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Sydney Barnes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English cricketer
For the similarly named Australian cricketer, seeSid Barnes.

Sydney Barnes
Barnes in 1910
Personal information
Full name
Sydney Francis Barnes
Born(1873-04-19)19 April 1873
Smethwick,Staffordshire, England
Died26 December 1967(1967-12-26) (aged 94)
Chadsmoor, Staffordshire, England
NicknameBarney
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-armfast-medium
Right-armleg spin
RoleBowler
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 129)13 December 1901 v Australia
Last Test18 February 1914 v South Africa
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1894–1896Warwickshire
1899–1903Lancashire
1904–1914, 1924–1935Staffordshire
1927–1930Wales
1929Minor Counties
Career statistics
CompetitionTestFCMCC
Matches27133177
Runs scored2421,5734,806
Batting average8.0612.7821.36
100s/50s0/00/23/19
Top score38*93136
Balls bowled7,87331,43030,699
Wickets1897191376
Bowling average16.4317.097.99
5 wickets in innings2468159
10 wickets in match71861
Best bowling9/1039/10310/26
Catches/stumpings12/–72/–113/–
Source:CricketArchive,30 January 2025

Sydney Francis Barnes (19 April 1873 – 26 December 1967) was an Englishprofessionalcricketer who is regarded as one of the greatestbowlers of all time. He was right-handed and bowled at a pace that varied frommedium to fast-medium with the ability to make theball bothswing andbreak fromoff orleg. InTest cricket, Barnes played forEngland in 27 matches from 1901 to 1914, taking 189wickets at 16.43, one of the lowest Testbowling averages ever achieved. In 1911–12, he helped England to winthe Ashes when he took 34 wickets in the series againstAustralia. In 1913–14, his final Test series, he took a world record 49 wickets in a Test series, againstSouth Africa.

Barnes was unusual in that, despite a very long career as a top-class player, he spent little more than two seasons infirst-class cricket, briefly representingWarwickshire (1894 to 1896) andLancashire (1899 to 1903). Instead, he preferred league and minor counties cricket for mostly professional reasons. He had two phases playing for his nativeStaffordshire in theMinor Counties Championship from 1904 to 1914 and from 1924 to 1935. He played exclusively for Saltaire Cricket Club in the Bradford League from 1915 to 1923. In his wider career from 1895 to 1934, he variously represented several clubs in each of the Bradford,Central Lancashire,Lancashire andNorth Staffordshire leagues.

Early life

[edit]

Barnes was born on 19 April 1873 inSmethwick,Staffordshire.[1][2] He was the second son of five children whose father, Richard, lived nearly all of his life in Staffordshire, working for 63 years at theMuntz Metal Company[2] which was based atSelly Oak inBirmingham.[3] His father did not play much cricket and Barnes was the only one of three brothers who ever "touched a bat or ball".[4]

Work outside cricket

[edit]

Outside cricket, Barnes worked as a clerk in a Staffordshire colliery until 1914, and later atStaffordshire County Council, where he became skilful incalligraphy.[5] Even into his nineties, his skill as an inscriber of legal documents was still in demand. In 1957, he was asked to present a handwritten scroll toElizabeth II to commemorate her visit toStafford.[6]

Cricket career

[edit]

1888 to 1894

[edit]

Barnes's career began in 1888 when he was fifteen and played for a small club which had a ground behind the Galton Hotel inSmethwick. Soon afterwards, he joined Smethwick Cricket Club and played for its third team. He was taught to bowloff spin by Billy Bird, the Smethwick professional who had played forWarwickshire, and then taught himself to bowlleg spin.[7] In due course, he was selected for the second team and had earned a place in the first team, playing in theBirmingham and District Premier League, at the start of the1893 season.[4]

In 1894, when Barnes was a 21-year-oldfast bowler, he was asked to join the ground staff ofStaffordshire County Cricket Club but he found the terms unattractive.[8] Instead, he joinedRishton Cricket Club in theLancashire League where the pay was better than in any form ofcounty cricket, largely because of match bonuses and collections. He played for Rishton until 1899.[8] Wilfrid S. White commented that Barnes's career in league cricket "stands out unparalleled, unapproached, by any other player".[9]

