Gerald Smithson

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Gerald Arthur Smithson
England (ENG)
Gerald Arthur Smithson
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling type Right-arm medium
Tests First-class
Matches 2 200
Runs scored 70 6940
Batting average 23.33 22.67
100s/50s -/- 8/31
Top score 35 169
Balls bowled - 94
Wickets - 1
Bowling average - 117.00
5 wickets in innings - -
10 wickets in match - -
Best bowling - 1/26
Catches/stumpings -/- 131/-

Test debut: 21 January 1948
Last Test: 11 February 1948
Source: [1]

Gerald (Gerry) Arthur Smithson (born Spofforth, Yorkshire, on November 1, 1926, died suddenly aged 43 at home in Abingdon, Oxfordshire on September 6, 1970), played for Yorkshire County Cricket Club between 1946 and 1949, his highest innings for the county being 169 against Leicestershire CCC at Leicester in 1947. Perhaps his most famous innings was the 98 he scored in the Roses Match of 1947 against Lancashire CCC when he was just 20, and which has been described in the writings of Yorkshire broadcaster and journalist Michael Parkinson (Parkinson's Lore, London: Pavilion, 1981). According to the then Yorkshire captain [[Norman Yardley}}, his batting invited comparison with young Australians. Smithson played for Leicestershire between 1951 and 1956. He also assisted Hertfordshire CCC between 1957 and 1962.

Conscripted into National Service as a Bevin Boy in the coal mines after the Second World War, he worked at Askern Colliery before receiving special permission (after his case had been debated in the British Parliament) to tour the West Indies with the MCC team of 1947-48, where he took part in two Test matches in Bridgetown, Barbados and Port of Spain, Trinidad - where the famous West Indies trio of Frank Worrell, Clyde Walcott and Everton Weekes first appeared together. He was injured on the tour and did not play for Yorkshire in 1948.

In 1949, Smithson was part of Yardley's side that won the Championship for the fourth successive time following the resumption of First Class cricket in 1946, sharing the title with Middlesex CCC. His last recorded appearance for Yorkshire was a match against Scotland at Edinburgh in July 1950.

In 1951 he joined Leicestershire, with whom he remained until the close of the 1956 season. His best season at Leicestershire was that of 1952 when, through his attractive left-hand batting and two centuries, he hit 1,264 runs, averaging 28.08. His last first class match was for Leicestershire against Northamptonshire CCC at the County Ground, Northampton, in August 1956. Afterwards he served as professional cricket coach, first at Caterham School and then at Abingdon School where he was also Head Groundsman.

His photograph appeared twice in the famous cricketing journal Wisden; in 1948 on page 38, and as the frontispiece to the 1971 edition.

He was married with four daughters.