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.
KANMADIKAR, ANANTH WAGESH, who died on August 15, 2006, aged 80,
was the secretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India from 1980 to 1985.
He was also chairman of his home state, Madhya Pradesh. Sharad Pawar, the
current board president, said: "He was an able administrator and a human being
who always had the players' requirements in mind."
KITCHIN, JOHN EVERARD, who died on August 30, 2005, aged 77, was a
fine schoolboy all-rounder at St Edward's, Oxford. He played for The Rest against
Southern Schools at Lord's in 1946. At university, he was better known as a golfer,
captaining Oxford and representing England while still an undergraduate. Kitchin
was a schoolmaster who spent much of his life dogged by depression. From 1989
to 1997, he was in charge of Wisden's obituaries, a job he did with empathy,
enthusiasm and flashes of insight.
KUNDERAN, BUDHISAGAR KRISHNAPPA, died of cancer on June 23, 2006,
aged 66. Budhi Kunderan was an attacking batsman and a solid wicketkeeper,
whose appearances for India were restricted by the presence of a similar livewire
in Farokh Engineer. Kunderan played only 18 Tests to Engineer's 46, but Kunderan
liked to point out, in a spirit of friendly rivalry, that his batting average was higher
(32.70 to 31.08). His first Test, against Australia at Bombay in 1959-60, came
even before he had played a Ranji Trophy match, and he had to borrow some
wicketkeeping gloves from Naren Tamhane, the man he had displaced. Even so,
he acquitted himself well, hitting 71 in his second match after opening: "I scored
about 16 runs in the first over," he recalled, "and later the Australian commentator
Michael Charlton came to me and said 'Do you realise you're playing Test
cricket?' " When he did make his Ranji debut, he scored a double-century: 205
for Railways against Jammu and Kashmir. But a run of low scores pushed Kunderan
down the Test batting order and, eventually, out of the side. He bounced back in
1963-64 by blasting 192, with 31 fours, in the First Test against Mike Smith's
England tourists at Madras. He woke on the first morning not expecting to play;
by nightfall he had thrilled a 30,000 crowd by reaching an unbeaten 170. In The
Times, John Woodcock compared him to Rohan Kanhai for his looks, his strokeplay
and his effrontery, adding: "He plays the ball uncommonly late, which is a sign
of his class."
A round 100 followed in the Fourth Test at Delhi, and he finished the series
with 525 runs, a record for a wicketkeeper at the time. Still his place was not
secure, possibly because of his relationship with the captain; Kunderan later
assessed the Nawab of Pataudi as "not a players' captain - he was aloof and
domineering". After spanking 79 from No. 9 against a mighty West Indian attack
at Bombay in December 1966, Kunderan came to England the following year, and
played two Tests as a batsman while Engineer kept wicket. In what turned out to
be his final Test, Kunderan even opened the bowling after a series of injuries (when
asked what sort of bowling to expect, he told reporters "I don't know"). To his
dismay, Kunderan missed the 1967-68 Australian tour, and never played for India
again. Disillusioned with Indian cricket, in 1970 he moved to Scotland, where he
proved a popular professional with the Coatbridge club Drumpellier, staying with
them until he was 55, and inspiring them to four Western Union titles in the 1970s.
He played for Scotland in the Benson and Hedges Cup in 1980 and 1982. At birth
his name was "Kunderam", but he changed the spelling in 1964.
LAMBERT, NOEL HAMILTON, died on October 10, 2006, aged 96. A righthand
batsman, Ham Lambert played nine first-class matches for Ireland either side
of the war, making 69 not out against Scotland in Belfast in 1937. Later that year
he played in an extraordinary game, which finished inside a day, against the New
Zealand tourists, who were bowled out for 64 in between skittling the Irish for
79 and 30 (Jack Cowie six for three). He won two rugby caps as a centre; his
father and uncle also played cricket for Ireland.
