Greg Watson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greg Watson Australia (Aus) |
||
Batting style | Left-handed batsman | |
Bowling type | Right arm fast-medium | |
First-class | List A | |
Matches | 45 | 8 |
Runs scored | 552 | 19 |
Batting average | 12.83 | 4.75 |
100s/50s | 0/0 | 0/0 |
Top score | 38 | 7 |
Balls bowled | 7,762 | 465 |
Wickets | 102 | 21 |
Bowling average | 37.56 | 11.38 |
5 wickets in innings | 1 | 1 |
10 wickets in match | 0 | N/A |
Best bowling | 6-45 | 5-22 |
Catches/stumpings | 12/0 | 0/0 |
Debut: 11 November 1977 |
Gregory George Watson (born 29 January 1955) is a former Australian cricketer, born in Mudgee, New South Wales. [1]
Watson made his first-class debut for New South Wales at the Adelaide Oval against South Australia in the 1977-78 Sheffield Shield. He took four wickets, his maiden victim being opposing captain Ashley Woodcock, but did not bat in either innings. He played a further six games in the Shield, capturing another 13 wickets, and made a single List A appearance in the Gillette Cup, taking 1-25 from 8 eight-ball overs.
In 1978 Watson came to England to play county cricket for Worcestershire. He had a reasonably successful season, taking 48 first-class wickets at just under 32 in 21 games, including a career-best 6-45 against Sussex in early August. He also made his highest score with the bat: 38 against Somerset. In one-day cricket he had great success, claiming 19 wickets at a mere 9.52 apiece, including 5-22 (again a career best) against Combined Universities in the Benson & Hedges Cup, a performance which won him the man-of-the-match award.
The 1978-79 Australian season saw Watson continue with New South Wales, but he was not particularly effective, averaging close on 50 with the ball in taking 13 first-class wickets. He returned for another season with Worcestershire in 1979, but played only nine times in first-class cricket (taking 22 wickets at 37.50) and not at all in the one-day format; from mid-July onwards he had to satisfy himself with a diet consisting entirely of Second XI games.
Watson was to play only one more match: a single outing in the 1979-80 Sheffield Shield for Western Australia against Queensland at Perth. The game was drawn, but Watson himself had a rather poor match: he conceded 135 runs from 30 six-ball overs and had only the second-innings wickets of Ray Phillips and Alec Parker to show for it. Watson never played again.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Cricinfo gives Mudgee as Watson's place of birth. CricketArchive, however, gives it as Gulgong, about 26km from Mudgee.