Later in the 1894 season, Barnes was invited to play for Warwickshire, who were due to enter theCounty Championship in 1895. His debut was in a minor match againstCheshire atEdgbaston on 20–21 August. Barnes bowled only 8 overs, taking none for 27, and the match was drawn.[10] On 23 August, Barnes made hisfirst-class debut for Warwickshire againstGloucestershire atClifton College Close Ground, except that he did not take the field as play was restricted by bad weather to just 72 overs of his team's first innings, in which they reached 102–2.[11]

1895 to 1903

[edit]

Barnes played only three more times for Warwickshire: twice in May 1895 and once in June 1896.[12] He took just three wickets in these matches, having bowled 86 overs and conceded 226 runs.[4] Barnes finished with Warwickshire after they invited him to play in a match and then sent him a telegram telling him not to come because an amateur would be playing.[8] So, he chose to play mostly for Rishton from 1895 to 1899, making 38 appearances and taking 411 wickets, his best season being 1898 when he took 96 wickets at 8.46.[5][13][14] Barnes had been afast bowler with Warwickshire but in his time at Rishton he reduced his pace tomedium fast and experimented withspin.[8]

Barnes's association withLancashire began in 1899 when he played for the club's Second XI against Staffordshire in a match at theCounty Ground, Stoke-on-Trent, on 10 and 11 July. He took ten wickets in the match including a match-winning analysis of eight for 38 in the second innings.[15] In August, he made his first-team debut for Lancashire and played in twoCounty Championship matches againstSussex andSurrey but he had only moderate success with a best return of three for 99 against Surrey.[16] He rejected an offer to join the Lancashire ground staff, preferring to remain in better-paid league cricket, which he could combine with full-time employment as a clerk in a Staffordshire colliery.[5]

In 1900, Barnes left Rishton and joinedBurnley Cricket Club, also in the Lancashire League. He did not represent Lancashire that season but reappeared in 1901 when he made two Second XI appearances againstYorkshire's Second XI and one County Championship match, the last match of the season in late August againstLeicestershire atOld Trafford. This was a rain-interrupted draw but Barnes scored 32 runs and then took six for 70 in the Leicestershire first innings, reducing them to an all-out 140 in response to Lancashire's total of 328–8 declared.[17] Lancashire wanted Barnes to sign for them in 1902, but Barnes, always financially aware, was unsure, as he considered first-class county cricket to be "a great deal of hard work for relatively little money", and he liked his arrangement with Burnley supplementing his full-time job.[8]

Lancashire's captain wasArchie MacLaren who was about to lead England in its tour of Australia in 1901–02. Despite Barnes's limited first-class career to this point, he was invited to join the squad. This came about becauseLord Hawke refused to allowGeorge Hirst andWilfred Rhodes to travel but MacLaren had become, to quote White, "the first to see in Barnes a bowler of international calibre".[18] Barnes's selection was a major surprise and considered to be "the most daring experiment in the history of the game".[18] For Barnes, "job security was always a prime consideration" and he accepted the tour but with misgivings.[8]

Barnes was a great success in Australia but his participation was cut short by a knee injury. He played against three state teams before making his Test debut againstAustralia on 13 December 1901 atSydney Cricket Ground, where he took five for 65 in the first innings. Also making their debuts in this Test wereColin Blythe andLen Braund. Between them, the three debutant bowlers took all twenty Australian wickets as England won by an innings and 124 runs.[19] Australia levelled the series in the second Test atMelbourne Cricket Ground, winning by 229 runs although Barnes had figures of six for 42 and seven for 121.Monty Noble trumped Barnes's effort with seven for 17 and six for 60.[20] Although successful, taking nineteen wickets in the two Tests to add to the thirteen in his previous seven first-class matches, Barnes was over-bowled. He injured a knee in the third Test atAdelaide Oval and missed the remainder of the tour. He later said he was still far short of his best at the time, but he had established himself as a world-class bowler.[21]

Differences arose between Barnes and MacLaren because Barnes was, inDerek Birley's words, "the arch-professional (who) expected due reward (for his efforts)".[8] This was in stark contrast to MacLaren's "starry-eyed public school enthusiasm" and the two did not get on personally. After leaving Australia, the team were crossing theTasman Sea in a storm which had them "fearing for their lives". At one point, MacLaren was heard to say: "Well, there's one consolation. If we go down, that bugger Barnes will go down with us".[8]

Barnes was selected only once in England'shome series against Australia in 1902. This was for the third Test, the only Test ever held atBramall Lane inSheffield, which Australia won by 143 runs. Barnes took six for 49 and one for 50, but Noble with 11 wickets was again Australia's matchwinner.[22]