LEGALL, RALPH ARCHIBALD, is reported to have died in either New York
state, Ontario or Trinidad, probably in February 2003. He would have been 77.
Legall was one of only two men to play Test cricket and Davis Cup tennis. The
other was Cotar Ramaswami, who by coincidence was the Indian tour manager
when Legall made his four Test appearances as West Indies' wicketkeeper in 1952-
53. By further coincidence, Ramaswami's death is even more mysterious, and
remains unconfirmed, although he would now be nearly 111. Legall collected 50
runs and nine dismissals in his Tests, but was never chosen again, although he
played on for Trinidad until 1957-58. He had two seasons in the Lancashire leagues,
then moved to Canada, where he was winning national age-group tennis titles as
late as 1990. His Davis Cup appearances came for the British Caribbean against
the USA and Canada in 1954 and 1956. He was also a useful hockey, basketball
and soccer player, and was one of the first inductees into Trinidad's sporting Hall
of Fame.
LONG, HAROLD IAN, who died on June 24, 2006, aged 76, was an off-spinning
all-rounder who played 29 matches for Eastern Province. He started in 1952-53
with 77 on debut, against Western Province, and made a century, against Border,
batting No. 9 two seasons later. Two of his sons, Grant and Simon, also played
first-class cricket.
McGINN, ALBERT HOWARD, who died on August 20, 2006, aged 92, was a
fast bowler who made a sensational debut for Queensland in November 1941, in
the last match played in Australia before cricket was suspended for the war. He
dismissed Les Fallowfield with his first delivery and Stan McCabe, the New South
Wales captain, with the last ball of his opening eight-ball over. He took only six
more wickets in his four-match career.
MAKOSANA, SOLOMON, died on August 3, 2006, aged 58 from diabetesrelated
complications. He helped organise cricket in South Africa's Western Cape
- particularly the township of Langa - for more than 30 years. Makosana overcame
a poor background to go to university and become principal of Nomalinganiselo
primary school in Nyanga. He became president of the Western Province Cricket
Association, and was on the UCB's general council for several years. The South
African team wore black armbands in his memory on the first day of their Second
Test in Sri Lanka.
MANDAN, SHARAD, died in a car crash in South Africa on July 2, 2006, aged
20. A promising left-hand opener, he had scored 115 not out in his most recent
one-day match for Easterns, against Free State at Bloemfontein in March, and
also made 98 in a first-class match against Griqualand West at Kimberley earlier
in 2005-06.
MARSHALL, Sir ROBERT MICHAEL, died on September 6, 2006, aged 76.
Michael Marshall was Conservative MP for Arundel from 1974 to 1997. He was
a cricket lover who captained the Lords and Commons team; he also wrote several
books, notably Gentlemen and Players, an oral history which included forewords
"by E. R. Dexter and Trueman, F. S.", the captains in the last Lord's match in
1962. While working in India in the 1960s he would save up his annual leave for
England tours, then offer his services as a commentator free to the cash-strapped
BBC. He also commentated on All-India Radio. Marshall was briefly a junior
minister under Margaret Thatcher but, The Times noted, was "regarded as having
too independent a mind".
MASOOD SALAHUDDIN died after a car crash on March 21, 2006, aged 90.
A fast bowler, he played for All-India in two unofficial Tests against an Australian
touring team in 1935-36, but just missed out - to the more experienced Shute
Banerjee - on the 1936 England tour. He took six for 62 for United Provinces
against Bengal at Calcutta in 1939-40. Salahuddin moved to Pakistan after Partition
and continued in first-class cricket until 1959, latterly as captain of Railways. He
was also an administrator - assistant manager of Pakistan's first tour of England
in 1954, and manager of the 1971 team - and an umpire. In 1954-55, despite
being a national selector, he stood in the final Test against India at Karachi after
a row about the appointed officials. Salahuddin showed his mettle by giving out
the captain he helped appoint, Abdul Hafeez Kardar, stumped for 93. "No other
Pakistan umpire would have dared give him out," observed Lala Amarnath, the
Indian manager.
