Paul Whitelaw
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul Whitelaw New Zealand (NZ) |
||
Batting style | Right-hand bat | |
Bowling type | - | |
Tests | First-class | |
Matches | 2 | 49 |
Runs scored | 64 | 2739 |
Batting average | 32.00 | 37.52 |
100s/50s | -/- | 5/15 |
Top score | 30 | 195 |
Balls bowled | - | 12 |
Wickets | - | - |
Bowling average | - | - |
5 wickets in innings | - | - |
10 wickets in match | - | - |
Best bowling | - | - |
Catches/stumpings | -/- | 39/- |
Test debut: 24 March 1933 |
Paul Erskine Whitelaw, born on 10 February 1910 and died at Auckland on 28 August 1988, was a cricketer who played for Auckland and New Zealand.
A right-handed opening batsman with a fine array of strokes, Whitelaw played first-class cricket for Auckland with some success from 1928 to 1947, averaging 37 runs per innings. Yet he made only two Test match appearances, both matches on the short tour of New Zealand by the 1932-33 MCC side that followed the Bodyline tour of Australia. Both matches were dominated by the batting of Walter Hammond, who scored 563 runs in two innings, being dismissed just once. Whitelaw made 64 runs from four innings, two of them not out. But though he represented New Zealand in unofficial matches against the MCC team led by Errol Holmes in 1935-36, he never played Test cricket again.
In 1936-37, playing for Auckland against Otago at Dunedin, Whitelaw and Bill Carson set a world record that stood for almost 40 years by adding 445 for the third wicket. The partnership remains the fourth highest in the world for that wicket. Whitelaw's 190 in this match was his highest first-class score.