Despite his differences with MacLaren, Barnes became a first team regular at Lancashire through the 1902 and 1903 seasons, producing several successful performances, although he was still troubled in 1902 by the knee injury sustained on tour. In 1903, Barnes was in dispute with Lancashire about winter employment and being "much over-bowled".[21] Near the end of the season, Barnes took part in theGentlemen v Players match but was unfit and could only bowl one over. Comments were made in the press that it was unfair of Barnes to "claim a fee and then not perform". Barnes thought it unfair that he should be paid the same as teammates who did much less work. Lancashire were paying him £3 a week in summer and £1 in winter, whereas in the Lancashire League he could get £8 plus bonuses for playing Saturdays only. Barnes tried to get more from Lancashire and refused to sign a contract for 1904. Lancashire called his bluff and dropped him from the team for their final match of the season. Barnes went back to the leagues and minor counties for good and never played in the County Championship again.[8]

The 1902 and 1903 seasons were the only ones between 1895 and 1934 in which Barnes did not play league cricket. He played in 22 first-class matches in 1902, taking 95 wickets at an average of 21.56 with a best analysis of six for 39 and one match in which he took 10 wickets. He is listed well down the national averages and his overall performance bears moderate comparison with that of, for example, Wilfred Rhodes who took 213 wickets at 13.15 with five ten-wicket matches.[23] In 1903, Barnes made 24 appearances and took 131 wickets at 17.85. He was ninth of those bowlers who took 100 wickets; his best analysis was eight for 37 and he had three ten-wicket matches.[24] 1903 was the only season in which Barnes took 100 wickets in an English first-class season, although he did capture 104 wickets in South Africa in 1913–14.[25]

1904 to 1914

[edit]

Barnes joined Staffordshire in 1904 and played in theMinor Counties Championship until 1914. He combined this with weekend league cricket, returning to the Lancashire League for the 1904 and 1905 seasons to play forChurch. In 1906, he moved to theNorth Staffordshire League and was with Porthill to 1914. Barnes did not play first-class cricket again for over four years until he joined an occasional team playing against theSouth African tourists in September 1907. He toured Australia the following winter and the bulk of his Test career was played from then till 1914. He made eight appearances for the Players in the prestigiousGentlemen v Players series during this period, culminating in the July 1914 match.[12]

Barnes returned to Test cricket whenEngland toured Australia in 1907–08. This time, he played in all five Tests and took 24 wickets at 26.08 with a best performance of seven for 60.[26] In the second Test, which England won by 1 wicket, it was Barnes's batting that was crucial as he shared stands of 34 for the ninth wicket withJoe Humphries and an unbeaten 39 for the last withArthur Fielder.[27] When the tourists playedWestern Australia, Barnes shared a stand withGeorge Gunn of over 200 for the fifth wicket while scoring 93, his personal best in first-class cricket.[28]

In the 1909 season, Barnes played in the last three ofEngland's five Tests against Australia. In the third Test atHeadingley, he took six for 63 in Australia's second innings but England lost by 126 runs.[29] The fourth Test at Old Trafford was drawn, Barnes taking five for 56 in the first innings.[30] In the final Test atThe Oval, Barnes took two wickets in each innings of another drawn match.[31] In 1910, Barnes was made aWisden Cricketer of the Year.[32]

Barnes joined the MCCtour of Australia in 1911–12 and played in all five Tests.[12] In the first Test at Sydney, which England lost, captainJohnny Douglas shared the new ball with left-arm seamerFrank Foster. Barnes, disgusted at being made a change bowler, sulked and gave a performance that was well below par.[7] At Melbourne, however, Douglas bowed to the pressure and surrendered the new ball to the Staffordshire bowler, who responded with a spell of four wickets for one run in his first five overs.[33] His first four victims wereWarren Bardsley,Charles Kelleway,Clem Hill andWarwick Armstrong. WhenFrank Foster dismissedVictor Trumper and Barnes addedRoy Minnett, the home side were reduced to 38 for six.[34] Barnes took 39 wickets in the series with three five-wicket hauls.[35]

In the1912 Triangular Tournament, Barnes played in all six of England's Tests, three each against Australia andSouth Africa.[12] In the three matches against South Africa, he took 34 wickets for 282 runs.[5]

