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Full name Frank Jonas Laver
Born December 7, 1869, Castlemaine, Victoria
Died September 24, 1919, East Melbourne, Victoria (aged 49 years 291 days)
Major teams Australia,Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Administrator, Author
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
100
50
6s
Ct
St
Tests
15
23
6
196
45
11.52
0
0
0
8
0
First-class
163
255
38
5434
164
25.04
6
18
147
0
Bowling averages
Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
15
22
2361
964
37
8/31
9/56
26.05
2.44
63.8
0
2
0
First-class
163
9990
404
8/31
24.72
19
5
Career statistics
Test debut
England v Australia at Nottingham, Jun 1-3, 1899 scorecard
Last Test
England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 9-11, 1909 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span
1891/92 - 1911/12
Profile
Frank Laver was an accurate medium-pace bowler and underrated lower middle-order batsman whose place in cricket history is unfortunately as the man who triggered the crisis which led to Australia sending such a weakened side to tour England in 1912. The players wanted Laver as manager, but the Australian board, seeking to weaken the players' power, refused. A photographer and author, he wrote an entertaining account of his 1899 and 1905 tour of England, An Australian Cricketer on Tour.
Wisden Cricinfo staff
Frank Laver, who died in Melbourne on September 24, was probably a better batsman on Australian wickets than he ever proved himself in this country. Otherwise he would hardly have secured a place in the great team that came here in 1899, as at that time he was not regarded as more than just a change bowler. During the tour he scored 859 runs, and, with ten not-outs to help him, had an average of 30, but his style of batting was so ungainly that even when he did well very little was thought of him. No serious demands were made upon him as a bowler in 1899, the side being so strong, but he came off on the last day of the Test match at Lord's, when England for the moment seemed to have a chance of making something like a fight after having been hopelessly out-played. With tempting balls on the off side he got Hayward, Tyldesley. and Jessop caught in quick succession, this surprising bit of work making Australia's victory absolutely certain.
In 1905 and 1909 Laver's experience were altogether different. He came over as manager in 1905, and only expected to play now and then, but circumstances forced him to the front, and for fully a month he was the best bowler in the team, his success culminating in the Test match at Nottingham, when in England's first innings he took seven wickets. After that, probably from overwork, he fell off, but he was recovering his form towards the end of the trip. A tall, powerful man, he bowled medium pace, with an excellent command of pitch, and no doubt his height helped to make the flight of the ball deceptive. English batsmen considered him a very good but not an exceptional bowler, and often wondered why they fared so badly against him. Some of them thought that on fast wickets he ought generally to have been punished as MacLaren punished him at Trent Bridge in 1905, but perhaps his bowling was not so easy to hit as it looked to be. In 1909, when Australia won the rubber of Test matches by two to one and had all the best of two drawn games, Laver headed the bowling averages with a record of seventy wickets for just under fifteen runs apiece, but he played in less than half the matches. He had a great day against England at Manchester, taking eight wickets and having only thirty-one runs hit from him. He was born on December 7, 1869
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack