglas, Christopher, Douglas Jardine: Spartan Cricketer, Methuen, 2002

  Duckworth, Leslie, Holmes and Sutcliffe: The Run Stealers, Hutchinson & Co, 1970

  Frindall, Bill, (ed.), The Wisden Book of Test Cricket 1876–77 to 1977–78, Macdonald & Jane’s, 1980

  Frith, David, The Slow Men, Allen and Unwin, 1984

  Frith, David, Pageant of Cricket, Macmillan, 1987

  Frith, David, Bodyline Autopsy, Aurum, 2002

  Frith, David, Frith on Cricket, Great Northern Books, 2010

  Gardiner, Juliet, The Thirties: An Intimate History, Harper Press, 2011

  Green, Benny, (ed.), Wisden Anthology 1864–1900, Queen Anne Press, 1979

  Green, Benny, (ed.), Wisden Anthology 1900–1940, Queen Anne Press, 1980

  Hamilton, Duncan, (ed.), Sweet Summers: The Classic Cricket Writing of JM Kilburn, Great Northern Books, 2008

  Hamilton, Duncan, Harold Larwood, Quercus, 2009

  Hamilton, Duncan, (ed.), Wisden on Yorkshire, John Wisden & Co., 2011

  Haynes, Basil; Lucas, John, The Trent Bridge Battery: The Story of the Sporting Gunns, Willow Books, 1985

  Hayter, Reg, (ed.), The Best of The Cricketer 1921–1981, Cassell, 1981

  Hill, Alan, Hedley Verity: A Portrait of a Cricketer, Kingswood, 1986 (reissued version, Mainstream, 2000)

  Hodgson, Derek, The Official History of Yorkshire County Cricket Club, The Crowood Press, 1989

  Holloway, David (ed.), The Thirties: A Chronicle of the Decade, Simon & Schuster, 1993

  Hutton, Len, Cricket is My Life, Hutchinson & Co., 1949

  Hutton, Len, Just My Story, Hutchinson & Co., 1956

  Hutton, Len, Fifty Years in Cricket, Stanley Paul, 1984

  Jennings, Grenville, Nottinghamshire Cricketers on Old Picture Postcards, Reflections of a Bygone Age, 1980

  Kay, John, (ed.), Cricket Heroes, The Cricket Writers’ Club, Phoenix Sports Books, 1959

  Kilburn, J. M., In Search of Cricket, Arthur Barker, 1937

  Kilburn, J. M.; Nash, J. H., History of Yorkshire County Cricket 1924–1949, Yorkshire County Cricket Club, 1950

  Kilburn, J. M., Yorkshire, Convoy, 1950

  Kilburn, J. M., A History of Yorkshire Cricket, Stanley Paul, 1970

  Kilburn, J. M., Thanks to Cricket, Stanley Paul, 1972

  Kilburn, J. M., Overthrows, Stanley Paul, 1975

  Larwood, Harold; Perkins, Kevin, The Larwood Story, Bonpara Pty, 1982

  Ledbetter, Jim, 100 Greats: Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, Tempus, 2003

  Lemmon, David, Cricket’s Champion Counties, Breedon Books, 1991

  Lucy, Nick; Dalling, Harry, Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club: A Man for 40 Seasons, Archive Publications, 1988

  Marshall, John, Headingley, Pelham Books, 1970

  Mills, Robert, Field of Dreams: Headingley 1890–2001, Great Northern Books, 2001

  Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club Yearbook, various editions

  Pope, Mick; Dyson, Paul, 100 Greats: Yorkshire County Cricket Club, Tempus, 2001

  Porter, Dilwyn, Yesterday’s Britain, Reader’s Digest, 1998

  Pullin, A. W., History of Yorkshire County Cricket 1903–1923, Chorley & Pickersgill, 1924

  Rickson, Barry, Hedley Verity: Famous Cricketers Series, Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians, 1999

  Robertson-Glasgow, R. C., Cricket Prints: Some Batsmen and Bowlers 1920-1940, T. Werner Laurie, 1943

  Robertson-Glasgow, R. C., More Cricket Prints: Some Batsmen and Bowlers 1920-1945, T. Werner Laurie, 1948