MEADS, ERIC ALFRED, died on June 23, 2006, aged 89. A small and unflashy
wicketkeeper, Meads lost his best years to the war. After playing once in 1939,
he was almost 30 when county cricket resumed, but was nonetheless a fixture
behind the stumps for Nottinghamshire for the next seven years, missing only
eight first-class games. In 1948 he made 74 dismissals, the most in England. But
in 1953 Bruce Dooland, the Australian leg-spinner, arrived at Trent Bridge. Meads
- along with many opposing batsmen - had trouble reading his variations; he lost
his place, and never regained it. He was a rabbit with the bat, averaging less than
ten over his long career and only twice passing 40; his successor, Eddie Rowe,
was even worse. Outside cricket Meads was a printer and stationer, and printed
Nottinghamshire's season tickets for several years.
MEHRA, VIJAY LAXMAN, who died of a heart attack while reading his morning
newspaper on August 25, 2006, aged 68, was India's youngest player at the time
of his Test debut against New Zealand in 1955-56 (the record is now held by
Sachin Tendulkar). Mehra was 17 years 265 days old and, in an era when Indian
batsmen generally preferred to perform elegantly against the spinners, he displayed
courage against pace, but few strokes. After two Tests, he was sent back to domestic
cricket to tighten his technique, and was not recalled for six years, when he made
a valiant 62 at Calcutta against Ted Dexter's England, despite breaking his right
thumb early on. He reached 62 again later that season in Trinidad, during a dismal
whitewash by West Indies, but nonetheless his Test career was over before he
turned 26. Mehra remained a consistent scorer in domestic cricket. His friend
Bishan Bedi who, like Mehra, came from Amritsar, said: "As a player, he was
limited in talent but excelled within those limitations. He was a technician who
used to build his innings, not one to take risks." Mehra was a Test selector from
1975 to 1982, and a popular radio commentator. His son, Ajay, played for Punjab
and Rajasthan.
MITCHELL-INNES, NORMAN STEWART, died on December 28, 2006, aged
92. "Mandy" Mitchell-Innes was the oldest surviving England Test cricketer, and
the last one to have played before the
Second World War, having won his
solitary cap as an undergraduate against
South Africa in 1935. He was an
outstanding all-round sportsman, scoring
a triple-century in a house match at
Sedbergh when he was 16 (he admitted
being dropped three times before reaching
13) as well as being an expert golfer, like
his father. Mitchell-Innes was still 16
when he made his Somerset debut in 1931
- at Taunton, having got a telegram the
previous day while playing a matchplay
tournament in Scotland. After losing at
golf, he travelled all night, fielded all day,
and picked up two wickets. In 1934 he
prospered at Oxford, reaching 1,000 runs,
including 171 against Surrey at The Oval.
He continued in fine form the following
year, and his 168 ("flawless" - Wisden)
against the South Africans put him in line
for a Test cap. He was duly called up and,
despite making only five in a draw at a
wet Trent Bridge, was retained for the
Second Test at Lord's. But, a martyr to hay fever, he pulled out, quietly informing
the chairman of selectors Plum Warner that "I might be sneezing just as a catch
comes in the slips." In the event, Mitchell-Innes did score a silky century in London
on the Saturday of the Lord's Test - but at The Oval, for Oxford against a Surrey
side weakened by the absence of Errol Holmes, who had nipped across town to
take up the vacant spot in the Test side.
