Peter Willey
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Peter Willey England (Eng) |
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Batting style | Right-hand bat | |
Bowling type | Right-arm offbreak | |
Tests | ODIs | |
Matches | 26 | 26 |
Runs scored | 1184 | 538 |
Batting average | 26.90 | 23.39 |
100s/50s | 2/5 | -/5 |
Top score | 102* | 64 |
Balls bowled | 1091 | 1031 |
Wickets | 7 | 13 |
Bowling average | 65.14 | 50.69 |
5 wickets in innings | - | - |
10 wickets in match | - | N/A |
Best bowling | 2/73 | 3/33 |
Catches/stumpings | 3/- | 4/- |
As of 1 January 2006 |
Peter Willey (born December 6, 1949) is a former English cricketer, who played as a right-handed batsman and right-arm offbreak bowler. After his playing career ended he became a Test umpire.
[edit] The Open Stance
Willey was a leading exponent of the "open stance" of batting, where the batsman looked squarely at the bowler, rather than side-on, looking over his own shoulder. Advocates of the traditional M.C.C. Coaching manual style derided the stance for its arguable ugliness and found technical reasons why its exponents were doomed to fail. Curiously, while Willey enjoyed success against the leading bowling attack of the day, the West Indies pacemen, (he scored 2 hundreds against them), his overall Test batting career was rather mediocre, as exemplified by an average of less than 27.
[edit] Willey and humour
Willey's surname is a component in one of the more widely-circulated commentary quotes in cricket history. During a Test match between the West Indies and England, Willey was to face West Indian bowler Michael Holding. One of the commentators at the time, Don Mosey, described the action as: "The bowler's Holding, the batsman's Willey" (an inadvertent double entendre as the word "willy" is English slang for a penis).
In 1979, Willey caught Dennis Lillee off the bowling of Graham Dilley, resulting in a scorecard of "Lillee c. Willey. b. Dilley"