  Rogers, Byron, The Last Englishman: The Life of JL Carr, Aurum, 2002

  Rosenwater, Irving, Sir Donald Bradman: A Biography, Batsford, 1978

  Ross, Gordon, Cricket’s Great Characters, G. Ross, 1977

  Sutcliffe, Herbert, For England and Yorkshire, Edward Arnold & Co., 1935

  Thacker, Matt, (ed.), The Nightwatchman, Issue 1 (Verity’s War by James Holland), John Wisden & Co., 2013

  Thomas, Peter, Yorkshire Cricketers 1839-1939, Hodgson, 1973

  Thomson, A. A., Hirst and Rhodes, The Epworth Press, 1959

  Verity, Hedley, Bowling ’Em Out, Hutchinson & Co., 1936

  Warner, David, The Sweetest Rose: 150 Years of Yorkshire County Cricket Club 1863–2013, Great Northern Books, 2012

  Williams, Marcus, (ed.), Double Century: 200 Years of Cricket in The Times, Collins, 1985

  Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack, various editions

  Woodhouse, Anthony, The History of Yorkshire County Cricket Club, Christopher Helm, 1989

  Wynne-Thomas, Peter, Nottinghamshire Cricketers 1919–1939, Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, 1980

  Wynne-Thomas, Peter, Trent Bridge: A History of the Ground to Commemorate the 150th Anniversary (1838–1988), Nottinghamshire County Council in association with Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, 1987

  Wynne-Thomas, Peter, The History of Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, Christopher Helm, 1992

  Yorkshire County Cricket Club Yearbook, various editions

  Acknowledgements

  My thanks to the late Frank Shipston, who unknowingly inspired this book, and the late Douglas Verity, who encouraged me to write it. I was privileged to count Douglas as a friend in the short time I knew him and will treasure his memory always. Thanks also to his widow, Ann, one of the nicest people I have met, and to Frank Shipston’s son, Peter, for kindly answering follow-up enquiries. I am also grateful to the late John Robert Richardson and his ever-helpful daughter Rosemary Norkett, as well as her equally helpful husband, Stan.

  A special thank you to Sidney Fielden, who supplied me with various research items including a typed-up copy of Hedley Verity senior’s memoir. Sidney was Douglas Verity’s best friend and he admired Hedley Verity to the extent that Douglas used to joke that Sidne
y thought more about his father than he did. Likewise, I am greatly obliged to those who cast a sagacious eye over the manuscript: the writers Stephen Chalke and Paul Edwards, the Yorkshire cricket lover Ron Deaton and the Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club librarian Peter Wynne-Thomas, all of whom helped beyond the call of duty. Not only did they make any number of insightful suggestions, they also spared me from more errors than might otherwise remain.

  For help with pictures, my thanks again to Peter Wynne-Thomas and Ron Deaton especially, plus Duncan Anderson, Madeleine Deaton, Tony Debenham, David Frith, David Hall, Ted Kirwan, William H. Roberts, Iain Taylor, Jon Wager, Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, the Verity family and Yorkshire County Cricket Club.

  I would also like to thank David Allan, Bob Appleyard, Robert Carr, Duncan Hamilton, the late Mary Kilburn and Roy D. Wilkinson. Apologies to anyone I’ve forgotten.

  This book could not have been written without access to old newspapers and, for that, I am indebted to staff at the Yorkshire Post, Leeds Central Library, Nottingham Central Library, Nottingham Post and Halifax Courier.

  Last but not least, my thanks to publisher Charlotte Atyeo and the team at Bloomsbury.

  First published in Great Britain 2014

  This electronic edition published in 2014 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  Copyright © 2014 by Chris Waters

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

  No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles or reviews

  Every reasonable effort has been made to trace copyright holders of material reproduced in this book, but if any have been inadvertently overlooked the publisher would be glad to hear from them

  Published in the UK by

  John Wisden & Co.

  An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  50 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP

  www.wisden.com

  www.bloomsbury.com

  Bloomsbury is a trademark of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  Bloomsbury Publishing, London, New Delhi, New York and Sydney

 

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