That winter Holmes captained Mitchell-Innes in a strong MCC team - an
England A side in today's terms - which toured Australia and New Zealand without
playing Tests. Mitchell-Innes won another Blue in 1937, finally finishing on the
winning side at the fourth attempt, and continued to do well for Somerset after
term finished: he had made 182 for them against Worcestershire at Kidderminster
in 1936. But that was almost the end of his serious cricket: he joined the Colonial
Service in Sudan, like his county team-mate and university pal Jake Seamer (see
below), and played very little afterwards. So there were no more Test caps - which
might have been England's loss. John Woodcock said: "He was just a lovely stylish
games player, and he did what came naturally." He did manage a few county
games after the war, some as Somerset's joint-captain in 1948, with no great
success. Mitchell-Innes returned to England full-time in 1954, and became
company secretary of Vaux Breweries in Sunderland. On his death, the mantle of
England's oldest player passed briefly to Lancashire's Ken Cranston, who himself
died in January 2007 (obituary in Wisden 2008), and then to Arthur McIntyre.
MUDGE, HAROLD, died on June 30, 2006, aged 92. An opener from Sydney's
Paddington club, where he once shared a partnership of 300 with Alan McGilvray,
Mudge played 14 matches for New South Wales up to 1940. He made 94 against
Queensland at Sydney on New Year's Day, 1936, and later that year took six for
42 with his leg-breaks against MCC, adding six more in his next match, against
South Australia at Adelaide. Mudge's only first-class century came in Ceylon, for
Sir Julien Cahn's XI, and he turned out once for Leicestershire in 1937. But
although he continued playing for Cahn's Nottingham-based side, he did not pursue
a county career, and eventually returned to Australia.
NAIK, Dr VASANT, died on September 8, 2006, aged 82. An industrial physician,
he was also a statistician and close friend of the former Indian captain Vijay
Hazare (who died in 2005), and ghosted his books.
NASIR WASTI died in a car accident in Karachi on July 21, 2006, aged 38. He
played 83 first-class matches over a 14-year period for the now-defunct Pakistan
National Shipping Corporation (PNSC) team, scoring three centuries.
NIEHUUS, RICHARD DUDLEY, died on June 17, 2005, aged 87. Dick Niehuus
was a South Australian left-handed opener who relished attacking the new-ball
bowlers. He played two matches for the state in 1946-47, then played with attractive
consistency the following season, making 137 against the touring Indians.
NOBLET, GEFFERY, OAM, died on August 16, 2006, aged 89. Geff Noblet was
a tall fast bowler with a seven-pace run-up and an unusual high-stepping delivery
stride, not unlike Graham Dilley or Geoff Lawson of more recent vintage. He also
had a pronounced wrist flick that led to occasional murmurs about the legality of
his action. Noblet went down with pleurisy in 1939 and was given only a few days
to live, but pulled through well enough to take the new ball for South Australia
for several years: overall, his 282 wickets came at less than 20 apiece, but the
presence of Ray Lindwall, Keith Miller and Bill Johnston restricted him to three
Test caps. Noblet's best season was his last - 55 wickets at 17 in 1952-53 as South
Australia won the Sheffield Shield. But he also did well the summer before, winning
a Test recall against West Indies after taking seven for 29 against Victoria, and
inflicting a king pair on Frank Worrell in the state match against the West Indians.
He retired after missing selection for the 1953 Ashes tour, and had two seasons
for Nelson in the Lancashire League before concentrating on a banking career. He
also coached South Australia, where one of his motivational aids was to make
every player write down his ambitions. Ian Chappell, one of Noblet's early charges,
thought there was no chance of achieving his: captaining Australia. The spelling
of Noblet's often mis-spelled Christian name was itself a mistake: his grandmother's
maiden name was Jeffery, but his name was registered with a G.
O'DWYER, THOMAS EDMUND, who died on September 1, 2005, aged 85, was
a member of the Western Australian team which won the Sheffield Shield at the
first attempt in 1947-48. His left-arm wrist-spin claimed eight wickets in the innings
victory in the first match, against South Australia, including his side's maiden
Shield wicket (Dick Niehuus, see above). Another nine wickets against Queensland
sealed the team's triumph. After a break of nine years, he returned in 1959-60,
when he was 40. Known as "the bowling baritone", he appeared in a number of
musicals in Perth, and sang in his church choir for more than 70 years.
