Other personalities of interest from around the world
Some of those who appeared in fewer than ten first-class matches
are included under Briefly Noted after the main listing. Wisden always
welcomes information about those who might be included. Please send details
to almanack@wisdengroup.com or to Matthew Engel at Fair Oak, Bacton,
Herefordshire HR2 0AT.
FANTHAM, WILLIAM ERNEST, died on April 16, 2006, aged 87. Bill Fantham
took 64 wickets in 63 matches for Warwickshire either side of the war, mostly
with off-breaks. He had started out as a leg-spinner, only to be told by Warwickshire's
resident leggie, Eric Hollies, that there was only room for one of them at
Edgbaston. Fantham started 1946 well, with four for ten and a career-best five
for 55 against Somerset; Hollies had almost identical figures. But Fantham
managed only 28 more wickets that season, and faded out of first-class cricket
after a mediocre 1947 and three games in 1948, returning to club cricket with
Mitchells & Butlers and as a professional in the Coventry Works League. His
former county team-mate, Ken Taylor, once said Fantham "looked unstoppable in
the nets, but went green in the middle".
FARAGHER, HAROLD ALKER, died on February 24, 2006, aged 88. He was
a schoolmaster who played six matches as an amateur for Essex in 1949 and 1950,
scoring three half-centuries. Faragher, the long-time captain of Ilford CC, was best
known as one of the co-founders (and, said Trevor Bailey, "the key figure") of
the indoor school at Ilford, which produced a string of Essex cricketers, including
Nasser Hussain, whose father Joe later managed the school.
FASKEN, DAVID KENNETH, died on May 24, 2006, aged 74, ten days after
falling downstairs at home - "I like to think on the way to the fridge for a latenight
snack," said his son, Hugh. Born in Malaya, Fasken was a seam bowler who
ensured himself an Oxford Blue in 1953 with five for 108 against the Australians,
dismissing Morris, Hole, Benaud, Archer and Ring. These remained his best figures
but, at a time when Oxford were short of quality bowling, he remained in the
side in 1954 and 1955. Fasken continued to play the odd first-class match -
including two for Douglas Jardine's XI in 1958. He became a director of the Earls
Court and Olympia exhibition venues.
FRANKLYN, WILLIAM LEO, who died on October 31, 2006, aged 81, was a
suave character actor best known for a long series of "Schhhh... you know who!"
advertisements for Schweppes; he was also a lifelong cricket fan. In his youth,
he had a trial with Essex, and formed half of an energetic new-ball pair for The
Stage with Brian Rix. Later, he slowed down to become a leg-spinner, by which
time he had formed his own team, the Sargent Men, to raise funds for the Sir
Malcolm Sargent cancer charity.
GARNETT, THOMAS RONALD, OAM, died on September 22, 2006, aged 91.
Tommy Garnett was headmaster of Marlborough College in England and Geelong
Grammar in Australia, bringing a distinctive and innovative approach to both
jobs. "We must have more madness," he said on arrival at Marlborough in 1952.
As a cricketer, he was not selected for any first-class matches at Cambridge, but
did play for Somerset, once in 1935, and then four times more in 1939, all in
the fortnight before war broke out. He scored a "bright" 75 on August 31, the
county's last day of first-class cricket for nearly seven years. Among Garnett's
charges in Australia was Prince Charles, whom he agreed to accept on condition
he could meet the boy and interview the parents first. On retirement, he stayed
in Victoria and constructed one of the country's most beautiful gardens on the
edge of the Wombat State Forest. He was awarded the OAM for services to
horticulture.
GIBBS, BARRY MONTGOMERY, who died on April 23, 2006, aged 73, was
secretary of the Queensland Cricket Association - initially with just one other
permanent employee - from 1961 to 1966. He then returned to commerce, mixed
with some sports writing, but was lured back to cricket in 1988, as executive
manager of the South Australian Cricket Association. He became a confidant of
Sir Donald Bradman, and was instrumental in the planning of the Adelaide Oval's
new Bradman Stand. After retirement in 1997, he wrote an affable autobiography,
My Cricket Journey.
