Doug Walters

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Doug Walters MBE (born 21 December 1945 in Dungog, New South Wales) is a former Australian cricketer. He was known as an attacking batsman, and also as a typical ocker.[1]

First-class career

Walters made his First Class debut for New South Wales against Queensland in the 1962-63 season. His highest score was 253 and his best bowling was 7/63, both against South Australia in the 1964-65 season. In the domestic Sheffield Shield competition he played 91 matches, scoring 5,602 runs at 39.73 and taking 110 wickets at 32.81.

Test cricket career

After Walters's innings I wrote that with one necessary qualification I thought he would be come to be rated as the best bat produced by Australia since Neil Harvey proclaimed himself with his famous hundred at Headingley in 48. The reservation concerned his ability against really fast bowling, as to which I had no evidence...Only Lawry and Simpson have made more runs and had record to compare if one is to make a quantitative judgement. Any all events my contention is at least arguable. Doug has made eleven hundreds for Australia, some of extreme brilliance, and if he ever played a dull innings I never saw it.[2]

E.W. Swanton

Walters made his debut in Test cricket on 10 December 1965 at The Gabba against England in the 1965-66 Ashes series and quickly developed a reputation as a batsman who could 'make things happen' with a moment of brilliance on an important occasion. He scored 155 in his first Test innings and another century in his second Test. He was not at his best in England, averaging only 25.68 in 18 matches there, but elsewhere he was a quick-scoring batsman. Walters was denied an opportunity to tour South Africa in 1966-67 when he was conscripted to two years of National Service training, although effectively being exempted from Vietnam service in order to pursue his professional, cricketing career in Australia, and it wasn't until 1968 that he returned to the test arena. In the 1968-69 series against the West Indies, Walters was injured and unavailable for the first Test match, but in the remaining four Tests he scored a Bradmanlike 699 runs, at an average of 116.5, with a highest score of 242 (in the process he became the first player to score a century and a double century in a single Test). In 1969-70 he showed a weakness against the South African fast bowlers Peter Pollock and Mike Procter, ducking while leaving his bat upright like a submarine periscope.[3] This weakness was exploited by England's John Snow in the 1970-71 Ashes Series, who repeatedly sent down fast, short-pitched balls against Walters. Even so Walters made 205 not out for New South Wales against the tourists, 112 in the First Test and three fifties thereafter, but few runs in between, making 373 runs (37.30) in the series. Walters starred in an unofficial Test series to a Rest of the World team led by Gary Sobers that toured in 197172 as a replacement for the politically unacceptable South Africans, scoring 355 runs in four matches at an average of 71.00, with 2 centuries. He famously hit a century in a session at the WACA against England in 1974, where he hit Bob Willis for six from the last ball of the day to bring up his ton. His 1970s and when not on the field was seldom seen without a cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth. He was also famous for his Laconic humour.[4]

The Doug Walters Stand at the Sydney Cricket Ground (opened 1985, demolished 2007)[5] was named after him. There is currently a bar in the Victor Trumper Stand named after him.

He was a Channel Nine cricket commentator in the 1987/88 season.

In 1988, he wrote "One for the road" which is a combination of stories and anecdotes from his early and later cricketing days. He later co-wrote a book, "The Entertainers", with Mark Waugh in 1999.

He currently resides in Sydney with his wife Caroline.

Doug Walters' career performance graph.


References

  1. The Oxford Companion to Australian Cricket, ed. Cashman, Franks, Maxwell, Stoddart, Weaver and Webster, Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-19-553575-8 p.562
  2. p135, E.W. Swanton, Swanton in Australia with MCC 1946–1975, Fontana/Collins, 1975
  3. p 505, Colin Frith, Pageant of Cricket, The MacMillian Compoany of Australia Ltd, 1987
  4. Ian Chappell, Austin Robertson and Paul Rigby, Chappelli Has the Last Laugh, Lansdowne Press, 1980
  5. "SCG History". Sydney Cricket & Sports Ground Trust. Retrieved 5 January 2012. 
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