George Duckworth

England
George Duckworth
INTL CAREER: 1924 - 1936
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Full Name

George Duckworth

Born

May 09, 1901, Warrington, Lancashire

Died

January 05, 1966, Warrington, Lancashire, (aged 64y 241d)

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Fielding Position

Wicketkeeper

Wisden obituary
George Duckworth, who died on January 5, aged 64, was an outstanding character in first-class cricket in the period between the two World Wars, a time when the game possessed far more players of popular personality than at the present time. Small of stature, but big of heart and voice, Duckworth used an "Owzat" shout of such piercing quality and volume that his appeal alone would have made him a figure to be remembered.

But Duckworth possessed many other qualities. He was one of the finest wicketkeepers the game has produced; as a batsman he could be relied upon to fight in a crisis; he possessed wit and good humour which made him an endearing companion, and he was a sound judge of a player, an ability which served his native Lancashire well as a committee man in recent years.

Duckworth, born and resident in Warrington all his life, joined Lancashire in 1922. He made his debut a year later and ended his first-class career, perhaps prematurely, in 1938. He took up journalism, but hardly had time to establish himself before war broke out in 1939. Then he spent spells in hotel management and farming before his post-war career, which included journalism, broadcasting, and acting as baggage-master and scorer to M.C.C. teams abroad, and for touring countries here. He also took Commonwealth sides to India.

Duckworth received a trial with Warwickshire before arousing the interest of his native county with whom he quickly showed his talent by the confident manner in which he kept to such varied and demanding bowlers as the Australian fast bowler, E. A. McDonald, and the spin of C. H. Parkin and R. Tyldesley. By 1924 he had gained the first of 24 Test caps for England, a total which undoubtedly would have been much higher but for the competition of L. E. G. Ames of Kent, who in the 1930s usually gained preference because of his batting prowess. In his later days with Lancashire, Duckworth also faced strong competition from Farrimond, which he resisted successfully.

In Test cricket, Duckworth claimed 59 wicketkeeping victims, and he also hit 234 runs, with 39 not out as his highest. For Lancashire his number of victims was a record 921, and his highest score 75. In all first-class matches he helped in 1,090 dismissals, 751 catches and 339 stumpings. He dismissed 107 batsmen, 77 caught and 30 stumped, in his best season, 1928.

That season completed three Championship successes for Lancashire, captained by Leonard Green, who described Duckworth as "one of the smallest, but noisiest of all cricketing artists -- a man born to squat behind the wicket and provide good humour and unbounded thrills day by day in many a glorious summer".

Lancashire won the Championship again in 1930, and 1934, so that Duckworth gained the honour of being a member of five championship teams. In 1949-50 Duckworth, a man of administrative ability, took his first Commonwealth team to India, Pakistan and Ceylon, and repeated the successful venture in 1950-51 and 1953-54. Then followed his duties as baggage-master and scorer, at home and abroad, where his jovial personality, wise counsel and experience were of benefit to many a team and individual cricketer. His radio and television commentaries, typically humorous and forthright, became well-known, both on cricket and on Rugby League, in which game he was a devoted follower of Warrington.

Among many tributes were:

H. Sutcliffe (Yorkshire and England): George was a delightful colleague, a great man on tours particularly. He had a vast knowledge of the game and he was always ready and willing to help any young player. As a wicketkeeper he was brilliant.

C. Washbrook (Lancashire and England): He was a magnificent wicketkeeper and a fighting little batsman. In his later years he became one of the shrewdest observers of the game and his advice was always available and eagerly sought by cricketers of every class and creed.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

George Duckworth Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAve100s50s6sCtSt
Tests24281223439*14.620004515
FC50454520649477514.5906-753343

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests24------------
FC504-68730---6.44-000
George Duckworth portrait

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Test

Debut/Last Matches of George Duckworth

Recent Matches of George Duckworth

MatchBatWktDateGroundFormat
England XI vs Australians0* & 150c/0s & 0c/0s31-Aug-1938BlackpoolFC
Lancashire vs Sussex7*0c/0s01-Jun-1938PrestonFC
England vs India--0c/2s & 1c/0s15-Aug-1936The OvalTest # 254
England vs India10*2c/0s & 0c/1s25-Jul-1936ManchesterTest # 253
England vs India20c/1s & 2c/0s27-Jun-1936Lord'sTest # 252

Photos of George Duckworth

The England XI vs India in the second Test at Old Trafford, 1936
Bill Woodfull is caught by George Duckworth off Harold Larwood for 0
The MCC squad for the 1932-33 tour of Australia and New Zealand
George Duckworth
England players on board the <i>Orontes</i> travelling to Australia
England players on board the <i>Orontes</I> to Australia for the 1932-33 Ashes series