C. A. G. Russell
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C A G Russell England (Eng) |
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Batting style | Right-handed batsman (RHB) | |
Bowling type | Right arm slow medium | |
Tests | First-class | |
Matches | 10 | 437 |
Runs scored | 910 | 27,354 |
Batting average | 56.87 | 41.57 |
100s/50s | 5/2 | 71/136 |
Top score | 140 | 273 |
Balls bowled | 0 | 19,715 |
Wickets | 0 | 283 |
Bowling average | N/A | 26.98 |
5 wickets in innings | 0 | 5 |
10 wickets in match | 0 | 0 |
Best bowling | N/A | 5-25 |
Catches/stumpings | 4/0 | 314/0 |
Test debut: 17 December 1920 |
Charles Albert George "Jack" Russell (erroneously written during his playing career as Albert Charles Russell) (born October 7, 1887, Leyton, Essex, England; died March 23, 1961, Whipps Cross, Leytonstone, Essex, England) was one of the leading batsmen in county cricket during the period after World War I. Never regarded as an attractive batsman, Russell's main strength was his leg-side play, but he was an extremely sound batsmen whose watchfulness made him effective on very difficult pitches.
A son of Essex's first regular wicket-keeper and a cousin of famous Kent bowler Tich Freeman, Russell first played for Essex in 1908 but did not establish himself until 1913. In that year he reached 1000 runs and repeated this for the next three years, but it was only a superb 197 against Middlesex at Lord's in 1920 that elevated Russell to the rank of a top-class batsman. His 2432 runs was third-highest in the country behind Hobbs and Hendren and he was an automatic choice for that winter's Ashes tour. Though the utter failure of England's professional bowling on the rock-hard Australian wickets meant England lost all five Tests, Russell did very well with an average of 58.42 for all matches , including 135 at Adelaide. When his batting the following year was even better than in 1920, it was remarkable that Russell played only in the last two Tests: his two centuries in those games showed England had made an error not playing him earlier, especially as with Hobbs injured he was the best man to open the innings with.
1922 was, considering the wetter weather, Russell's finest season: his 2575 runs was a personal best and placed him ahead of Hobbs as the leading run-scorer in the country. Especially in the first half of the season, Russell seemed almost unstoppable, and his Cricketer of the Year nomination was almost a formality. His 162 for the Players at Lord's was seen as the finest batting by an English cricketer since the war.
That winter, Russell went to South Africa and on the biting matting pitches achieved his finest performance with 436 runs for an average of almost 63. In the last Test - which decided the series - Russell was suffering from a serious illness and, it was admitted, should not have been playing. Yet, he made 140 in the first innings and (going in late) 111 in four and a half hours in the second. He was the first batsman to score a century in both innings of the same Test match for England.
However, illness severely affected Russell's performance in 1923: only after a rest of two weeks in late June did he recover anything like his best form, and his average fell from 52 to 29.71. This placed him out of calculations for representative honours, especially as the incomparable Sutcliffe established himself as a representative player that year. Nonetheless, in 1925 Russell his seven centuries and scored 2080 runs, whilst in 1928 he scored 131 and 104 against Lancashire, who were County Champions for the third successive year that season.
After an injury-affected year in 1929, Russell only played one more season before retiring to become county coach and later a first-class groundsman. In 1949, twelve years before he died, Russell was among the first professional cricketers to be given membership of the MCC.