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#debut

8 incidents tagged

Mild

Alan Knott's Test Debut — England's Greatest Modern Wicketkeeper Arrives, 1967

England vs Pakistan

1967-08-10

Alan Knott of Kent made his Test debut at The Oval against Pakistan in August 1967 and was immediately the best wicketkeeper England had seen since Godfrey Evans — a lower-order batsman of real quality and a keeper of outrageous agility. He would go on to take 269 dismissals and score 4,389 runs in 95 Tests, and is rated by many as the finest wicketkeeper-batsman England has produced.

#alan-knott#wicketkeeper#debut
Mild

Derek Underwood's Test Debut — Slow-Medium Left-Arm on Sticky Wickets, 1966

England vs West Indies

1966-08-04

Derek Underwood of Kent made his Test debut at Headingley in August 1966, at 21, and immediately demonstrated the slow-medium left-arm bowling that would make him one of England's greatest post-war wicket-takers. On any surface with moisture in it, Underwood was unplayable; his 'Deadly Derek' nickname arrived within his first few county seasons and his Test career of 297 wickets at 25.83 would span seventeen years.

#derek-underwood#debut#england
Mild

Clive Lloyd's Test Debut — West Indies vs India, Bombay, December 1966

India vs West Indies

1966-12-13

Clive Lloyd of British Guiana made his Test debut against India in Bombay in December 1966, at 22. The tall left-hander — six feet five in his socks, with the wrists and timing of a much lighter man — scored 82 not out in his first innings and announced a presence that would dominate West Indian cricket for the next fifteen years. Lloyd would go on to captain West Indies through their most dominant era.

#clive-lloyd#west-indies#debut
Mild

Geoff Boycott's Test Debut — 48 Against Australia, Trent Bridge, June 1964

England vs Australia

1964-06-04

Geoffrey Boycott of Yorkshire made his Test debut at Trent Bridge in June 1964, opening the batting against Neil Hawke and Graham McKenzie and scoring 48 — cautious, correct and utterly determined. It was the beginning of a Test career of 108 matches and 8,114 runs, the most polarising batting career England has produced.

#geoff-boycott#debut#ashes
Mild

Richard Daft — Nottinghamshire's Next Great Batsman Makes His First-Class Debut, 1858

Nottinghamshire and All-England elevens

1858-06-01

Richard Daft of Nottingham made his first-class debut for Nottinghamshire in 1858, at twenty years of age, and immediately announced himself as the finest young batsman in the north of England. An elegant right-hander with a perfect upright technique and an exceptional off-drive, Daft would by the mid-1860s succeed Parr as Nottinghamshire's leading professional and England's most admired batsman after Grace.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1850s
Mild

William Ward's First Major Match — Surrey v England at Lord's, June 1808

Surrey vs England

1808-06-13

William Ward — the City banker who would, twelve years later, score 278 at Lord's and, in 1825, save the ground itself by buying its lease — made his first major-match appearance for Surrey against England in June 1808. He scored 18 in a low-scoring defeat. The debut is the entry point of one of the great careers of the Regency era and of one of the most important administrators in the history of Lord's.

#regency-cricket#underarm#lord-s-old-ground
Mild

E.H. Budd's First Match at Lord's — Twenty-Two of Middlesex v Twenty-Two of Surrey, September 1802

Twenty-Two of Middlesex vs Twenty-Two of Surrey

1802-09-13

On 13-16 September 1802 a 16-year-old War Office clerk named Edward Hayward Budd appeared in his first match at Lord's, playing for a Twenty-Two of Middlesex against a Twenty-Two of Surrey. He scored 9 and 5 in an odds match that Arthur Haygarth's Scores and Biographies records as his earliest senior fixture. Budd would become, alongside Beauclerk, the dominant gentleman batter of the next twenty years.

#eh-budd#1802#lord-s-old-ground
Mild

William Lambert's Senior Debut — Surrey v England at Lord's, July 1801

Surrey vs England

1801-07-20

On 20-21 July 1801 a 22-year-old village professional named William Lambert appeared for Surrey against England at Thomas Lord's first ground in Dorset Square. Listed tenth in the order, he scored 0 and 5 in a low-scoring defeat. Within a decade he would be ranked alongside Beauclerk and Beldham as the finest all-rounder in England, and in 1817 he would become the first man to score two centuries in the same major match.

#william-lambert#surrey#lord-s-old-ground