In 1913–14, Barnes toured South Africa with MCC and played in the first four Tests of a five match series.[12] He missed the last Test because of a financial disagreement.[36] His 49 wickets on the matting pitches used in this series remains the world record for wickets taken in a Test series.[37] In the second Test at theOld Wanderers ground inJohannesburg, he became the first bowler to take more than 15 wickets in a Test with figures of eight for 56 and nine for 103 resulting in a match analysis of seventeen for 159.[38]

OnlyJim Laker's match analysis of nineteen for 90 in 1956 has since surpassed this feat in Test cricket.[38] Don Bradman recalled seeing Barnes at Old Trafford after Laker had destroyed Australia in that match. "Well, what did you think of that?", Bradman asked Barnes. He received the gruff reply that "no bugger ever got all ten when I was on at the other end", probably a reference to the fact that Laker's co-bowler Tony Lock did not take a wicket in the second innings (in the whole match, Lock took one for 106 in 69 overs).[39]

Barnes took 189 Test wickets. His average of 16.43 andstrike rate of 41.65 are the lowest amongst bowlers who have played in more than 25 Tests and taken more than 150 wickets, althoughKagiso Rabada currently has a lower strike rate. His closest challenger isAlan Davidson, who took 186 wickets at 20.53.[40] Barnes took his 150th Test match wicket in only his 24th Test, which is a world record.[41] Next best are Waqar Younis and Yasir Shah (27 Tests each).[42]

1915 to 1923

[edit]

Barnes was 41 when the First World War began and so too old for military service. First-class cricket was shelved for the duration but league cricket continued and numerous top-class players including Jack Hobbs, Wilfred Rhodes and Frank Woolley signed up to play in theBradford League. Barnes saw an advert placed by Saltaire Cricket Club in theAthletic News and applied for the role by saying: "Will I do?"[43] From 1915 to 1923, he played exclusively and with great success for Saltaire. The club and their ground at Roberts Park had been founded in 1871 and they joined the Bradford League in 1905. They won the league three times (1917, 1918 and 1922) while Barnes played for them. On his debut in May 1915, he took eight for eight against Bowling Old Lane and followed that with all ten for fourteen against Baildon Green, including five wickets in five successive balls. In later seasons, he took all ten against Bowling Old Lane and Keighley.[44]

Barnes knew full well his value to Saltaire and characteristically drove a hard bargain. There were several record crowd and gate receipt matches when he was playing, including one Priestley Cup final at Bradford Park Avenue, a first-class ground used by Yorkshire. Barnes started on £3 10s per match in 1915 plus travel and accommodation, though he did soon remove to Saltaire (and the club paid his removal costs). His match fee doubled in 1916 and had increased to £18 15s in 1922. Like all professionals operating in league cricket, he benefited from "pass the hat" crowd collections (performance rewards) at each game and, as an additional supplement, he secured a coaching role at Bradford Grammar School which is near Saltaire. Saltaire over-reached themselves somewhat and it took an effort to re-balance the books in the 1920s following Barnes's departure.[45]

In total, Barnes took 904 wickets for Saltaire at an average of 5.26. He took a hundred wickets in a season five times, a rare feat in the Bradford League's history, and headed the bowling averages in every one of his nine seasons there. He had an average of under five in most seasons and even his highest was only seven, which is itself generally held to be a remarkable bowling average in any level of competition.[46][47]

Fifteen years after Barnes left Saltaire, they signed the young Jim Laker, then a sixteen year old schoolboy who lived in nearby Baildon. Laker played for Saltaire through the 1938 to 1940 seasons. He joined the British Army in 1941 and spent the Second World War in Egypt. He did not develop his off break bowling skill until he joined the Army and at Saltaire he was recognised primarily as a promising batsman who was also a useful pace bowler. During that time, when he was attending a coaching class with Yorkshire at Headingley, Laker listened to a conversation between George Hirst and Herbert Sutcliffe who apparently did not often agree with each other about cricket, but Laker recalled Sutcliffe being in complete agreement with Hirst's view that "Sydney Barnes was the greatest bowler there has ever been and what's more the greatest bowler there ever will be".[48] Around that time, Laker had watched Barnes, then in his sixties, when he guested in a Bradford League match. Laker recalled that Barnes's control of the ball was "still remarkable".[48]

