Colin Bland

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Colin Bland
South Africa (RSA)
Colin Bland
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling type Right-arm medium
Tests First-class
Matches 21 131
Runs scored 1669 7249
Batting average 49.08 37.95
100s/50s 3/9 13/34
Top score 144* 197
Balls bowled 394 3508
Wickets 2 43
Bowling average 62.50 35.27
5 wickets in innings - -
10 wickets in match - -
Best bowling 2/16 4/40
Catches/stumpings 10/- 51/-

Test debut: 8 December 1961
Last Test: 23 December 1966
Source: [1]

Kenneth Colin Bland, (born April 5, 1938 in Bulawayo, Rhodesia) was a cricketer who played for South Africa.

Bland originally came from Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe but then not a Test cricket- playing nation. He also played for the South African provincial sides Eastern Province and Orange Free State. A tall and elegant right-handed batsman, Bland broke into the South African Test team in 1961, and was a regular until 1966. As South Africa in the apartheid era played Test cricket only against England, Australia and New Zealand, his career was restricted to just 21 Tests, in which he scored 1,669 runs, including three centuries.

Bland's chief fame, though, rested on his fielding. By common consent the finest cover fieldsman of his time, and rated by some as the finest ever, he was able to the turn the course of whole matches. His spectacular run out of Ken Barrington in the Lord's Test of 1965, followed by a similar dismissal of Jim Parks, may have prevented England from establishing a match-winning first innings lead, the match eventually being drawn.

Bland was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1966.