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George Lohmann

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English cricketer

George Lohmann
Lohmann c. 1895
Personal information
Full name
George Alfred Lohmann
Born(1865-06-02)2 June 1865
Kensington,Middlesex, England
Died1 December 1901(1901-12-01) (aged 36)
Worcester,British Cape Colony
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight armmedium-fast
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 51)5 July 1886 v Australia
Last Test24 June 1896 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1884–1896Surrey
1894–1897Western Province
Career statistics
CompetitionTestFirst-class
Matches18293
Runs scored2137,247
Batting average8.8718.67
100s/50s0/13/29
Top score62*115
Balls bowled3,83071,724
Wickets1121,841
Bowling average10.7513.73
5 wickets in innings9176
10 wickets in match557
Best bowling9/289/28
Catches/stumpings28/–337/–
Source:Cricinfo,1 October 2009

George Alfred Lohmann (2 June 1865 – 1 December 1901) was an Englishcricketer, regarded as one of the greatestbowlers of all time.[1] Statistically, he holds the lowest lifetime Testbowling average among bowlers with more than fifteen wickets and he has the second highest peak rating for a bowler in theICC ratings. He also holds the record for the lowest strike rate (balls bowled between each wicket taken) in all Test history.

He bowled at around medium pace and on English pitches of his time could gain spin, so that when rain affected the pitch he was unplayable. Against the best batsmen, too, Lohmann possessed skill and guile, and he could vary his pace, flight and break deceptively, so as to worry batsmen on better pitches. He was the finest slip fielder of his time and in county cricket a hard-hitting batsman who scored two centuries for Surrey and averaged 25 in 1887.

In 2016, Lohmann was inducted into theICC Cricket Hall of Fame.[2]

Early years

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Lohmann played in a few colts matches at the beginning of1884,[3] and impressed sufficiently to play tenfirst-class cricket matches forSurrey that season. He did little bowling but nonetheless established himself as a regular member of the side for his promising batting.

The following season was nothing short of a sensation. Lohmann not only became Surrey's leading bowler, but was the leading first-class wicket-taker with 142 wickets. He also showed his promise as a batsman was no fluke, for he scored 571 runs. In 1886, Lohmann did equally well and played his firstTest matches for England against Australia. He took only one wicket atOld Trafford, and none atLord's, but his continued superb form in other first-class matches saw him retained for the last match atThe Oval. Here, Lohmann established himself as a great bowler with a superb twelve for 104 (7 for 36 and 5 for 68), giving England what is still one of its most decisive wins in anAshes series. Again being the leading first-class wicket-taker, Lohmann was chosen to tour Australia withAlfred Shaw's team.

World's premier bowler

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On his first tour, Lohmann moved even further ahead of the pack as a bowler. In the Second Test at theSCG, Lohmann became the first bowler to take eight wickets in a Test innings, and, in the abnormally dryEnglish season of 1887, showed himself far ahead of any other bowler. Despite being severely punished during the middle of the season when handicapped by a finger injury,[4] Lohmann took 154 wickets whereas the next highest was 114, becoming deadly when the weather broke up in August. He also made his highest score as a batsman, scoring 115 against Sussex at Hove, whilst his aggregate of runs for the season totalled 843. Lohmann again toured Australia in the winter of 1887/1888, and withJohnny Briggs formed an irresistible combination on a sticky wicket in the only Test match.

In 1888, a summer as wet as 1887 had been dry, Lohmann took full advantage of the dreadful pitches on which most matches were played, taking 209 wickets for only 10.90 each, including 142 in 14 county matches. In the three Tests against Australia, Briggs,Bobby Peel andBilly Barnes did so well that Lohmann had to do little bowling at the Oval and Old Trafford. However, he took eight wickets at Lord's and made his only Test fifty at the Oval. In 1889, Lohmann again took over 200 wickets (115 for 1485 runs in purely county matches) and took nine wickets in an innings for the first time against Sussex.

Early County Championship triumphs

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In 1890, theCounty Championship was officially constituted for the first time after years of unofficial "champion" counties.[a] Lohmann continued to carry all before him in 1890, taking a career-best 220 wickets and being the leading wicket-taker outside of touring teams for the sixth successive season.[b] For Surrey in county cricket he totalled 113 wickets, and he again helped England to victory over Australia in the only Tests where cricket took place. In 1891, Lohmann was the leading English wicket-taker for the seventh successive year with 177 wickets as Surrey carried all before them in a wet summer, and on the following winter's Australian tour, he again bowled wonderfully well, taking eight for 58 on a dry wicket in Sydney.

In 1892, with Surrey still crushing all opposition in the County Championship race, Lohmann "suffered only by comparison with previous years".[5] He surprisingly ceded the position of Surrey's chief bowler to the emergentWilliam Lockwood who took full advantage of Oval pitches being extremely fiery and untrue due to reconditioning of the square, but it still seemed as though Lohmann had many years of county and Test cricket ahead of him. A rude shock to Surrey was to come, however.

Illness and comeback

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After the 1892 season had ended, a dreadful shock came when it was announced that Lohmann had contractedtuberculosis. In an effort to improve his health, he sailed during the 1892/1893 winter toCape Town.[6] Although at first it was hoped that he might return even when the 1893 season began, for two years his health did not at first improve and he could not play at all for Surrey in 1893 or 1894. In fact, he was not well enough to play any cricket until the 1894/1895 Currie Cup final where he turned out forWestern Province.