After Laker became an England bowler himself, he was able to meet Barnes and remembered one conversation in particular which took place at Lord's. Laker was impressed by Barnes's genuine enthusiasm and self-confidence. He had been told that Barnes would bowl such varied deliveries as an in-swinger, a fast off break and a leg-cutter all in the same over. Laker asked Barnes if that was true and Barnes said: "Keep trying something different". Laker heeded his advice.[49]

1924 to 1935

[edit]

Barnes declined an opportunity to join the tour to Australia in 1920–21, when he was 47 years old. He wanted to take his family with him, but it soon became clear that he would have to pay their traveling expenses.[5] He was not selected by England nor did he seek selection by the Players after the First World War. He did not play first-class cricket again until 1927 when he was 54 years old. From then until 1930, he made nine appearances forWales.[12]

He left Saltaire after the 1923 season and returned to Staffordshire where he remained until 1935. As in his first spell with the county, he decided he would also play league cricket at weekends. From 1924 to 1930, this was in theCentral Lancashire League, first with Castleton Moor (1924 to 1928) and then forRochdale (1929 and 1930). He moved toRawtenstall in the Lancashire League from 1931 to 1933. Then, aged 61, he returned to the Bradford League to play for Keighley in 1934, which was his final season in league cricket.[46]

Barnes took 49 wickets for Wales in 1928, including seven for 51 and five for 67 in an eight wicket win over the touringWest Indians.[50] He also made two first-class appearances for theMinor Counties in 1929[12] and took eight for 41 in a drawn game against the South Africans at Stoke-on-Trent.[51] Barnes's final first-class appearance was for Wales againstMarylebone Cricket Club (MCC) atLord's in 1930.[12]

Barnes made a total of 177 appearances for Staffordshire in two spells from 1904 to 1914 and 1924 to 1935. His career record for Staffordshire was 1,432 wickets at an average of 8.03. Aged 62, he played twice for Staffordshire in 1935 and, although he did make occasional reappearances in later years, that was effectively the end of his cricketing career.[13] His last match for Staffordshire was against Yorkshire Seconds on the Savile Park ground at Castleford on 3 & 4 July 1935 where he took none for 36 and one for 61.

Approach and technique

[edit]

Barnes bowled with consistent attacking intent, consistently making the batsmen play, and using ongoing variation.

He could bowl balls that swung and/or spun both ways, at a range of speeds (mostly fast-medium). He in particular delivered leg-breaks bowled at pace and without rotation of the wrist. The spin was derived purely from the twist exerted by his fingers (which were described as long) rather than through leverage of the wrist or elbow. Fielders at mid-off and mid-on reported hearing the snap of his fingers as he bowled, with the batsmen unable to read which way the ball would break.[52]

Barnes was described as more than six feet tall and maintaining an erect posture with wide shoulders, a deep chest, long arms and strong legs – in John Arlott's view, "perfectly built to be a bowler".[53] He bowled right armfast-medium but also had what Arlott called "the accuracy, spin and resource of a slow bowler".[36] Barnes's high delivery provided him with a lift off the pitch that forced even the best batsmen to play him at an awkward height. He was clever at concealing his pace and could produce deliveries that were both appreciably faster and slower than his usual fast-medium pace; and could bowl an effectiveyorker.[36] Barnes considered himself essentially a spin bowler as he bowled both theoff-break and theleg-break, but at a fast pace.[36] Although technically formidable, Barnes allied his skillset to a hostile persona and great stamina which, Arlott says, "were reflected in constant, unrelenting probing for a batsman's weakness and then attacking it by surprise, each ball fitting into a tactical pattern".[36] In Barnes's era, the same ball would be used for the whole of a team's innings, with nonew ball, although bowlers were assisted by the unpredictability ofuncovered pitches.

Harry Altham wrote of Barnes's bowling: "At appreciably more than medium pace he could, even in the finest weather and on the truest wickets in Australia, both swing and break the ball from off or leg. Most deadly of all was the ball which he would deliver from rather wide on the crease, move in with a late swerve the width of the wicket, and then straighten back off the ground to hit the off stump".[1]

Bernard Hollowood played alongside Barnes for Staffordshire in the 1930s and quoted his father, Albert Hollowood, who had been Barnes's Staffordshire captain before the First World War, as saying: "Oh, yes, he could bowl 'em all, but he got his wickets with fast leg-breaks. Marvellous, absolutely marvellous, he was. Fast leg-breaks and always on a length".[54]

The great Australian batsman Clem Hill told Neville Cardus that, on a perfect wicket, Barnes could swing the new ball in and out "very late", could spin from the ground, pitch on the leg stump and miss the off. This is evidence of Barnes's ability to deploy maximum variety in the space of a single over. Cardus remarked on Barnes's creativity as "one of the first bowlers really to use the seam of a new ball and combine swing so subtly with spin that few batsmen could distinguish one from the other".