PARSONS, RAYMOND, died of leukaemia on August 18, 2006, aged 63. Ray
Parsons was a builder who had been Gloucestershire's chairman since January,
after joining the committee in 1994. An award for Gloucestershire's best young
cricketer has been set up in his memory: the first winner was David Brown.
PATEL, BHUPENDRA RAMABHAI, who died on December 11, 2006, aged 77,
was a medium-paced all-rounder. He made 54 not out on his Ranji Trophy debut
for Mysore, in 1954-55, but played the rest of his first-class cricket for Andhra,
captaining them in the late 1960s. His nephew, Brijesh Patel, played 21 Tests.
PEARSON, HERBERT TAYLOR, who died on June 15, 2006, aged 95, played
for Auckland for 15 years, scoring 172 while captaining them against Canterbury
over Christmas 1947, in what turned out to be his final season. His runs usually
came behind the wicket, though his stubbornness as an opener made him a
contender for the 1949 New Zealand tour to England. Facing Ray Lindwall at
Eden Park in 1945-46, he was bowled with such force that the off bail almost
reached the boundary. Pearson was a solid full-back for the Auckland rugby side
and later Keeper of the Key for the thirstier members of the Auckland Cricket
Association. The key opened a spare dressing-room where the drinks were stored.
PHATE, UMAKANT SEWARAM, was found dead in the Hooghly River near
Kolkata, on February 5, 2006. He was 40. Phate had been missing for ten days
after leaving a hotel where he was staying with other members of the Western
Coalfields company team. Phate was wearing a tracksuit; medicines for "mental
disorder" were found in the pockets, and police said he had probably committed
suicide. He played 28 Ranji Trophy matches for Vidarbha over the decade up to
1996-97 but, after a promising start, including a century in his third match, against
Madhya Pradesh, he failed to establish himself.
PINCH, COLIN JOHN, who died on October 21, 2006, aged 85, played twice
for New South Wales in 1949-50 before switching to South Australia. There, he
made an immediate impact as an opener when he carried his bat for 146 against
Victoria, but it took him until the mid-1950s to established a regular place. He
was stocky, and his batting mixed sound defence ("dour", Jack Pollard called him)
with thoughtful shot-selection and outstanding footwork against the spinners. He
twice hit a century in each innings of a Sheffield Shield match, and topped the
national run-scoring list in 1956-57. An outstanding outfielder, he could throw
with either arm, a legacy of his days as a baseball player.
PITHEY, ANTHONY JOHN, died on November 17, 2006, aged 73. Tony Pithey
was a Rhodesian who matured at Cape Town University into a solid batsman,
staunch against pace bowling. "He was a very sound player - good technique, not
flashy," remembered his South African team-mate John Waite. "He was sometimes
seen as negative, but that was unfair really, you often need batsmen like that."
Pithey's solitary Test century, 154 against England at Cape Town in 1964-65,
spanned 434 minutes, although his third 50 came in just short of even time. John
Woodcock, in The Times, could not understand why Pithey batted ahead of Graeme
Pollock and thought his lack of adventure helped England save the game: "He
was a quiet, unassuming tenant who went about his business without upsetting a
soul." His 95 in the next Test was equally measured and, although overall he made
462 runs, Pithey's scoring-rate summed up an attritional series, won by England
1-0. As it turned out, his first Test hundred was his 13th and last in first-class
cricket: originally selected for the return tour of England in 1965, he dropped out
for business reasons, and afterwards rarely played outside Rhodesia. Pithey had
gone to England in 1960, but his tour was ruined by back trouble and a virus.
He had more luck in Australia in 1963-64, scoring two fifties and a 49 in four
Tests. His brother David, an Oxford Blue, also represented South Africa. They
played together in five Tests in 1963-64, in three of them alongside the Pollock
brothers.