By July 1895 Lohmann's health had recovered sufficiently for him to return to England and play for Surrey again. Fortuitously, his return coincided with a return to extremely treacherous wickets after a long spell of dry weather and much better pitches than he had ever bowled on before. Though completely overshadowed byTom Richardson, the mere fact of missing the good wickets in May and June caused Lohmann to actually beat Richardson in the averages, though his batting (seen as an important part of his county cricket up to 1892) was completely insignificant.[7]

Record breaking feats

[edit]
Completed Test careerbowling averages[8][c]
BowlerAverage
Charles Marriott (ENG)8.72
Frederick Martin (ENG)10.07
George Lohmann (ENG)10.75
Laurie Nash (AUS)12.60
John Ferris (AUS/ENG)12.70
Tom Horan (AUS)13.00
Harry Dean (ENG)13.90
Albert Trott (AUS/ENG)15.00
Mike Procter (SA)15.02
Jack Iverson (AUS)15.23
Tom Kendall (AUS)15.35
Alec Hurwood (AUS)15.45
Billy Barnes (ENG)15.54
John Trim (WI)16.16
Billy Bates (ENG)16.42

Returning to theBritish Cape Colony to maintain his health, Lohmann played no more first-class cricket until February, yet on the matting wickets in three "Tests" (the England eleven was no more than England "A" of today), Lohmann was so unplayable that he took 35 wickets for the remarkable average of just 5.80 runs each. During this series Lohmann twice broke the record for best average in Test cricket: he took 15 for 45 in the first Test, including ahat-trick (the fourthTest cricket hat-trick) at the end of the second innings to win the match; and after not being put on initially in the second Test, he became the first bowler to take nine wickets in a Test innings (a feat subsequently emulated only 14 times andsurpassed only three times).

In 1896, Lohmann began to play for Surrey at the end of May, and, though he took 93 wickets and helped Richardson to put Australia out for 53 on a good wicket at Lord's, it was thought he had not come up to expectations. Indeed, on several occasions when pitches were suited to him,[d] his bowling should have met with much greater success.[9] Still, he had a fully satisfactory benefit in the game against Yorkshire in August.

A pay dispute, in which he demanded twice the existing 10-pound match fee given at the time to professional cricketers, caused Lohmann, along withBilly Gunn, to withdraw from the last Test match. He continued to play for Surrey that August, but at the end of the season his health again degenerated and had to return to South Africa, and a continuation of the 1896 pay dispute caused Lohmann to retire from his English career for good.

He is also the fastest Test bowler to reach 100 wickets, taking just 16 matches.[10] Lohmann also holds the record for the most Test matches in a complete career (18) where a player bowled in both innings.[11]

Last days

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Lohmann emigrated to the British Cape Colony permanently in 1897 and played a full season of first-class cricket for Western Province. In five matches on matting pitches during March 1897 he took 34 wickets for 12.26 runs each, but it was clear throughout that year that his health was unlikely to recover, and he was able to play only one further first-class match for "A Bailey's Transvaal XI".

Lohmann did come back to England in 1901 to manage the second South African touring team (and the first whose matches were recognised as first-class). However, his health was clearly never going to recover completely, and even after returning to Cape Town with the onset of autumn in England, Lohmann's condition only became more critical. On 1 December 1901, the tuberculosis he had fought against for nine years finally claimed his life at age 36. He was buried atMatjiesfontein.[12]

Awards

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Further reading

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Notes

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  1. ^Surrey had been acknowledged as the champion county since 1887
  2. ^This feat has been bettered only byTich Freeman between 1928 and 1935
  3. ^Qualification: 10 wickets, career completed.
  4. ^Notably againstMiddlesex at The Oval,Somerset at Taunton andLancashire at Manchester

References

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  1. ^Frindall, Bill (2009).Ask Bearders.BBC Books. p. 148.ISBN 978-1-84607-880-4.
  2. ^Cricinfo (2 January 2009)."ICC and FICA launch Cricket Hall of Fame". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved19 July 2019.
  3. ^Lemmon, David (1989).The official history of Surrey County Cricket Club.London: Christopher Helm. pp. 56–57.ISBN 0747020108.
  4. ^Pardon, Charles F., ed. (1888).John Wisden's Cricketers' Almanack (26 ed.). London: John Wisden & Co. pp. 2–3.
  5. ^Pardon, Sydney H., ed. (1893).John Wisden's Cricketers' Almanac (30 ed.). John Wisden & Co. pp. 5–6.
  6. ^"Court Circular".The Times.London. 21 December 1892. p. 10.
  7. ^Pardon, Sydney H., ed. (1896).John Wisden's Cricketers' Almanack (33 ed.). London: John Wisden & Co. pp. 3–4.
  8. ^"Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Bowling records".Cricinfo.
  9. ^Pardon, Sydney H., ed. (1897).John Wisden's Cricketer's Almanack (34 ed.). London: John Wisden & Co. p. 61.
  10. ^"Ask Steven: Ronchi's rare double, and agreeing on a result" | Cricket.ESPNcricinfo (4 June 2013). Retrieved on 2018-07-30.
  11. ^Walmsley, Keith (2003).Mosts Without in Test Cricket. Reading, England: Keith Walmsley. p. 434.ISBN 0947540067.
  12. ^"Death of G. LOHMANN".The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 19, 884. New South Wales, Australia. 3 December 1901. p. 5. Retrieved19 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.

External links

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