Cardus described Barnes's "splendid upright action, right arm straight over". He ran on easy strides. Wilfred Rhodes recalled that Barnes carried the ball in his left hand until, a couple of strides from delivery, he switched it to the right.

Personality

[edit]

As for Barnes's controversial character, Cardus said that he was not an easy man to handle on the field of play because there was a "Mephistophelian aspect about him" in that (unlike the amateurs) he did not play cricket out of any "green field starry-eyed idealism".

Cardus said that Barnes was a hostile, attacking bowler.

Cardus said Barnes always made the batsman play the ball and Barnes himself said about later bowlers sending down so many balls the batsman need not play that, "I didn't. I never gave 'em any rest".

Barnes, said Cardus, was "relentless" and "blew a chill wind of antagonism", but he mellowed in full age and retirement. (Cardus, Wisden Obituary)

Hollowood cartoons

[edit]

Bernard Hollowood drew two cartoons of Barnes, which appear in his bookCricket on the Brain. One depicts him leaping in the air as he appeals for a dismissal and with his index finger raised as though he himself is adjudicating on the appeal. It is entitled "A.N. Other lbw Barnes.... 0".[55]John Arlott wrote in his review of the book for the 1971Wisden: "... his two caricatures of S. F. Barnes would seem transcendent if they were not outweighed by his chapter on that great bowler which is a fine passage ofcricket literature ... this is a book of many and well-cut facets."[56]

Personal life

[edit]

Barnes married Alice Maud Taylor (née Pearce) in 1903 and they had one child, a son called Leslie who took the photos for Wilfrid S. White's biography of Barnes.[57] Barnes was Alice's second husband, following her divorce from George Taylor.

In later life, Barnes became friends withPelham Warner, who was his exact contemporary, and they watched cricket together at Lord's.

Barnes died in 1967 at his home inChadsmoor,Cannock, Staffordshire.

Awards and tributes

[edit]

