Jack Birkenshaw

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

English Flag
Jack Birkenshaw
England (Eng)
Jack Birkenshaw
Batting style Left-handed batsman (LHB)
Bowling type Right arm off-break (OB)
Tests First-class
Matches 5 490
Runs scored 148 12,780
Batting average 21.14 23.57
100s/50s 0/1 4/53
Top score 64 131
Balls bowled 1,017 69,171
Wickets 13 1,073
Bowling average 36.07 27.28
5 wickets in innings 1 44
10 wickets in match 0 4
Best bowling 5-57 8-94
Catches/stumpings 3/0 316/0

Test debut: 25 January 1973
Last Test: 5 April 1974
Source: [1]

Jack Birkenshaw (born 13 November 1940 in Rothwell, near Leeds, Yorkshire) was an English cricketer, who later stood as an umpire and worked as a coach.

Contents

[edit] Lean times at Yorkshire and Leicestershire

Birkenshaw played a single County Championship match for Yorkshire at the age of 17 in 1958, taking the wicket of Jim Parks in both innings, but did not make another first-class appearance until 1959. That year he took 40 wickets at an average of 27.39, and also played for Minor Counties against the touring Indians; he made a second and final Minor Counties appearance against the South Africans the following year. In all he played 30 games for Yorkshire, but failed to win his county cap, and in 1961 he went to Leicestershire in search of better things.

For a long while Birkenshaw's performances for Leicestershire were rather disappointing: in his first six years at the club he never took more than 27 wickets in a season, and he had to rely on some useful lower-order contributions with the bat to keep his place in the side, though he earned a place in the history books by playing (exclusively as a batsman) in the pioneering Midlands Knock-Out Cup limited-overs tournament in 1962. However, he was capped by the county in 1965 and much greater success was just around the corner.

[edit] Breakthrough and England recognition

In 1967 Birkenshaw came good with a vengeance, snapping up 111 wickets -- in the previous six seasons he had managed only 102 in total -- at an average of only 21.41. He took five in an innings on five occasions, including 7-86 against Sussex, and gained selection for the International XI that toured Pakistan in the winter. 1968 proved another good season for Birkenshaw, as he again took 100 wickets, and punished Sussex again: this time with the bat as he made 101 not out. He made two more centuries the following year, but surprisingly for a man who passed fifty on no less than 57 occasions in first-class cricket, he was to reach three figures just once more in his career. The years between 1969 and 1972 saw Birkenshaw record solid statistics, taking 69, 63, 89 and 90 wickets in successive seasons, and in 1972 he achieved his career-best bowling of 8-94 against Somerset.

Such performances attracted the interest of the England selectors, who had previously stuck by Ray Illingworth as their first-choice off-spinner, and Birkenshaw was picked to go to India and Pakistan in 1972/73. He made 64 on debut in the fourth Test against India at Kanpur, and also claimed three wickets; his first victim in Test cricket was Sunil Gavaskar. Birkenshaw retained his place for the fifth Test at Bombay, and opened the batting in the second innings, but lost his place for the Pakistan series and played only in the third Test, taking 5-55 and sharing the second-innings wickets equally with Norman Gifford.

Despite another decent domestic season in 1973, Birkenshaw was omitted from the England side for both series that summer (against New Zealand and West Indies), the 41-year-old Illingworth again being the barrier to his selection. However, there was no Illingworth on the winter tour to the Caribbean, and Birkenshaw played in the last two Tests. A total return of 2-96 and 15 runs in three innings was not enough to keep his place for the summer of 1974, and that was that as far as his England career was concerned.

[edit] Later career and retirement

He played on for Leicestershire for a number of years, in 1975 making his fourth and final first-class hundred and recording his best bowling figures in one-day cricket, taking 5-20 against Essex in the Sunday League; oddly, these were the only wickets he took in the 11 one-day games he played that year. In 1976 Birkenshaw made his only one-day hundred, but his unbeaten 101 against Hampshire in the second round of the Gillette Cup just failed to win the game, Leicestershire falling short of their target by three runs.

Birkenshaw finished with Leicestershire in 1980, but had one final season in the game with Worcestershire. In his penultimate match he made 32 and 54 against the Australian tourists, and his very last first-class match came in late July of 1981 against Northamptonshire. The first wicket of his first-class career had been that of a famous Test player, and with a pleasing symmetry the last was to be too: Kapil Dev, caught behind for 79. This match was also notable for being the first first-class game to be held at Stourbridge for 19 years; as of 2005 it also remained the last.

After retirement, Birkenshaw became an umpire, standing in over 250 matches from 1982 to 1988 including two Tests and six One-day Internationals, four of the latter being at the 1983 World Cup. His last game as an umpire was the Refuge Assurance Cup final in September 1988; he later returned to his old county of Leicestershire in the capacity of coach.

[edit] Teams

[edit] International

[edit] English county

[edit] Other first-class

[edit] Career highlights

[edit] Tests

[edit] First-class

[edit] List A Limited Overs

  • List A debut: Leicestershire v Northamptonshire, Leicester, 1964
  • Last List A match: Worcestershire v Warwickshire, Birmingham, 1981
    • Highest score: 101* for Leicestershire v Hampshire, Leicester, 1976
    • Best bowling: 5-20 for Leicestershire v Essex, Leicester, 1975

[edit] External links

Player Profile: Jack Birkenshaw from Cricinfo