Syd Gregory

Syd Gregory
Personal information
Full name Sydney Edward Gregory
Born (1870-04-14)14 April 1870
Randwick, New South Wales, Australia
Died 1 August 1929(1929-08-01) (aged 59)
Randwick, New South Wales, Australia
Nickname Little Tich
Height 1.64 m (5 ft 5 in)
Batting style Right-hand batsman
Bowling style -
Role Specialist batsman
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 58) 21 July 1890 v England
Last Test 19 August 1912 v England
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
18891912 New South Wales
Career statistics
Competition Tests FC
Matches 58 369
Runs scored 2282 15188
Batting average 24.53 28.54
100s/50s 4/8 25/65
Top score 201 201
Balls bowled 30 599
Wickets 0 2
Bowling average n/a 195.00
5 wickets in innings 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0
Best bowling n/a 1/8
Catches/stumpings 25 174/0
Source: , 8 May 2012

Sydney Edward Gregory (14 April 1870 1 August 1929), sometimes known as Edward Sydney Gregory, was a cricketer who played for New South Wales and Australia. At the time of his retirement, he had played a world-record 58 Test matches during a career spanning 1890 to 1912. A right-handed batsman, he was also a renowned fielder, particularly at cover point.

Biography

Gregory was born at Moore Park, New South Wales, not far from the present site of the Sydney Cricket Ground, attending Sydney Boys High School.[1] The Gregorys were Australia's first cricketing dynasty. Syd's father Ned Gregory was one of the eleven Australians selected to play in a match against England at the MCG in 1877 - a match later designated as the first-ever Test. Ned Gregory served as curator at the SCG, occupying this position at the time of the birth of Syd. Syd Gregory's uncle Dave was Australia's first Test cricket captain, and his nephew Jack was the nation's most feared fast bowler of the 1920s.

Gregory playing the drive

Syd Gregory made his first-class debut for New South Wales in the season of 188990. Six months later, he was selected to tour England with the Australian team. Altogether, Gregory toured England a further seven times - in 1893, 1896, 1899, 1902, 1905, 1909 and finally in 1912 - and South Africa once (1902). He is one of only three cricketers to have batted in every position of the batting order, from one to eleven, in his Test career.

Syd Gregory scored Australia's first double hundred in a Test in Australia in 189495 but his 201 was not enough to save his team from a remarkable defeat. They made England follow on after amassing 586 but the visitors then made 437 and bowled Australia out for 166 to pull off an astonishing victory by 10 runs. It was the first time a Test had been won after following on and remained the only occurrence until the famous Headingley Test in 1981.

Syd Gregory's Test career batting graph.

In 1912, six of Australia's leading cricketers - including captain Clem Hill - refused to tour England for the inaugural Triangular Test series. A largely untried team, led by Gregory, was selected in its place. Although Australia lost only one of its six Tests, the cricket was overshadowed by the Australian team's poor behaviour. Gregory was heavily criticised for his inability to control the off-field antics of members of his team.

Gregory's stance

Away from cricket, Gregory was initially employed by the postal service before opening a "men's shop" - containing a tobacconist, barber and sporting store among others - with two business partners in Sydney's King Street in the mid-1890s. In 1896, he married a woman named Maria Sullivan. When his business failed in 1902, Gregory was forced to take a clerical job at the Water Board.

Syd Gregory died on 1 August 1929 at Randwick, an eastern suburb of Sydney. He was 59.

Career highlights

Gregory in later years

Assessment

In 1948 the New Zealander Dan Reese made this assessment of Gregory as a cover-point:

From Vernon Royle to Hobbs, England has had many fine cover-points, but none to equal Australia's Syd. Gregory. A delightful story that Vernon Ransford told us on one of his visits to New Zealand gives the best flash-light picture one could get of the quickness of movement and unerring aim of little Syd. It was in a match at Lord's when a well-known English amateur hit a ball firmly between mid-off and cover-point, and in his cultured voice called, "Come one — perhaps two," but he was thrown out before even one run had been scored![2]

See also

References

  1. http://www.shsobu.org.au/wp-content/uploads/sport.pdf
  2. Dan Reese, Was It All Cricket?, George Allen & Unwin, London, 1948, p. 452.

Source

Preceded by
Clem Hill
Australian Test cricket captains
1912
Succeeded by
Warwick Armstrong
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