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Chris Cairns (c)
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Paul Nixon (wk)
Min Patel
John Stephenson

Johnny Tyldesley

England

Player profile

Full name John Thomas Tyldesley
Born November 22, 1873, Roe Green, Worsley, Lancashire
Died November 27, 1930, Monton, Salford, Lancashire (aged 57 years 5 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Relations Brother - GE Tyldesley

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 31 55 1 1661 138 30.75 4 9 3 16 0
First-class 608 994 62 37897 295* 40.66 86 193 359 0

Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 31 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 608 296 211 3 1/4 70.33 4.27 98.6 0 0

Career statistics
Test debut South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Feb 14-16, 1899 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at Manchester, Jul 26-28, 1909 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1895 - 1923

 Profile

Wisden obituary
TYLDESLEY, JOHN THOMAS, one of England's greatest batsmen, who had been in weak health for some years, died on November 27. On the morning of his death he was putting on his boots before going to his business at Deansgate, Manchester, when he collapsed and died. He had carried on his duties as coach at Old Trafford until the end of last summer. Born at Roe Green, Worsley, on November 22, 1873, he was just 57 years of age at the time of his death. Tyldesley received his early training in Lancashire club cricket -- a very stiff school -- and was a well equipped batsman when he first appeared for Lancashire in 1895. In his second match he scored 152 not out against Warwickshire on the Edgbaston ground -- the scene of many triumphs for him in subsequent years. He did nothing else of much note that summer -- he was not given a trial until the middle of July -- but two years later he made over 1,000 runs, and he achieved that performance for nineteen consecutive seasons. Four times he scored over 2,000 runs, and in 1901 he had an aggregate of 3,041, his innings including nine separate centuries, eight of which were made for Lancashire, and his average being 55. In two seasons -- 1897 and 1904 -- he played three successive innings of a hundred, and on three occasions he made two separate hundreds in the same match. These scores were 106 and 100 not out for Lancashire against Warwickshire in 1897, 121 and 100 not out in a North and South match in 1900, and 136 and 101 for Lancashire against Hampshire in 1910. His highest innings -- all for his county -- were:

295* v. Kent, at Manchester 1906
272 v. Derbyshire, at Chesterfield 1919
253 v. Kent, at Canterbury 1914
250 v. Notts, at Trent Bridge 1905
249 v. Leicestershire, at Leicester 1899
248 v. Worcestershire, at Liverpool 1903
243 v. Leicestershire, at Leicester 1908
225 v. Notts, at Trent Bridge 1904
221 v. Notts, at Trent Bridge 1901
210 v. Somerset, at Bath 1904
210 v. Surrey, at The Oval 1913
209 v. Warwickshire, at Edgbaston 1907
200 v. Derbyshire, at Manchester 1898
* signifies not out

Altogether in the course of his brilliant career he scored 37,803 runs in first-class matches with an average of nearly 41, and made eighty-six separate centuries. He played frequently in Gentlemen v. Players matches and in 1901 made 140 at Lord's. He also took a leading part in Test match cricket between 1899 and 1909, appearing for England in sixteen games in this country and going out to Australia with A. C. MacLaren's team in 1901-02 and with the M.C.C.'s side two years later. In England he made three hundreds against Australia, scoring 138 at Birmingham in 1902 (after the side had started in disastrous fashion), 100 at Leeds in 1905, and 112 not out at The Oval in the latter year. In all he scored 1,661 runs in Test Matches with an average of 30. Tyldesley was a member of the team Lord Hawke took out to South Africa in the winter of 1898-99. He scored 742 runs during the tour with an average of 32. Among his innings was one of 112 in a Test match at Cape Town. There were few batsmen more attractive to watch than John Tyldesley. He was exceptionally quick on his feet and so always appeared to have plenty of time in which to make his strokes. Essentially a batsman of enterprise, when he went forward to the ball it was nearly always to hit. He also possessed a very strong defence and had at his command practically all the strokes in the game. His ability to adapt himself to circumstances was emphasised in a Test match at The Oval in 1905, when Armstrong, bowling well outside the leg-stump with an offbreak, reduced to impotence a number of batsmen, but not Tyldesley, who drew back and cut him. One of the best of outfieldsmen, he was very fast, picked the ball up cleanly, and had a very accurate return, in addition to being a very sure catch.

His benefit match, against Yorkshire at Manchester in 1906, yielded a profit of £3,105. Ernest Tyldesley, the Lancashire batsman, is a younger brother of John Tyldesley.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

 Notes
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1902

 Latest Articles

 Latest Photos

England touring party, 1924-25
England touring party, 1924-25
© Unknown

Johnny Tyldesley
Johnny Tyldesley
© Wisden

May 29, 1905

(L-R) Stanley Jackson and Joe Darling; Australia take the field;  Bernie Bosanquet and Johnny Tyldesley
(L-R) Stanley Jackson and Joe Darling; Australia take the field; Bernie Bosanquet and Johnny Tyldesley
© The Lord Price Collection

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