GIRDHARI, S. K.,, died on April 15, 2006, aged about 90. An off-spinning
all-rounder, Girdhari (whose first names are unrecorded) came close to Indian
selection during nearly two decades of domestic cricket. His best chance probably
came in 1948-49 when he took five for 31, including Clyde Walcott and Gerry
Gomez, as East Zone trounced the touring West Indians by ten wickets. In the
1952-53 Ranji Trophy final for Bengal, he had match figures of 88-34-119-5
and scores of 45 and 58 not out - in vain, as Bengal narrowly lost on first innings
to Holkar. He tried life as a professional in the Lancashire leagues, and enjoyed
it so much that he eventually moved there permanently. He started with Millom
and Accrington, but is best remembered as an immaculately dressed and polite
presence at Netherfield, where he played when they joined the Northern League
in 1959.
GOODWIN, THOMAS JEFFREY, died on February 15, 2006, aged 77. A leftarm
swing bowler from Staffordshire, Jeff Goodwin took 335 wickets for
Leicestershire in the 1950s, and would have had more but for frequent injuries.
His best season was 1953, when Leicestershire briefly topped the table and finished
third: Goodwin took 86 wickets, after 67 the year before, and received his county
cap. But two injury-ravaged seasons followed: although he returned with 63 wickets
in 1956, including a career-best eight for 81 to set up victory over Sussex at Hove,
there were younger and fitter bowlers coming through. Goodwin was, as he
cheerfully admitted, "one of the worst No. 11s playing cricket", but in 1953 he
did survive for more than two hours, for a career-best 23 not out, to stave off
what had seemed certain defeat by Hampshire.
GUY, General Sir ROLAND, GCB, CBE, DSO, died on December 13, 2005, aged
77. Roly Guy was a batsman who captained Wellington College in 1946. He was
awarded a DSO after commanding a battalion of the Royal Green Jackets in West
Belfast at the height of the troubles in 1971. He went on to become adjutantgeneral,
effectively second-in-command of the Army.
HANUMANT SINGH died on November 29, 2006, aged 67, after suffering from
hepatitis and dengue fever. Of princely blood (his father was the Maharaja of
Banswara), he was regarded as a batsman of appropriate style to stand comparison
to his uncle Duleepsinhji and Duleep's uncle Ranjitsinhi. Hanumant made a silky
century on his Test debut, against England at Delhi in February 1964. It was
"delightful and delicately composed", The Times correspondent reported. "For
someone so quiet and fresh of face, the maturity was remarkable." Hanumant was
the fifth Indian to score a hundred in his first Test and, like the previous four,
never made another, winning only 13 more caps, although he did manage a fine
attacking 94 against Australia, with Graham McKenzie at the peak of his form,
at Madras in 1964-65. He went down with the ship on India's grim tour of England
in 1967, despite a fighting, unavailing, 73 at Headingley. But he was left out of
the tour of Australia that followed on
grounds of fitness - although this was a
puzzle, and the captain, the Nawab of
Pataudi, wanted him in the side: "He
should have made the trip. I asked for
him. But they did not want him. It was
very unfair." A rather disillusioned
Hanumant played only one more Test
after that, before devoting himself to
making runs for Rajasthan, for whom he
averaged over 50 in 96 matches, many
of them alongside his older brother
Suryaveer Singh. He became one of
Indian cricket's father figures, as a tour
manager, selector, ICC referee (England's
scores-level draw at Bulawayo in 1996-
97 was one of his nine Tests) and coach.
In 2000, he became the first director of
India's national academy, and then
coached players from India and abroad at
the World Cricket Academy in Mumbai.
At his funeral, he was cremated with a
bat on his chest; two of his pupils joined
the luminaries of the game there.
"Without sir, we cannot think of cricket,"
said Mohammed Moin Sheikh.
HARRIS, Chief Rabbi CYRIL, OBE, died on September 13, 2005, aged 68. After
being rabbi of the St John's Wood synagogue, opposite Lord's, Harris was
appointed Chief Rabbi of South Africa in 1987, where he became a strong
campaigner against apartheid. While in South Africa, Harris started his own MCC
- the Ministers Cricket Club - for players of all faiths. After his release, Nelson
Mandela referred to him as "my rabbi".
HARRISON, BERNARD REGINALD STANHOPE, died on March 18, 2006,
aged 71. Bernie Harrison played 14 matches for Hampshire between 1957 and
1962, including three in 1961, the first year they won the County Championship.
