The only other really notable fast bowler produced by Australia during the nineteen-thirties was Ernie McCormick, who made his debut against South Africa in 1935 and played played twelve tests over the next few years.
McCormick is the first modern bowler I have seen in one sense, in that his full length run up is by far the longest for the era that I have found, its sixteen to eighteen paces being about the normal length used by fast bowlers today (although the seventies and eighties saw some truly ridiculous peregrinations). His action is rather abrupt, with a very short pre-delivery stride and rather short delivery stride, using mainly leverage from the shoulder. His swung his arm down rather than across, which meant he mainly swung the ball in rather than away.
At his best he was the fastest bowler in Australia with a non-controversial action of the period, but his career was beset by back troubles (the lack of smoothness in his action likely contributing), other injuries and he was prone to being wayward. After taking 15 wickets in a reasonably successful, if unspectacular, debut series his career sputtered along with the temperament of an Italian sports car, never really achieving its potential. The experience at Brisbane in 1936 was a case, where after taking three wickets in a fast opening spell, including Hammond for a golden duck, his back flared up and he only bowled three more overs. In 1938 in England he was severely troubled by his back and had tremendous problems with his rhythm, leading
Wisden to describe him as the most overrated bowler ever brought to England. In the first tour match he bowled thirty-five no-balls, nineteen of them in three overs, being forced to trim his run to as few as twelve paces at times. He took his best test figures of 4/101 at Lord's and played his final test the next match, being unfit for the slaughter in the final test.
A jeweller by trade, he designed and made the Frank Worrell Trophy - though supposedly a copy was used for a number of years, the original being lost by the West Indies in the early eighties after being brought over following their victory in 1978 before being found in Wes Hall's mother's garage in the early nineties.
Another at 0:22