PRABHU, K. N., died on July 30, 2006, aged 83. Niran Prabhu, sports editor of
the Times of India for 24 years, was one of India's most respected sports journalists.
A balanced judge with a colourful turn of phrase, he covered many of Indian
cricket's greatest triumphs, including the series win in the West Indies in 1971,
and the World Cup victory in 1983, the year he retired from the paper and went
freelance. He was a long-serving Indian correspondent for The Cricketer. In 1998
he received the C. K. Nayudu Lifetime Achievement Award from the influential
Cricket Club of India, and remains the only non-player to have won it.
PRESTON, JOHN BEAL, who died on December 12, 2006, aged 92, was a South
African off-spinner who played one match for Eastern Province in 1933-34, then
11 more for Border after the war. Although his career spanned 15 years, more
than half his 13 first-class wickets came inside a week in December 1947.
RABONE, GEOFFREY OSBORNE, died on January 19, 2006, aged 84. Geoff
"Boney" Rabone had the unenviable task of leading New Zealand in the early
1950s, after the team that toured England impressively in 1949 began to break
up. A determined if limited all-rounder, Rabone himself was selected for that tour
after only six matches for Wellington and did well, scoring 1,021 runs and taking
50 wickets, mostly with off-spin; he also
clung on to some fine catches. But it got
harder: after the four three-day Tests of
1949 were honourably drawn, Rabone
lost five of his other eight Tests, including
four of his five as captain. His tenure
started well personally, with 107 and 68
in his first match in charge, at Durban in
1953-54, and 56 and six for 68 at Cape
Town. However, he missed the last two
Tests of that series with a broken foot
(some of the South African players lined
up and sang "Backbone Rabone got a
broke-a bone") and his youngish team
lost the series 4-0. They may have had
their heads turned by the lavishness of
the hospitality, and Rabone was not
universally respected. Fast bowler Tony
MacGibbon said: "Geoff 's problem was
that he was a Lancaster bomber captain
in the war, and he tried to run the team
in a similar way." Batsman Matt Poore
also found Rabone difficult, but added: "You've got to admire the man's guts."
MacGibbon agreed with that: "He was a tremendous leader by example. He was
hit about a dozen times by Adcock in Durban. In the dressing-room he was just
a mass of black and blue." Rabone's last taste of Test cricket was a bitter one:
England came on to New Zealand early in 1955, in uncompromising mood after
winning the Ashes. In the First Test he survived three hours for 18, and in the
Second had the mortification of presiding over the lowest total in Test history -
26 all out. Typically, Rabone hung on longer than anyone: 53 minutes for seven,
before being given out lbw to Statham - off the edge, he said later. "It was very
unfortunate. We might have made 30 if I hadn't been given out." The humour
disguised the pain: "I found it hard to cope with," he admitted. He played on for
Auckland, where he had moved in 1950, later becoming a national selector, and
enjoyed a successful career with Shell Oil.
RAMSBOTTOM, ROY FREDERIC, who died on November 21, 2006, aged 63,
was chairman of his flourishing village club, Oulton Park in Cheshire. Ramsbottom
wrote a widely used booklet on grant aid for sports clubs, now in its eighth edition.
He also planned a study of Bodyline and, only days before his death, published
a booklet called Pamphlets and Programmes of the 1932-33 MCC Tour to Australia
and New Zealand. His extensive cricket library was to be sold, and the proceeds
put in trust for Oulton Park's juniors.
RAYMER, VINCENT NORMAN, died on October 31, 2006, aged 88. "Mick"
Raymer - sometimes known as "Possum" - was a key member of the Queensland
side in the post-war decade. He was an economical slow left-armer; his accuracy,
combined with variations in pace and flight, compensated for not being a big
spinner. His left-hand batting was based on hitting the ball hard and often. After
a mastoid operation during the war, he suffered from deafness, which once led to
him hitting out indiscriminately at the New South Wales fast bowler Alan Walker
because he thought his grunt on delivery was the umpire calling no-ball. For years
he dominated cricket in Toowoomba, where he was a plasterer.