He hit his only first-class century that year, 110 against Oxford University at
Portsmouth, but, as an opener, found it impossible to compete with the established
pair, Roy Marshall and Jimmy Gray. A teacher (and cricket coach), he played for
the Basingstoke & North Hampshire club over five decades. He also played soccer
for Southampton, Crystal Palace and Exeter City.
HARVEY, PETER FAIRFIELD, who died on July 19, 2006, aged 83, caused a
minor sensation in 1947 when he scored a century in his second match for
Nottinghamshire - against Derbyshire at Trent Bridge - having not batted in his
first. He shared a sixth-wicket stand of 303 with Harry Winrow, a county record
that stood for 54 years. But there was only one more hundred, 150 at Leicester
in 1951, and it was as a handy leg-spinner that he secured his position - until
1953, when the Australian Bruce Dooland arrived and took over. Harvey played
on until 1958, finishing with 332 wickets for the county, but never again
commanded a regular place. Before Dooland, Harvey had enjoyed some purple
patches, notably his eight for 122 against Somerset at Nottingham in 1949, and
was occasionally mentioned as an England prospect. After leaving county cricket
he joined the big Nottingham sports outfitters, Redmayne & Todd, and remained
there until his retirement.
HASSETT, RICHARD JOSEPH, who died on November 15, 2006, aged 97, was
one of five brothers who played for Victoria's Geelong College, the most famous
of them being Lindsay, Australia's captain in the early 1950s. Dick Hassett was
an aggressive batsman who also bowled subtly varied leg-spinners at a brisk pace.
He played eight times for Victoria in his early twenties, scoring two centuries
against Tasmania in 1930-31. A chemical engineer by training, Hassett left
cricket early in order to concentrate on his career with the clothing manufacturer
Holeproof, where he worked for 43 years.
HENLEY-WELCH, DAVID FRANCIS, died on February 20, 2006, aged 82. A
fastish bowler and a useful batsman, the Old Harrovian David Henley played most
of his first-class cricket for Oxford University. He won a last-gasp Blue in 1947,
taking the final place in the side after the Australian "Jika" Travers lost form, and
hit a rapid 52 in the Varsity Match. He missed out on a second Blue in 1948
(even though by then he had acquired a second barrel to his surname), being
supplanted by the future South African captain Clive van Ryneveld. He later scored
more than 2,000 runs for Suffolk.
HENRY, TREVOR, who died of cancer on February 6, 2006, aged 51, was
Ireland's leading umpire, and had just been appointed to ICC's new ten-strong
associates and affiliates panel. He was due to officiate in the Under-19 World Cup
in Sri Lanka early in 2006 before illness forced his withdrawal. Ehsan Mani, then
president of the ICC, praised his commitment, skill and easy-going likeability.
Though Henry's nickname in Irish cricket circles was "Trigger", it was applied
with respect and affection.
HILL, GERALD, died on January 31, 2006, aged 92. Gerry Hill's 22-year county
career was helped on its way by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who played golf with
Hill's father and recommended the boy to Hampshire. It also survived a bizarre
accident in the nets when he was shot in the leg by his team-mate Len Creese,
who was messing around with a shotgun. A doctor decided the pellet was too
close to the bone to remove, and left it there: Hill still played the first match of
the new season a couple of months later. "I went through the whole of the war
and never got shot at," he observed afterwards. Hill played 371 matches for
Hampshire, although his figures were unspectacular - he averaged a shade over
18 with the bat, despite a career-best 161 against Sussex at Portsmouth in 1937
(his fifth-wicket stand of 235 that day with Donald "Hooky" Walker is still a
county record), while his three other centuries included one at Guildford,
containing a six off Alec Bedser of which Hill was particularly proud. He also
took 617 wickets, mainly with off-spin, 93 of them in 1935, including eight for
62 against Kent at Tonbridge, after which he was presented with his Hampshire
cap - by the Kent captain, Percy Chapman, a family friend. John Arlott's county
history says that Hill, in his later years as a senior pro, "was kindly and humorously
pessimistic", qualities he may have acquired in 1935 when Cyril Smart of
Glamorgan hit him for 32 in an over (664664), a first-class record for a six-ball
over that stood for 33 years.
