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New Cricket Trivia - 'SJS format'

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
burkey_1988 said:
was the player who broke the record indian?
Q10 was the player who broke the record indian ? No
(Can't see how he could be Indian , if he's not from the subcontinent :laugh: :laugh: )

Hint- It was a World record (no mention of the word Test Record !!) (And it was only a record he equalled . He did not hold it on his own !! :D )
I am off for the night. Sorry fellas. Will answer questions tomorrow. :)
 

cbuts

International Debutant
hmm not sure about that one. ill post a question for when this one is answered
english cricketer c a absolom died how?
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
The Baconator said:
To carry on with the other question

does the record involve wicket-keeping performance?
Question

Holder of a World Record in his time (since been bettered by 1 in a very dubious/questionable standard :) game) , he still made his Test debut only at age 30 !!

Who is he ? What's the record ?

Q1 Is it a batting record ? No
Q2 Is it a bowling record ? No
Q3 A fielding record ? Yes sort of.
Q4 Was he an Englishman ? No
Q5 Is it a record by a Wicket keeper ? Yes
Q6 Does this "dubious/questionable standard game" include Zimbabwe or Bangladesh ? Yes
Q7 Did this record exist for more than 20 years before it was broken ? Yes
Q8 Was the player took the record off this player from the subcontinent? No

Q9 was Zimbabwe the team the record was broken against? No (there's a clue there! :D )
Q10 was the player who broke the record indian ? No
(Can't see how he could be Indian , if he's not from the subcontinent :laugh: :laugh: )

Hint- It was a World record (no mention of the word Test Record !!) (And it was only a record he equalled . He did not hold it on his own !! :D )

Q11 does the record involve wicket-keeping performance ? Yes , off course.
 
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JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
deeps said:
i'm adam gilchrist. no idea wat the record is, i'm still lookig
Q13 Is it Adam Gilchrist ? No :)

Hint 2-(to rephrase the question) He equalled a world record in his time and held it jointly with another for over 50 years before it was bettered by another by 1 in a questionable standard game . I made my Test Debut only at age 30. (In fact it was equalled by a third person a further 30 years after the person who is the focus of this question :) )
(clarification for about 30 years the record was held by three people jointly ,until it was broken in the questionable game ! :) )
 
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JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Somerset said:
Lol.

Was this record achieved in a first class match (since you've hinted it wasn't a test match)?
Q14 Was this record achieved in a first class match (since you've hinted it wasn't a test match)? Yes Yes Yes
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Hint 3 - Clarification - the record was held by 1 person on his own for nearly 70years, then equalled by the gentleman in question, (Thus held jointly by 2 people for further 30 years, then equalled by a third . Thus now held by 3 people jointly for a further 25 odd years.) Bettered by the new record holder. :)
 

Somerset

Cricketer Of The Year
Is the player Don Tallon for the most dismissals in a first class match?

E.Polley, 12 dismissals, 1868
D.Tallon, 12 dismissals, 1938/39
HB Taber, 12 dismissals, 1968/69

WK James, 13 dismissals, 1995/96 (Matableland v Mashonaland Country Districts)

Tallon made his debut in 1945/46 at the age of 30.
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Somerset said:
Is the player Don Tallon for the most dismissals in a first class match?

E.Polley, 12 dismissals, 1868
D.Tallon, 12 dismissals, 1938/39
HB Taber, 12 dismissals, 1968/69

WK James, 13 dismissals, 1995/96 (Matableland v Mashonaland Country Districts)

Tallon made his Test debut in 1945/46 at the age of 30.
Correct. Now its your turn to ask next question.
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Wisden obituary
TALLON, DONALD, who died in Brisbane on September 7, 1984, aged 68, was a great wicket-keeper. Unlucky not to be chosen to tour England in 1938 – his omission caused quite a stir – he had to wait until after the war, in which he did Army service, to become established in the Australian side. Unusually tall for a wicket-keeper (5ft 10½ in) and very slim, he yet crouched low behind the stumps. He was a man of few words (partly, perhaps, because his hearing was not good) and of quick, neat movement of the gloves. Born in Bundaberg on the Queensland coast, he made his first appearance against an English side for a Queensland Country XI at Toowoomba in 1932–33, when he was sixteen. He stumped Sutcliffe. He first played for Queensland a year later and was still only nineteen when he scored 193 for Queensland against Victoria at Brisbane in 1932–36, the highest of his nine first-class hundreds. He was Queensland’s leading batsman that year, with 503 runs at an average of 55.88. By the outbreak of war he had equalled E. Pooley’s long-standing world record of twelve victims in a match (it has yet to be beaten) for Queensland against New South Wales at Sydney, this in the 1938–39 season. He had six in each innings, catching nine of them and stumping three. Seven dismissals in an innings for Queensland against Victoria at Brisbane a month later was also, at that time, a world record, though shared with several others.
The first of Don Tallon’s 21 Tests was Australia’s first after the war, against New Zealand at Wellington in March, 1946 (it was not granted Test status until 1948); his first victim came from a stumping off O’Reilly. Having made the wicket-keeping place his own against England in 1946–47, and established what was then a record twenty victims in the series, he was an integral part of Bradman’s brilliant 1948 side in England, being equally at home whether keeping to the speed of Lindwall and Miller or the spin of Johnson, McCool and Ring. He had wonderful timing behind the stumps and exceptionally fast hands when it came to taking off the bails. Perhaps his most famous catch was at The Oval in 1948, when he dived down the leg side to dismiss Hutton for 30. He caught an authentic leg-glance left-handed and at full stretch – a great finish to Australia’s splendid performance, wrote Wisden, Hutton being the last man out and England’s total a mere 52. Tallon came to England again in 1953, but he was 37 by then and no longer quite the supreme craftsman he had been. Having played in the first Test, he gave way to Langley.

His rugged weathered features helped to make him seem a typical Australian to many English cricket followers. In the few years after the war he was looked upon almost with awe. Bradman was of the opinion that as a wicket-keeper he was the equal of the great Oldfield, to whose coaching Tallon acknowledged a considerable debt. Lindwall and Miller both rate Tallon as the best they ever saw. His unavailability to tour South Africa in 1949–50 deprived him of one full series, but his Test victims numbered 58 (50ct, 8st). All told he claimed 432 first-class victims, no fewer than 129 of them being stumped, Australian cricket at that time being well endowed with leg-break bowlers. Tallon’s batting record in Tests was disappointing, partly no doubt because in such a strong and all-conquering Australian side runs were seldom needed from him. His best Test score was his 92 against England at Melbourne in 1946–47, when he and Lindwall added 154 for the eighth wicket. In first-class cricket he scored 6,034 runs (average 29.18), in Test cricket 394 runs (average 17.13).
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack
 

Somerset

Cricketer Of The Year
My second Cricket Trivia success. :)

My question is:

In 1976, I set a record that no one in the 20th century could match and that any fast bowler would be proud of. Who am I and what is the record?
 

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