REICHWALD, KATHARINE DOROTHEA VERONICA, died on May 5, 2006,
aged 81. Veronica "Wonky" Reichwald umpired during the inaugural women's
World Cup, in England in 1973, and also stood in two women's Tests in the 1980s.
REUBEN, JUDAH, who died on November 13, 2006, aged 84, umpired in ten
Tests in India. His first, Australia's visit to Calcutta in 1969-70, was enlivened by
a riot, and his last, at Madras in 1976-77, was notable for the fuss about the
Vaseline-impregnated gauze strip used by England's John Lever. England said
Lever was trying to keep the sweat out of his eyes; Reuben thought he was balltampering.
"I thought I would get a medal," Reuben reportedly said, "but the
board said we must not spoil our relations with England." Reuben's day job was
as a fingerprint expert in the Bombay police.
RHEINBERG, NETTA, MBE, who died on June 18, 2006, aged 94, was a pioneer
of women's cricket as a player, journalist, umpire and administrator. She was not
a great player: a decent enough batsman and slip for Gunnersbury and Middlesex,
she played in just one Test. The team she was managing in Australia, in 1948-49,
was hit by injuries: she came in, and got a pair. But in every other sphere, she
was outstanding, bringing her business background - the Rheinbergs were in the
silk trade - and energy to bear on the women's game's then-haphazard
administration. "Netta was an action girl," said the former England captain Rachael
Heyhoe-Flint. "We had very few people
then, and she galvanised activity, partly
just by having a great personality and
a sense of humour." She edited the
magazine Women's Cricket, contributed
regularly to Wisden for more than 30
years, co-wrote (with Heyhoe-Flint) Fair
Play, a history of the women's game, and
served as membership secretary and
vice-chairman of the Cricket Society.
In 1999, Rheinberg became one of the
ten women initially admitted as MCC
honorary members. Her mother had
warned her: "You'll never meet nice men
if you play cricket." "She was quite right
in a way," Netta admitted. "I won't say I
didn't meet nice men, but I didn't marry."
RHODES, WILLIAM ERNEST, died on August 16, 2005, aged 69. Yorkshireborn
Billy Rhodes played 36 matches for Nottinghamshire between 1961 and
1964. His only century came against Cambridge, in 1962, but he did fill in as
wicketkeeper when Geoff Millman was unavailable, a role his son Steve filled
with rather more distinction for Worcestershire and England.
ROBINSON, PETER KEITH, who died of cancer on April 11, 2006, aged 54,
was perhaps South Africa's finest and best-informed cricket writer. He made his
name as cricket correspondent on the Johannesburg daily, The Star, from 1990 to
1996. In a society where the most robust traditions of sports journalism disappeared
under apartheid, Robinson was notable for his shrewd judgment and lively, often
sardonic, phrase-making.
RONALDSON, MALCOLM BRUCE, died on December 2, 2004, aged 87. Bruce
Ronaldson opened the batting, sometimes without gloves, for Eastern Province in
five of their Currie Cup matches in 1937-38, making 94 against Western Province.
War prevented him playing first-class cricket again, but he captained Tanganyika
in the 1950s, leading both them, and East Africa, against a non-white South African
touring team captained by Basil D'Oliveira. He moved to Britain in 1962 and
spent 20 years as company secretary of Oxfam. His son, Chris, became world
real tennis champion.
