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#1930s

4 incidents tagged

Moderate

Clarrie Grimmett — Test Wicket Records, 1930-36

Australia

1936-03-06

Clarrie Grimmett was the first bowler in Test history to take 200 Test wickets — reaching the milestone in March 1936 against South Africa, in his last Test innings before being controversially dropped. He finished with 216 wickets in 37 Tests at 24.21, all of them taken between the ages of 33 and 44, and held the world Test wicket record until Alec Bedser broke it in 1953.

#clarrie-grimmett#australia#leg-spin
🔥Moderate

'The Black Bradman' — How a Nickname Followed George Headley

West Indies

1934-06-01

From the early 1930s English newspapers, and then much of the cricketing world, called George Headley 'the Black Bradman.' Headley, polite and reserved, never publicly objected; in private and in CLR James's account, he and many West Indian writers preferred to invert the formula — Bradman as 'the white Headley.' The nickname is a small case study in how race coloured even the most generous compliments paid to inter-war Caribbean cricketers.

#george-headley#black-bradman#west-indies
Serious

Bill O'Reilly — 'Tiger' and Australia's Best 1930s Bowler

Australia

1932-02-19

Bill O'Reilly debuted for Australia in February 1932 and was, until World War II ended his Test career, the most feared bowler in the world. A leg-spinner who bowled at near-medium pace with sharp turn and bounce, he took 144 wickets in 27 Tests at 22.59, was named Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1935, and stood at the centre of the Bradman-O'Reilly rivalry that would mark Australian dressing rooms across the decade.

#bill-oreilly#tiger-oreilly#australia
Moderate

Learie Constantine — A Decade in the Lancashire League, 1929-39

Nelson Cricket Club v Lancashire League sides

1929-04-27

From 1929 to 1937 Learie Constantine was the professional at Nelson Cricket Club in the Lancashire League, a contract that paid him substantially more than Test cricket and quietly turned him into the most famous Caribbean man in Britain. He took 793 league wickets at 9.90 and scored 4,397 runs at 37, won Nelson seven titles in eight years, and shifted the social geography of black professionalism in pre-war England. His decade in Nelson was as influential as anything he did in Test whites.

#learie-constantine#lancashire-league#nelson