Leslie Townsend
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Leslie Townsend England (ENG) |
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Batting style | Right-hand bat | |
Bowling type | Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak | |
Tests | First-class | |
Matches | 4 | 493 |
Runs scored | 97 | 19555 |
Batting average | 16.16 | 27.50 |
100s/50s | -/- | 22/102 |
Top score | 40 | 233 |
Balls bowled | 399 | 65764 |
Wickets | 6 | 1088 |
Bowling average | 34.16 | 21.12 |
5 wickets in innings | - | 51 |
10 wickets in match | - | 16 |
Best bowling | 2/22 | 8/26 |
Catches/stumpings | 2/- | 241/- |
Test debut: 21 February 1930 |
Leslie Townsend (Leslie Fletcher Townsend; born June 8, 1903, Long Eaton, Derbyshire, England; died February 17, 1993, Nelson, New Zealand) was the leading all-rounder for Derbyshire between the wars and at his peak probably the most deadly bowler on a sticky wicket Derbyshire ever produced, owing to his perfect length and ability to turn the ball back from the off. His pace was almost medium and even the most fleet-footed of batsmen could not hit him easily on a bad pitch; however, his lack of flight and variety made him usually harmless on good pitches. Townsend was also an enterprising middle order batsman, who set a longstanding record for most centuries for Derbyshire in a season in 1933.
Townsend did not play cricket in his youth and was only attracted to the game by watching Nottinghamshire's star batsman George Gunn. He first played for Derbyshire, his native county, in 1922 and obtained a regular place in 1924. Though he did little, Townsend was able to keep his place because there was no competition - Derbyshire did not win a single match that year.
1925 saw a slight advance: Townsend scored over 800 runs at an average of 18. So weak was the county's batting that these modest figures, with 59 as his best score, placed Townsend fourth in the county's averages. In 1926 after a very slow start Townsend developed remarkably as a bowler in August on a number of treacherous pitches. He took 6 for 32 against Nottinghamshire at Ilkeston and 9 for 36 for two innings against Northamptonshire at Chesterfield.
The following year, with Derbyshire making a remarkable rise to fifth in the Championship, Townsend's medium pace off-break bowling was close to the top of the averages. He took 5 for 29 on a sticky wicket against the formidable Lancashire side and 5 for 42 against Warwickshire. The following year, his deadliness on sticky wickets was so pronounced he took 101 wickets, including 13 against Sussex, and his batting developed so much he edged past 1000 runs with a best score of 98. In 1929, despite only one five-wicket return, he again managed 100 wickets. He was chosen for a second-string tour of the West Indies but did nothing of note.
The 1930s saw Townsend's batting bloom amazingly due to improved technique. Having not scored a century before 1930, he hit four alone this year, and after a decline in 1931, did even better as a batsman in 1932. At the same, time, so deadly was his bowling on the many sticky wickets than he was in the top ten of the 1931 national bowling averages and took 117 wickets in 1932. In 1933, Townsend's batting was so successful that he scored over 2,000 runs, including innings of 233 against Leicestershire at Loughborough, 172 not out against Warwickshire at Derby, and 151 against Essex at Leyton. He took 100 wickets for 18.71 each and was second only to Verity in deadliness on the sticky wickets of May and June. His best performances were 9 for 82 against Somerset at Ilkeston, 10 for 54 against Hampshire at Portsmouth and 14 for 90 against Gloucestershire at Chesterfield. However, his limitations on the hard pitches in July and August meant he only reached the rare "double" of 2000 runs and 100 wickets in the last match. Nonetheless, he was names as a Cricketer of the Year by Wisden and toured India, though again meeting with little success. He played in three of the Tests but did not show the skill required.
In the following three years, as Derbyshire attained the greatest heights they ever have in the County Championship, Townsend's bowling declined steadily even during the appalling summer of 1936. By 1935, indeed, he was rarely given substantial spells of bowling but still could do well on a sticky pitch, as at Edgbaston in 1936 when he took twelve Warwickshire wickets. Nonetheless, along with Dennis Smith he was the indispensable backbone of the batting, which, though above the horrific standards often associated with Derbyshire, was that year still very weak for a champion county. His best score that year was 182 not out against Sussex at Chesterfield. Leslie Townsend played a season with Auckland in 1934/1935, and after his batting declined so badly in 1939 that he scored fewer than 700 runs for an average of only 19, Townsend settled in New Zealand permanently.
However, in his adopted country Leslie Townsend, who originally went there to work as a joiner and cabinet-maker, became the vital driving force behind the development of first-class cricket in the Nelson district of New Zealand. Most observers during his later years as a coach there saw Leslie Townsend as the reason why the city produced an unusual proportion of New Zealand's Test cricketers in the latter part of the twentieth century. Leslie Townsend died in February 1993 at the age of 89.