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New Cricket Trivia - 'SJS format'

SJS

Hall of Fame Member
JASON said:
Question - Who is he ? What is the record ? What was the unparallaled nature of this Test ? He missed an opportunity to do even better. what was that about ?

You already have it there !!
1. MJC Allom
2. Getting 8 wickets in his first test all debutants !
3. There were 17 debutants in the test match.
4. (This is guesswork) He could have got five for in both innings , all debutants, if he had two more wickets in the second innings.
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
SJS said:
1. MJC Allom
2. Getting 8 wickets in his first test all debutants !
3. There were 17 debutants in the test match.
4. (This is guesswork) He could have got five for in both innings , all debutants, if he had two more wickets in the second innings.
Maurice Allom is correct. The record is getting 4 wickets in 5 balls. He took a hat trick and another wicket off the last ball. In fact he could've got 5 wickets of 6 balls had a close LBW off the very first ball been given, a leg bye was taken off it, following which he took the hat trick , and a 4th wicket off the last ball of the over.

His record is unparallelled because of those who took 4 wickets in 5 balls in Test history (Wasim Akram and Chris Old being the others) he is the only debutant to do so.

The unparallelled nature of the Test is that England was playing a Test simultaneously in the West Indies on the same days of this Test.
 
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JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
SJS and BI you both got it, Although BI got the record correctly SJS got 2 of the 4 answers. I'll Let you guys work out who is asking the next question. :D
 

SJS

Hall of Fame Member
BTW, 17 NZL Wickets were taken by Englands debutants

Allom ...................8
Worthington .........3
Nicolls..................6
 

SJS

Hall of Fame Member
JASON said:
SJS and BI you both got it, Although BI got the record correctly SJS got 2 of the 4 answers. I'll Let you guys work out who is asking the next question. :D
BI, you may go ahead.
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Wisden Obituary
With one sensational over at Lancaster Park, Christchurch in Jan 1930, Maurice Allom joined the immortals. England, led by Harold Gilligan (while another England team played Tests in West Indies that extraordinary winter), were playing in New Zealand in that country’s inaugural Test, and Allom, the tall, strongly-built Cambridge and Surrey amateur, aged 23, was on Test debut. His eighth over saw Roger Blunt narrowly escape being lbw to the first ball (a leg-bye was taken); Stewart Dempster was bowled by the next; Tom Lowry, the large Kiwi skipper, played and missed at the third ball and was lbw to the fourth; Ken James was caught by wicketkeeper Tich Cornford, standing up at the stumps; and the sixth ball bowled Ted Badcock, giving Allom a hat-trick and four wickets in five balls.

New Zealand, now 21 for 7, recovered to 112 but lost in just under two playing days, and Allom was aglow after taking 5 for 38 and 3 for 17, including the 10th hat-trick in Test history, which was watched by Hugh Trumble, then 62, who had taken two hat-tricks for Australia early this century.

Born in Northwood, Middx on March 23, 1906, Allom was to play in only four more Tests, the other three in New Zealand and one in South Africa a year later, finishing with 14 wickets in 18.93. Between 1927 and 1937 he played in 100 matches for Surrey, though hardly any after 1933, and was appointed as the club’s vice-captain. His most productive season was 1930, when he took 108 wickets at 23.33, twice getting Bradman. During those happy summers his bounce and movement through the air and off the pitch won him prize wickets with regularity, Ames, Hammond, Headley, Hendren, Hobbs, Leyland, Sandham and Woolley among them. He played in eight Gentlemen v Players matches.

He toured Jamaica with Tennyson’s side in 1927–28, and from his Australasian and South African tours sprang two fun-filled. The book of the Two Maurices and The Two Maurices Again, co-authored with Maurice Turnbull of Glamorgan.

Educated at Wellington, Maurice James Carrick Allom was a Cambridge Blue in 1927 and’28, and secured his best figures when the university played the Army in 1927: 9 for 55. His 605 first-class wickets cost 23.62 each.

Elevated a member of MCC in 1925, he was joint-senior member at the time of his death, on April 8, and it was his fate to be president of the club, and also chairman of the Cricket Council; during the storm over the proposed visit to England of the 1970 South African team, a tour which Lord’s was compelled to cancel after pressure from Home Secretary Callaghan.

Allom was also president of Surrey, for whom his son – who was even taller at 6ft 9ins – played one match in 1960. A jazz saxophonist in his undergraduate days, Maurice Allom was married for almost half-a-century to Pamela, and when she died in 1980 he married for the widow of pre-war Lancashire captain Peter Eckersley, who was killed on active service in 1940.

M. J. C. Allom’s name lives on as the first Test debutant to take a hat-trick ( Peter Pretherick and Damien Fleming have followed), and the first to take four wickets in five balls (a feat since emulated by Chris Old and Wasim Akram).
David Frith, Wisden Almanack 1996
 
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biased indian

International Coach
ok i will ask a simple question

what is common between ajit agarkar,mervin dillon,shane bond??

its not that they are bowlers :)
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
By the Way Wasim Akram had an opportunity to take 5 wickets in 5 balls in the Test against West Indies at Lahore in 90/91. A catch off the third ball was dropped. Had it been taken Akram would have gone onto being immortalised as the only bowler in Test History to take 5 wickets in 5 balls perhaps!! :)

Just as Allom too, had the close shout for LBW been given off the first ball!! (Given Home Umpires then I wonder if indeed he should have got 4 wickets off 4 balls !! :D )
 
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