Derek Shackleton
15-Apr-2008
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Shackleton, Derek, who died on September 28, 2007, aged 83, was one
of the most admired cricketers of his generation. Along with Tom Cartwright and
Les Jackson, who also both died in 2007, "Shack" left his contemporaries
awestruck, opposing batsmen mesmerised and Test selectors almost completely
cold. They played 14 Tests between them; Shackleton's share was seven, and he
took 18 wickets at 42. In all first-class cricket, though, he took 2,857 wickets, a
figure surpassed by only seven men in history, at 18.65. Of these, 2,669 were for
Hampshire, with whom his name will be for ever inextricably linked. Normally
eloquent men struggle for original words to describe his success. They tend to
get repetitive, like Shackleton himself. Of the 159,001 balls he delivered in first-class
cricket, the overwhelming majority landed precisely where he intended, which
was normally on line just back of a length. John Arlott put it best: "shrewdly
varied and utterly accurate medium pace bowling beating down as unremittingly
as February rain".
Shackleton came from the strange Pennine border town of Todmorden; he grew
up thinking he was a Lancastrian, though technically he was qualified for Yorkshire.
He was called up in 1943, but the army quickly discovered he had a serious
problem in his left eye (which never left him and made his career even more of
a wonder). He was obliged to join the Pioneer Corps, who were in harm's way
without actually fighting. Just before demob in 1947, he met the Hampshire coach
Sam Staples, who invited him for a trial. Staples thought here was a batsman who
bowled the odd leg-break; Shackleton thought the same. But Hampshire were
desperately short of fast bowling and the chairman, W. K. Pearce, issued an edict
that everyone should try to bowl fast in the nets. The club realised at once they
had discovered a natural. He started modestly, and indeed was generally underbowled.
But in 1949 he took 100 wickets (as he would do for 20 successive
seasons) and came within 86 runs of achieving the double (a feat he would never
even threaten again). All round the circuit went news that Hampshire had a special
bowler; what no one ever discovered was a reliable way of combating him. In
1950 England responded to their earth-shaking defeat against West Indies at Lord's
by bringing in Shackleton to open the bowling at Trent Bridge. He actually topscored
with 42 in the first innings as England battled from 25 for four to 223,
but he took only one wicket, as Frank Worrell staged his most astonishing
onslaught, and England crashed again. The selectors responded by making eight
changes. Shackleton reappeared against South Africa at The Oval in 1951 when
he was largely redundant on a turning pitch, and was chosen for the weakened
MCC party that toured the subcontinent that winter; he was the leading wickettaker
on the tour, with 51, but played in only one Test, the First. Wisden commented:
"His well-controlled late swing worried a number of sides but he seldom upset
the better-class batsmen." England then ignored him for more than 11 years.
That Wisden judgment framed the terms of the debate that would recur on every
ground in England throughout Shackleton's career, and afterwards. It was said he
was not quick enough, that the best batsmen could find him out; that his success
was due to uncovered wickets; that he had no Plan B if a batsman got after him.
But he regularly tied down and dismissed the top players; he was as successful
in dry summers as wet ones; and the occasions anyone took him on were so rare
Plan B grew dusty with disuse. Fred Trueman did it once during a run-chase at
Bradford in 1958, when Shackleton went for 64 in seven overs, an event unexpected
enough to render it unforgettable. Year after year Shackleton put the ball where
he chose, with the subtlest variations in pace, length and movement, and everyone
succumbed: Tom Graveney 14 times, Colin Cowdrey 13 and Peter May five times,
once with a magic delivery at Guildford in 1958 when May was probably the
world's No. 1 batsman. "Everything went up in the air," Shack happily recalled,
"his head, the bat, the lot."
No one could explain quite how it was done, least of all the man himself. When
the young Bob Cottam joined him in the Hampshire team, he asked Shack how
he gripped the ball. "He couldn't explain at all. He had these long fingers, naturally
apart. The ball just looked part of him. He'd probably never had to think about
it." This was a very different approach from that of Cartwright, with his questing
mind. Indeed, there was something rather other-worldly about Shackleton: never
a hair out of place, never a stain on his flannels (Cottam once saw him take a
return catch, landing on his elbows) and hardly ever an injury in 22 years.
If it ever got boring, that ceased when Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie became captain
in 1958. The Trueman onslaught came in Ingleby's first match as full-time captain
after the first of many unusual declarations - "I was amazed Shack ever spoke to
me again," he said later. But as the captaincy developed, and Hampshire began
their historic assault on the Championship in 1961, the two were the essential
foils for each other - the gambler and the straight man. Shack only drank halves,
and never bet; in that roistering team of winners, he was like the nightclub
accountant - somewhat out of place but crucial to the business. He bowled 1,511
overs that summer, took 158 wickets and rolled Derbyshire over with six for 39
at Bournemouth to secure the famous, crucial victory. The following season, he
bowled even more and took more wickets (172) than ever. A year later, as he
approached his 39th birthday, the selectors finally caved in: he was preferred to
Brian Statham for the Lord's Test - the epic draw when Cowdrey went out to bat
with a broken arm. Shackleton had finished West Indies' first innings with three
wickets in four balls, and this time he kept his place for the rest of the series.
The 1963 West Indians were one of the most intimidating batting teams in history,
but Shackleton took 15 wickets and conceded little more than two an over. There
was no long-term future in this, though, and he returned to county cricket.
His decline was barely perceptible. At Westcliff in 1968, there was a valley on
a Shack length across the pitch: Essex 95 all out. At Bath that summer, he bowled
three balls down the leg side to Roy Virgin at the start of the Somerset innings
then complained the stumps were out of alignment. No one else could see it.
Shack was right, of course. In the nets once he took Malcolm Heath aside, then
bowled three successive balls which hit off, middle, leg. "I've seen everything
now," said Heath. "No, you haven't," Shack said, then he did the trick in reverse.
On retiring, he coached at Canford School, and spent three years on the first-class
umpires' list, where he was curiously unsuccessful, struggling with the Laws
and even the signals. His son Julian had an unremarkable career for Gloucestershire
in the 1970s. Shackleton's last illness was long and difficult, but phlegmatic
endurance was his greatest strength.