Bruce Pairaudeau
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Bruce Pairaudeau West Indies (WI) |
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Batting style | Right-hand bat | |
Bowling type | Legbreak googly | |
Tests | First-class | |
Matches | 13 | 89 |
Runs scored | 454 | 4,930 |
Batting average | 21.61 | 32.01 |
100s/50s | 1/3 | 11/25 |
Top score | 115 | 163 |
Balls bowled | 6 | unknown |
Wickets | 0 | 0 |
Bowling average | - | - |
5 wickets in innings | 0 | 0 |
10 wickets in match | 0 | 0 |
Best bowling | -/- | -/- |
Catches/stumpings | 6/0 | 64/0 |
Test debut: 21 January 1953 |
Bruce Hamilton Pairaudeau (born April 14, 1931, Georgetown, British Guiana (now Georgetown, Guyana) was a West Indian cricketer who played in 13 Tests between 1953 and 1957.
Bruce Pairaudeau was a bespectacled right-handed batsman, often used as an opener, whose career never quite fulfilled its early promise. Picked for his first first-class match for British Guiana before his 16th birthday, he scored a century in his third match aged 16 years and five months. But opportunities for first-class cricket were rare in West Indian cricket at this stage, and Pairaudeau came to England in 1950 to play Lancashire League cricket with Burnley.
In late 1952, he returned to Guyana and did well enough in two first-class matches to be drafted into the team for the first Test against India in January 1953. Batting at No 6, Pairaudeau scored 115 and put on 219 for the fifth wicket with Everton Weekes. For the remaining four Tests in the series he was promoted to open the innings and, though he made only one score of more than 50, he finished the series with 257 runs at an average of more than 32 runs per innings.
The following winter against the England tourists, though, he was picked for only two of the Tests, scoring 71 in the second match but failing in the fourth, and when the Australians toured in 1954-55, he was not chosen at all.
He was picked, however, for the somewhat makeshift West Indies side which made the first official tour of New Zealand in 1955-56. Lacking Clyde Walcott and Frank Worrell of the established West Indian batsman, the side often struggled for runs, and Pairaudeau scored just 101 runs in six innings in the four Tests. The fourth Test of the series at Auckland provided New Zealand with its first-ever victory in Test cricket.
Pairaudeau's final Tests came on the tour of England in 1957, which was not a success for him. He hit 127 against Cambridge University and a career-best 163 against Hampshire, but in 31 other innings on the tour he managed fewer than 500 runs. He played in the first and fourth Tests, but failed to get into double figures in his four innings. Those matches were the end of his Test career, at the age of 26.
Pairaudeau then emigrated to New Zealand and began playing, in 1958-59, for Northern Districts. Consistent rather than spectacular – he scored only one century in eight years in New Zealand – he was a regular in the side for seven seasons and in 1962-63 he captained Northern Districts to its first-ever victory in the Plunket Shield competition.