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Australia players and officials - select an initial letter:
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Frederick Spofforth

Australia

Player profile

Full name Frederick Robert Spofforth
Born September 9, 1853, Balmain, Sydney, New South Wales
Died June 4, 1926, Ditton Hill Lodge, Long Ditton, Surrey, England (aged 72 years 268 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 18 29 6 217 50 9.43 0 1 1 11 0
First-class 155 236 41 1928 56 9.88 0 3 83 0

Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 18 30 4185 1731 94 7/44 14/90 18.41 2.48 44.5 6 7 4
First-class 155 30593 12759 853 9/18 14.95 2.50 35.8 84 32

Career statistics
Test debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Mar 31-Apr 4, 1877 scorecard
Last Test Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 28-31, 1887 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1874/75 - 1887/88
 Profile

Tall, spindly, and a player who consistently tested the wits of opposing batsmen, Fred "The Demon" Spofforth was Australia's first true fast bowler. His first-class career spanned the 23-year period between 1874 and 1897 and, throughout that time, his accuracy, his lionhearted endeavour and the phenomenal rapidity of his wicket taking made him a revered figure. Although he possessed a relatively unremarkable run-up and action (the most notable feature of which was a high leap just before he released the ball) and was never regarded as a tearaway fast bowler, Spofforth was an inspiration both for his peers and succeeding generations of pacemen. From the time of his debut for New South Wales, he was a larger than life character in the sport - the quality of his performances matched in kind by his ability to enhance the growing popularity of cricket in Australia.

Notwithstanding the relative superiority of bowlers over batsmen during his era, Spofforth's raw figures were outstanding; he claimed 94 Test wickets in 18 matches at an average of less than 20 runs apiece. He was also the first bowler to clinch a Test hat-trick; he claimed ten wickets in a match on four of those 18 occasions, and his analysis of 14/90 against England at The Oval in 1882 still stands as the second best performance in a match by an Australian bowler in the entire history of Test cricket. It remains salutary to note that, if it had not been for the growing business interests which ultimately took him to England (and ensured that he exited Test cricket in 1886 when he was at close to the peak of his powers), he may well have been able to enjoy even greater success.

Spofforth's stamina also set him apart from other players of his era. He reputedly spent considerable time at his brother-in-law's rural property before embarking on at least two of his five tours of England specifically in order to improve upon his fitness, and it was also common for him throughout his career to bowl considerably more overs than his teammates. He left another enduring legacy for other fast bowlers to follow in that he was one of the first Test cricketers to exhibit the trait of refusing to take a backward step in his approach to the game either on or off the field. He refused, for instance, to play in Australia's first ever Test team because New South Wales wicketkeeper Billy Murdoch was overlooked at the selection table, and it was only when Murdoch was chosen for the following match that he made his own debut at international level.

To celebrate his outstanding overall record in the sport, Spofforth was honoured with induction into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame when that institution's original ten members were named in late 1996.
John Polack


 Notes
Australian Cricket Hall of Fame 1996

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Fred Spofforth
Fred Spofforth
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The 1878 Australians
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The Australian touring side of 1878
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