Hugh Bartlett

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H.T. Bartlett
Surrey, Sussex and England

Batting style Left-hand bat (LHB)
Bowling type n/a
First-class record
Matches 216
Runs scored 10098
Batting average 31.95
100s/50s 16/59
Top score 183
Balls bowled 346
Wickets 10
Bowling average 26.90
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match 0
Best Bowling 1-0
Catches/Stumpings 70/0
First class debut: 12 August 1933
Last first class game: 12 June 1951
Source:

Hugh Tryon Bartlett DFC (born 7 October 1914 in Balaghat, Madhya Pradesh, India and died 26 June 1988 in Hove, England) was a brilliant attacking left-handed batsman who played for Sussex on either side of the war.

Early years

Bartlett was born in Balaghat, India and moved to England at the age of nine. He captained Dulwich College for three seasons. In 1933 - his last season for the school - he hit two double hundreds in successive weeks and set a Dulwich record of 228 against Mill Hill ( the record stood until 2006, when Arthur Mitchell hit 230* at a lower age group [1]). He won blues at Cambridge for three years and in 1936 captained them in the Varsity match. After a few matches with Surrey, he settled down as an amateur at Sussex.

1938

Bartlett's finest year was 1938. While travelling by train to Leeds to play Yorkshire in May, his captain Jack Holmes told him : 'If you score 50 I will give you your cap ... a 50 against Yorkshire is worth 150 against any other county'. Sussex lost their first five wickets for 106 when Bartlett joined Harry Parks. They added 126 in 75 minutes of which Bartlett scored 94. The bowlers were Bill Bowes, Hedley Verity, Frank Smailes, Emmott Robinson and Cyril Turner. He hit seven sixes and nine fours - all the seven sixes and one four came off Verity. In two overs of Verity, Bartlett scored .6266. and ..66.6 The last six was his final scoring shot as he tried hit Smailes over long off and was caught by Maurice Leyland 'with his heels on the boundary and left hand outstretched'. Bartlett was duly awarded his county cap. [2]

Later at Lord's, Bartlett made 175 not out in his first appearance for Gentlemen against the Players. One six off Morris Nichols deposited the ball in a grandstand turret. He hit Nichols for five fours in an over, Peter Smith for two fours and two sixes off another.[3] In all, he hit 24 fours and four sixes in 165 minutes. His last 75 runs came in 46 minutes; with last man Ken Farnes (10), he added 82 in 45 minutes. "I do not recall", wrote the Cricketer correspondent, "even Jessop treating professional bowling quite so roughly as he did in this innings".

On 27 August, the Australians came to Hove and Bartlett hit 157 in two hours. He scored his 50 in 33 minutes, 100 in 57 minutes and 150 in 110 minutes. A pull off Frank Ward early on landed on the pavilion roof. Later he hit two fours and two sixes off successive balls from Ward in an over that went for 22 runs. The century won Bartlett the Lawrence trophy for the fastest hundred of the season and included six sixes and eleven fours. He scored 105 runs before lunch in just over an hour before slowing down. The fourth wicket partnership with James Langridge contributed 195 in 120 minutes; Bartlett 152, Langridge 39. The innings included six sixes and eighteen fours. Once again he fell to an extraordinary catch, this time by Sid Barnes low down at long on.

With 1548 runs at 57.33, Bartlett finished fifth in the averages (behind Wally Hammond, Joe Hardstaff, Jr., Len Hutton and Eddie Paynter). Wisden elected him as a Cricketer of the Year in their next edition. He hit 40 sixes in 1938, second only to Arthur Wellard. Immediately after his innings against Australia, when Arthur Fagg dropped out, Bartlett was picked for the team to tour South Africa that winter. He did not play a Test. A year later, he was selected for the Indian tour under the captaincy of Jack Holmes, but the Second World War led to its cancellation.

Batting style

In the nostalgic piece about Bartlett that he wrote for Cricket Heroes, Alan Ross remembered his batting style :

As a cricketer, domesticity was just not in his line. He began his innings usually as one who, suffering from violent astigmatism, has not only mislaid his glasses, but had in addition a fearful headache. He made a pass or two after the ball had gone past him: he lunged fitfully and missed: he stabbed down just in time at the straight ones: he sliced the rising offside ball over the second slip: he snicked hazily part his leg stump. So, for about a quarter of an hour, it went on: or, to such an agonized onlooker as I, it seemed to go on. Then suddenly, he would catch a half volley or a long hop such a crack that the bowler, fearful of his own safety, lost all his aggressive intention, and, with it, any idea of length.
Phase two then began. One no longer felt that the bowler was remotely interested in the stumps, but having scattered his fielders around the boundary, relied now, in the form of bait, on a species of poisoned chocolate. Bartlett paid scant heed to these exiled boundary creatures: at alarming rates he drove between, over, and if needs be, through them. He was a firm footed hitter, possessed of a long reach, and the trajectory of his drives was low and of a fearful power.

In the 57 minute hundred against the Australians, Bartlett scored just four in his first 14 minutes.

1939 and the war

In 1939, at Eastbourne against Worcestershire he scored 89 in 44 minutes. He was caught by Charles Palmer at deep extra cover off a hit that, like the one against Yorkshire in 1938, would have gone for six had he missed it. At the end of the season, he played in what was to be Hedley Verity's last match before he died in the Second World War. On a drying wicket Verity took 7 for 9, Bartlett being one of the victims.

In the Second World War, Bartlett was commissioned into the Royal Army Service Corps. He transferred to the Royal West Kent Regiment in 1942, served in the Glider Pilot Regiment and later served as the second-in-command to Billy Griffith. He served at Normandy, Arnhem and in the Rhine crossings.

During the Rhine campaign (Operation Varsity), his pilots included Welsh rugby union centre Bleddyn Williams, who had piloted in a cargo of medical and radio supplies. Having spent a week sleeping rough, he bumped into Bartlett on a Friday morning: "Williams aren't you meant to be at Welford Road tomorrow playing for Great Britain against the Dominions? They need you. Go now!" Williams caught the last supply plane to RAF Brize Norton that night, and although the team didn't win he did score a try.[4] He turned out for both the RAF and the Great Britain United rugby teams.[5]

In August 1945, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. He reached the rank of Major. He remained in the Territorial Army after the war, returning to the RASC.

Post-war

After the war, except the odd occasion, he wasn't the stroke player that he had been. He served as Billy Griffith's vice captain in 1946 and took over the captaincy for the next three seasons. In 1947, he lifted Sussex from bottom to ninth place, but they slipped back to 16 and 14 in the next two years. He scored more than a thousand runs in 1938, 1939 and 1947. Before the 1950 season, he resigned the captaincy following some disputes and returned to stockbroking. Later, he reconciled with Sussex and served as the President between 1977 and 1979.

He collapsed and died while watching Sussex play Yorkshire in a Sunday League match at Hove in 1988.

References

  • Alan Ross, Cricket Heroes (1959)
  • David Frith; M.C. Spurrier, Obituaries of HT Bartlett, Wisden Cricket Monthly, August 1988
  1. News report of Mitchell breaking Bartlett's Dulwich record.
  2. Gerald Brodribb, Some Great Six-hitting Feats, The Cricketer, 20 July 1957, p. 346
  3. Bartlett scored two sixes and four fours in a single over from Smith, according to some sources.
  4. Gallagher, Brendan (8 March 2008). "Dr Jack Matthews, Bleddyn Williams are heroes". London: The Telegraph. Retrieved 5 July 2009. 
  5. "'Prince of Centres' Williams dies". BBC News. 6 July 2009. Retrieved 6 July 2009. 


External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Billy Griffith
Sussex county cricket captain
19471949
Succeeded by
James Langridge
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