Lindsay Tuckett

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Lindsay Tuckett
South Africa (RSA)
Lindsay Tuckett
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling type Right-arm medium-fast
Tests First-class
Matches 9 61
Runs scored 131 1496
Batting average 11.90 17.60
100s/50s -/- 1/4
Top score 40* 101
Balls bowled 2104 13097
Wickets 19 225
Bowling average 51.57 23.07
5 wickets in innings 2 18
10 wickets in match - 2
Best bowling 5/68 8/32
Catches/stumpings 9/- 38/-

Test debut: 7 June 1947
Last Test: 5 March 1949
Source: [1]


Lindsay Tuckett (born February 6, 1919, Durban, Natal) is a former South African cricketer who played in 9 Tests from 1947 to 1949.

The son of one Test player, Len Tuckett, and the nephew of another, Joe Cox, Lindsay Tuckett was just a month past his 16th birthday when he made his first-class cricket debut for Orange Free State in March 1935. A lower-order right-handed batsman and a fast-medium right-arm bowler who specialised in in-swingers, he took regular wickets for one of the weaker provincial sides for the next 20 years, but had a much shorter career in Tests.

Picked for the 1947 South African tour of England, he began promisingly, and even though he strained a muscle in the first Test and was less effective afterwards, he was picked for all five Tests and finished with 15 wickets, the joint highest number for the side. In the first innings of the first match at Trent Bridge, he took five England wickets for 68 runs and it was a dropped catch off his bowling in the second innings that, according to the report in the 1948 Wisden, allowed England to escape from the match with a draw after following on 325 runs behind. At Lord's in the second Test, he again took five wickets in the first innings, this time for 115 runs as England amassed 554 runs with centuries by Bill Edrich and Denis Compton.

On the 1947 tour as a whole, Tuckett took 69 wickets at an average of 25 runs per wicket.

When MCC toured South Africa in the 1948-49 season, Tuckett was again chosen as an opening bowler in four out of the five Tests, but could not repeat his form of 18 months earlier. He took only four wickets in the series and did not play for South Africa again. In the first Test, he bowled the last possible over of the match, and on the eighth and final ball England's ninth wicket pair of Alec Bedser and Cliff Gladwin scrambled the single run that gave the touring side victory.