Baron HUSSEY OF NORTH BRADLEY (Marmaduke James Hussey) died on
December 27, 2006, aged 83. "Duke" Hussey had been a promising cricketer
before losing a leg at the Battle of Anzio in 1944. Two years previously, he had
played for Oxford in the one-day Varsity Match at Lord's, and was stranded
scoreless when Oxford lost four wickets in the last ten minutes to give Cambridge
victory. Earlier, he had come on as first change and taken two wickets with his
slow left-armers. He later became chief executive of Times Newspapers and
chairman of the BBC, in both cases for a decade, turbulent ones at that.
INGLEBY-MACKENZIE, ALEXANDER COLIN DAVID, OBE, died of cancer
on March 9, 2006, aged 72. Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie was one of the most
extraordinary, and best-loved, men ever to play cricket. He gave the impression
that his life was a party that lasted 72 years, which was not that far from the
truth. Nonetheless, he was a successful captain - leading Hampshire to their first
County Championship - and a radical president of MCC.
Colin's father was Surgeon Vice-Admiral Sir Alexander Ingleby-Mackenzie,
who had been with the Hampshire president, Harry Altham, at Repton. Altham
saw Colin, aged 12, execute a perfect on-drive in the nets, and marked him down as a future Hampshire captain - which says something about both the attitudes
of the era, and Altham's prescience. Colin went to Eton which, characteristically,
he adored, achieving all the honours the school could offer except academic ones.
At 17, in 1951, he made a brief, damp, scoreless debut for Hampshire - and
decided he loved the idea of county
cricket too. During National Service and
a stint in Yorkshire working for Slazenger,
he played occasionally and without
obvious success. But in 1956 he began
to score runs, finally impressing the old
pros with an unbeaten 130 against
Worcestershire at Cowes. It was an
appropriate place for him to make his
name, since he was to bring to Hampshire
the air of a regatta: complete with a
breezy freshness, a sense of style and
pretty girls.
In 1957, the long-standing captain
Desmond Eagar occasionally stood aside
to let Ingleby take charge, which he
did full-time in 1958. Still only 24,
he led Hampshire to second place in
the Championship, their highest-ever
position. In early August, they had looked
like being champions before falling away.
But the template for his captaincy had
been set: a spirit of enterprise sometimes
bordering on what sterner minds called
recklessness. It was exemplified by his
own batting - Ingleby scored two
centuries in 1958: one took 98 minutes, the other 61. His batting style no longer
came from Altham's nets. He would score 1,000 each year from 1957 to 1962
(except 1960, when he missed by two), and averaged 26, but that really was an
average, not a benchmark. He had not grown tall: he was a stocky left-hander
with delicate feet and slashing power. When he came off - which was usually
when he had to - he was sensational; Hampshire's batting was strong enough to
cope with the other days. "Surely no one among his contemporaries with such a
statistical record has played so many crooked strokes," wrote John Arlott. Not for
nothing was he nicknamed "McCrackers".
But the next two seasons Hampshire drifted. They finished eighth and 12th:
a lot of catches were dropped; the captain's concentration wavered under the
pressure of six-day-a-week cricket; and it was noted that his injuries appeared
to coincide with the fashionable race meetings. In January 1961, however, the
admiral died, and the effect on his son was profound: Prince Hal turned into
Henry V. In the 1960s there was usually some strange experiment going on
designed to produce the sort of cricket Ingleby-Mackenzie played by instinct. In
1961, the follow-on was abolished in county cricket. Ingleby applied his racing
man's mind to the dynamics of that change, and how it affected declarations.
With fearsome batting - led by the brilliant Roy Marshall - and an attack
spearheaded by Butch White and Derek Shackleton, he had the side to back him
up. Hampshire won a succession of breathless and improbable victories to stay
in contention, including one over Essex at Cowes when Ingleby (who was keeping
wicket in that match) marched in at 35 for four and hit a sensational century -
"the innings of his life", said Arlott. That win came after Trevor Bailey declared
twice, not Ingleby. That was part of the magic: "He could charm even the enemy,"
said the regular wicketkeeper Leo Harrison. In July he broke his thumb (for
Goodwood, this time) and the team again got nervy. But he came back, with
renewed vigour, and Hampshire won five successive matches. They sealed their
first title on a glorious afternoon at Bournemouth against Derbyshire after another
exquisitely timed declaration. From the balcony, Ingleby praised his players and
said he was "the luckiest captain of all time". In The Times John Woodcock
thought differently: "His has been a triumph, not of tactics, nor of theory, nor
even of leadership, but of personality. Ingleby-Mackenzie has a zest for cricket
which he can communicate to others."