ROOPE, GRAHAM RICHARD JAMES, who died on November 26, 2006, aged
60, was a batsman good enough to win 21 Test caps in the 1970s. He never scored
a century for England: his highest was a four-hour 77, mostly in partnership with
Bob Woolmer, to save the 1975 Ashes Test at The Oval. Roope was athletic, with
a mop of dark curly hair, a perpetual smile and usually a story: his cheeriness
helped him keep his Test place, along with the fact that England did well with
him - he was in a losing Test team only twice. But most important was his fielding,
mainly at slip, though he was brilliant whatever his position. "He wasn't a fielder
like Randall or Graham Barlow, diving all over the place," said Mike Selvey. "He
was a brilliant catcher. People talk about him being a goalkeeper, but I don't think
that had much to do with it. He was just an utterly reliable catcher of a cricket
ball, with terrific hands and a good eye."
When Geoff Boycott reached his 100th hundred, in the 1977 Headingley Ashes
Test, it was Roope who skipped out of the way at the non-striker's end as the ball
scudded past. His own century count was a more modest 26, and he passed 120
only six times, suggesting a certain lack of single-mindedness. When he was on
song, though, his cover-drive would zing across the Oval outfield like a skimming
stone. His best season was 1971, when Surrey regained the Championship, and
Roope got 1,641 runs and 59 catches. Of his eventual 603 catches, more than a
fifth - 122 - came off Robin Jackman, who said: "It was a great comfort to have
someone like that at second slip." Jackman thought Roope could have played more
Tests had he taken his bowling more seriously: he could wobble the ball around
at just above medium-pace, and took 50 wickets in 1968, with five for 14 for
Surrey against the 1969 West Indians. He also had an extraordinary ability, when
kicking the ball away, to hoof it enormous distances, even with old-fashioned
pads. And he was known to his team-mates as an infallible navigator wherever
they were. He kept travelling in retirement: if there was ever a game or a tour,
Roopey ("Cyril" to his fellow pros) was the man. He proed in the leagues, coached
at a variety of schools, and turned out wherever or whenever, with a bat, a laugh
and a yarn. It was on one such friendly tour, in Grenada, that he died in his sleep,
of a suspected heart attack.
ROSENWATER, ISIDORE, died on January 30, 2006, aged 73. Irving
Rosenwater was a cricket statistician and historian. He pursued these not so much
as a career or a hobby, but as an obsession and, often, a form of unarmed combat.
From a poor East End Jewish background, he became founder-editor of the
Journal of the Cricket Society, a regular contributor to the idiosyncratic Cricket
Quarterly and assistant editor of The Cricketer in 1967, and was soon a wellknown
and much talked-about figure on the circuit. He was the BBC TV scorer
from 1970 to 1977, and in 1978 produced Sir Donald Bradman - A Biography,
the first detailed and serious account of his life. But his gift for evidence-based
cricket writing was subsumed by his prickly obsessiveness. He was a serial
resigner and, by then, he had already left the BBC to score for World Series
Cricket. Afterwards, a certain paranoia kicked in, and he became increasingly
reclusive, retreating to his bachelor home in the East End, with no car and no
television, but thousands of cricket books. He continued to produce learned
monographs (and testy letters), and was working on one about ticket designs for
Lord's when he died. "The Rosenwater mania for absolute veracity and accuracy
with content and copy was legendary," said his friend David Rayvern Allen.
"Every comma and colon had to be in place. Correspondence was replied to
instantly by first-class post. Woe betide the casual sender of a missive by secondclass
post - they were likely to receive a vituperative response. Irving knew to
the second the delivery time of each piece of mail." According to the Bradman
dustjacket, he stopped taking part in Cricket Society quizzes because "he is
universally regarded as unbeatable".
ROWE, Colonel GEOFFREY CHARLES KINGSLEY, died on June 5, 2005,
aged 82. A long-serving officer who left the Army briefly for a three-year stint
as MCC's assistant secretary (administration) between 1978 and 1981, he had
been a handy club cricketer, playing with the former England captain Bob Wyatt
for Moseley. Early in his Lord's career he was looking forward to the challenges
cricket administration might bring, when one of the first members to visit his
office flung something on to his desk and barked "Call that a cheese roll?"
© John Wisden & Co