In the 1963 edition ofWisden Cricketers' Almanack, Barnes was selected byNeville Cardus as one of the "Six Giants of the Wisden Century".[58] This was a special commemorative selection requested byWisden for its 100th edition. The other five players chosen wereDon Bradman,W. G. Grace,Jack Hobbs,Tom Richardson andVictor Trumper. Soon afterwards, writing in the May 1963 edition ofThe Cricketer,John Arlott published a tribute to Barnes which commemorated his 90th birthday. Arlott wrote that of those who played with or against Barnes, "(they) had no doubt that he stood alone – the greatest bowler that ever lived".[59] In 2008, when the "ICC Best-Ever Test Championship Ratings" were published, Barnes's retrospective rating of 932 at the end of the 1913/14 series was the highest ever achieved.[60] In 2009, Barnes was an inaugural member of theICC Cricket Hall of Fame.[7]To mark 150 years of the Cricketers' Almanack,Wisden named him in anall-time Test World XI.[61]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abSwanton, E.W. (1986).Barclays World of Cricket. Willow Books. p. 153.ISBN 0-00-218193-2.
  2. ^abWhite, p. 9.
  3. ^"Muntz Metal Co". OldCopper.org. Archived fromthe original on 16 June 2011. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  4. ^abcWhite, p. 10.
  5. ^abcdeGerald M. D. Howat,Barnes, Sydney Francis (1873–1967), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  6. ^Gibbs,A chill wind beyond the boundary.Wisden Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  7. ^abcCricinfo – profile. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  8. ^abcdefghiBirley, Derek (1999).A Social History of English Cricket. Aurum. p. 188.ISBN 1-85410-710-0.
  9. ^White, p. 11.
  10. ^"Warwickshire v Cheshire in 1894".CricketArchive. Retrieved12 June 2011.
  11. ^"Gloucestershire v Warwickshire in 1894".CricketArchive. Retrieved12 June 2011.
  12. ^abcdefgh"First-class matches played by Sydney Barnes".CricketArchive. Retrieved24 June 2011.
  13. ^abWhite, p. 53.
  14. ^"Lancashire League matches played by Sydney Barnes".CricketArchive. Retrieved24 June 2011.
  15. ^"Staffordshire v Lancashire Second XI in 1899".CricketArchive. Retrieved16 July 2011.
  16. ^"Surrey v Lancashire in 1899".CricketArchive. Retrieved16 July 2011.
  17. ^"Lancashire v Leicestershire in 1899".CricketArchive. Retrieved16 July 2011.
  18. ^abWhite, p. 17.
  19. ^"Australia v England in 1901–02 (First Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved18 July 2011.
  20. ^"Australia v England in 1901–02 (Second Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved18 July 2011.
  21. ^abArlott,Arlott on Cricket, p. 17.
  22. ^"England v Australia in 1902 (Third Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved18 July 2011.
  23. ^"First-class bowling in England in 1902".CricketArchive. Retrieved17 July 2011.
  24. ^"First-class bowling in England in 1903".CricketArchive. Retrieved17 July 2011.
  25. ^"First-class bowling in each season by Sydney Barnes".CricketArchive. Retrieved17 July 2011.
  26. ^"Test bowling by England in Australia in 1907–08".CricketArchive. Retrieved18 July 2011.
  27. ^Arlott,Arlott on Cricket, p. 18.
  28. ^Arlott,Arlott on Cricket, p. 19.
  29. ^"England v Australia in 1909 (Third Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved20 July 2011.
  30. ^"England v Australia in 1909 (Fourth Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved20 July 2011.
  31. ^"England v Australia in 1909 (Fifth Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved20 July 2011.
  32. ^CricketArchive profile. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  33. ^"Second Test summary – Australia v England in 1911–12". Wisden Online. Retrieved21 July 2013.
  34. ^"Australia v England in 1911–12 (Second Test)".CricketArchive. Retrieved23 January 2014.
  35. ^Test bowling record by season. CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  36. ^abcdeArlott,Arlott on Cricket, p. 16.
  37. ^"Most wickets in a Test series".Cricinfo. Retrieved23 January 2014.
  38. ^ab"Best Figures in a Test Match".Cricinfo. Retrieved23 January 2014.
  39. ^Hill, 134
  40. ^Frindall, Bill (2009).Ask Bearders. BBC Books. p. 93.ISBN 978-1-84607-880-4.
  41. ^"Fastest 150 Wickets In Test | Who Are These 5 Bowlers?". 28 June 2021. Retrieved29 June 2021.
  42. ^"Fastest 150 Test Wickets".Cricinfo. Retrieved28 September 2017.
  43. ^Hill, 20
  44. ^Hill, 20 to 21
  45. ^Hill, 21 to 22
  46. ^abWhite, pp. 53–54.
  47. ^Hill, 21
  48. ^abHill, 22
  49. ^Hill, 23
  50. ^"Wales v West Indians in 1928".CricketArchive. Retrieved18 July 2011.
  51. ^"Minor Counties v South Africans in 1929".CricketArchive. Retrieved18 July 2011.
  52. ^Gibbs, Peter (15 April 2025)."Sydney Barnes: Insurmountable Bowler But Deeply Difficult Man | Wisden".
  53. ^Arlott, pp. 16–17.
  54. ^Hollowood, p. 135.
  55. ^Hollowood, p. 69.
  56. ^Arlott,Wisden 1971, p. 1070.
  57. ^White, p. 3.
  58. ^Cardus, Neville (1963)."Six Giants of the Wisden Century".Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. John Wisden & Co. Retrieved8 November 2008.
  59. ^Arlott,Arlott on Cricket, p. 15.
  60. ^"ICC rankings – best-ever Test bowlers". International Cricket Council. Retrieved5 January 2014.
  61. ^"WG Grace and Shane Warne in Wisden all-time World Test XI". BBC. 23 October 2013. Retrieved26 July 2019.

Sources

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Media

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Sporting positions
Preceded by Oldest Living Test Cricketer
12 July 1964 – 26 December 1967
Succeeded by
Records
Preceded byWorld Record – Most Career Wickets in Test cricket
189 wickets (16.83) in 27 Tests
Held record 13 December 1913 to 4 January 1936
Succeeded by
Wisden All-Time World Test XI
Players
Men
Women
International
National
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sydney_Barnes&oldid=1328431903"
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