The aura round this triumph still glows, and the legend grows. What exactly
was Hampshire's famous training regime? There have been various versions of
the story but, at the memorial service (venue: St Paul's; attendance: 1,600), Mark
Nicholas traced it back to an interview with a po-faced reporter from BBC
Sportsview, with Ingleby in full mickey-taking mode.
"To what do you attribute your success?"
"Oh, wine, women and song, I should say, though in truth there wasn't
so much singing."
"But don't you have certain rules, discipline, helpful hints for younger
viewers?"
"Well, everyone in bed by breakfast, I suppose."
"Yes, thank you, now might we take a look in the dressing-room?"
"Certainly, as long as you don't mind me wandering around in the nude."
It was on one of E. W. Swanton's tours to the Caribbean that Jim is supposed
to have suggested the players all went to bed by 11 and drawn the reply from
Ingleby: "Well, that's pretty silly. The game starts at half past." It certainly wasn't
all legend. The 61-minute hundred evidently came after a day at Ascot and a mad
all-nighter. Contemporaries swear the captain really did turn up at games in his
dinner jacket. And he did tell his players, as one of them, Mike Barnard,
remembers: "Try to win in two days. If you can't, lose in two days so we can
have a day off." But opponents did well not to underestimate the underlying
seriousness. "On the field he had a grasp of everything," said Butch White. "Yes,
we used to enjoy our social life. And we may have had the odd late night. But
he was a tremendous man, and none of us ever let him down."
Hampshire faded after 1961: the fielding declined, and the next four seasons
comprised a long anticlimax. Ingleby gave up cricket, aged 31, and went into
insurance (rather a waste - having sold dodgy declarations to Trevor Bailey, he
could surely have sold the Saudis some sand). When he retired from business, he
enlivened the Country Gentlemen's Association by becoming its chairman, and
MCC, by taking on the presidency from 1996 to 1998. He set out to achieve the
long-resisted admission of women, failing narrowly to get the required two-thirds
majority the first time; the walls finally tumbled two days before he handed over
to his successor, Tony Lewis. But Ingleby couldn't help being Ingleby: when Lewis
presented the membership cards to the first ten women, who had all been waiting
a long time, his predecessor whispered: "Perhaps we should have inspected the
merchandise first."
Really, there was not a shred of malice in him. He would walk into a room
carrying both his champagne glass and, so it seemed, a tub of stardust, which he
would sprinkle on everyone present, making them feel a foot taller. "Have you
met so-and-so, you know, the maestro?" he would say, bringing two strangers
together. "Marvellous job he's doing, isn't he? What magic! Fantastic man!" Not
a patch on McCrackers, though, any of us. "One in a million," said Mike Barnard.
"No. Probably one in five million."
JAYASINHA, DOUGLAS DIAS, died on April 28, 2006, aged 90. A left-hand
batsman from Galle - and a handy bowler and slip fielder - he was one of the
first from the south of the island to represent All-Ceylon, against New Zealand
in 1937 and India in 1945. He was a national selector from 1961 to 1973, the
last ten years as chairman.
JONES, ARCHIBALD TREVOR MAXWELL, died in May 2005, aged 85. Trevor
Jones was the youngest player to score a century for Somerset, making 106 to
stave off defeat at Leicester in 1938. He was just 104 days past his 18th birthday,
and shared a ninth-wicket partnership of 146 with Wally Luckes to force the draw:
at the start of the day Somerset were 130 for seven, still 38 behind, and most of
Jones's team-mates had packed their bags for the journey home. "He never made
a mistake," said The Times, "scoring freely all round the wicket." Jones played
sporadically afterwards, and his overall record was very poor - even with the
century he averaged just 11.40. He was a superb bridge player.
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