Dick Richardson

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For the Welsh boxer see Dick Richardson (boxer)

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Dick Richardson
England (ENG)
Dick Richardson
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling type Left-arm medium
Tests First-class
Matches 1 383
Runs scored 33 16303
Batting average 33.00 27.39
100s/50s -/- 16/89
Top score 33 169
Balls bowled - 588
Wickets - 8
Bowling average - 44.25
5 wickets in innings - -
10 wickets in match - -
Best bowling - 2/11
Catches/stumpings 1/- 422/-

Test debut: 4 July 1957
Last Test: 4 July 1957
Source: [1]

Derek Walter "Dick" Richardson (born November 3, 1934, Hereford) is a former English cricketer who played in one Test in 1957.

The younger brother of England opening batsman Peter Richardson, Dick Richardson was a middle-order left-handed batsman and a fine fielder in close catching positions. Unlike his older brother, Dick spent most of his time with Worcestershire as a professional, and remained with the county throughout his first-class cricket career.

Playing regularly for the county from 1955, Richardson made 1000 runs for the first time in the following season when he turned professional and in 1957 came right to the forefront with 1830 runs at an average of 32 runs per innings. He was picked, alongside his brother, for the third Test match against West Indies at Trent Bridge: the most recent time that two brothers have been picked for England. Coming into bat on a batsman's wicket when England, largely through Tom Graveney's 258, had already scored 510 for four wickets, Richardson made 33 in 70 minutes. It was not enough to keep his place. David Sheppard, by 1957 a part-time cricketer, was available for the remaining two Tests of the series and was preferred. Richardson was never selected again.

In fact, his career went into a fairly steep decline in 1958: he completed 1000 runs, just, but his highest score for the season was only 60. It is likely that this is the lowest top score ever by a batsman completing 1000 runs in an English cricket season. Richardson may have been unsettled by the dispute between Worcestershire and his brother, who was the amateur county captain, over Peter Richardson's desire to turn professional. Peter Richardson left the county at the end of the season and signed for Kent, but Worcestershire contested the registration, and the player was forced to sit out the 1959 season while he qualified for his new county.

Dick Richardson's career recovered to the extent that he made significantly over 1500 runs for Worcestershire in each of the four seasons from 1959 to 1962, and from 1961 he was among the top fieldsmen in England. His 65 catches in 1961 remains the Worcestershire county record, and he holds five out of the top 10 season's fielding records for the county. His career total of 412 catches for Worcestershire is a record for a non-wicketkeeper too.

From 1963 onwards, Richardson's fielding ensured his continued selection for Worcestershire as his batting became less reliable, and he was a regular member of the side that won, for the first time, the County Championship in 1964 and again the following year. In 1965, however, he failed to complete his 1000 runs, and there was further decline in 1966. He lost his place in the Worcestershire team in 1967 and left first-class cricket at the end of that season at the age of only 32.

Apart from Peter Richardson, Dick Richardson's younger brother Bryan was also a first-class cricketer, playing intermittently for Warwickshire.

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