Fred Trueman
Fred Trueman Obituary
15-Apr-2007
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FREDERICK SEWARDS TRUEMAN, OBE, who died on July 1, 2006, aged 75,
was - ignoring his own grander claims - probably the greatest fast bowler England
has produced. He was at the heart of the England team for more than a decade,
during which time it usually beat the world. He was also English cricket's most
enduring and best-loved character, representing a certain kind of Yorkshireness -
chippy, forceful, sometimes humorous - that spread his fame far beyond the game
and maintained it long after his retirement. Harold Wilson, the former prime
minister, called him the "Greatest Living Yorkshireman", and only an unusually
fulsome Wilson-admirer would have come up with another contender. Jokes,
anecdotes and myths clung to him all his adult life: he was the most talked-about
figure in the game until Ian Botham arrived in the early 1980s; and until Andrew
Flintoff stole the moniker 20 years later, he was instantly recognisable by the
simple syllable: "Fred".
Trueman was born in a terraced house just outside Stainton in the mining
country south of Doncaster. He weighed, if not a ton, then a stone when he was
born, which must have been an omen. His father Dick was a former stud groom,
forced down the pits by the hard times, and weekend cricketer. He was determined
his children would do better. Fred's determination with a ball in his hand was
obvious from the start: "We never got a chance to bat properly and it made us
cry," his sister Florence recalled later. Nothing was a certainty, though. Aged 12,
at secondary school in Malton, he was hit - batting without a box - in the groin;
he was off school for a year, out of the game for two, and there were fears that he might lose a leg. But back he came. At 16, he was bowling fast for a local
club, Roche Abbey. He was noticed by Sheffield United, who played at Bramall
Lane, and from there was picked for a Yorkshire Federation tour, in effect the
county third team. Though the £6 cost was a lot for the Trueman family, his father
happily paid.
Meantime, young Trueman had to work: as a bricklayer, until he told the foreman
to "bugger off ", and at the pit - though never down it. But by 1949 he had
achieved his first ambition: "Yorkshire gave a trial to three young players," Wisden
reported in one of its least fine hours, "Lowson, an opening batsman, Close, an
all-rounder and Trueman, a spin bowler." He forgave that insult, but characteristically
never forgot it. Just as typically, while Close moved rapidly into the Test
team, and Lowson followed, Trueman had to battle for everything.
Though quick, he was wayward and sometimes expensive, and in the dour,
unforgiving atmosphere of the Yorkshire dressing-room and committee room in
that era, the negatives assumed great importance. He was also loud-mouthed and
seemingly insensitive. Indeed, England's selectors seemed more interested than
Yorkshire's. In 1950, he was picked for The Rest in the Bradford Test Trial, the
match immortalised by Jim Laker's eight for two, but Yorkshire dropped him in
favour of John Whitehead. He was downhearted enough to think about joining
Lancashire. But some people recognised that they had a potential treasure; it was
his captain, Norman Yardley, that first christened him "Fiery Fred".
Alec Coxon's sudden departure after that season meant that Trueman's time
had surely come. In 1951, he almost bowled Yorkshire to victory over the South
Africans and did bowl them to a stunning win over Nottinghamshire, taking eight
for 68. Not merely was he not picked for the next match - the team had already
been chosen - he ended up as twelfth man for the Second XI at Grimsby. But
in the return match at Trent Bridge, he was even more devastating, taking eight
for 53. "It was the start of the Trueman era," wrote Don Mosey, in his biography
Fred Then and Now.
He still had to do his National Service. But he joined the RAF, and got a nearby
posting and a sympathetic station commander, so he could play plenty of cricket.
At that stage, the RAF was probably less hierarchical than Yorkshire County
Cricket Club, and he coped with the vagaries of service life rather better
than he did with the Yorkshire committee. And he was hauled from there - as
AC2 F. S. Trueman 2549485, a sports storeman - to play for England in 1952.
There have been extraordinary debuts before, but never one that quite matched
this, as India were reduced to nought for four. Six weeks later he took eight for
31 as India were bowled out for 58, most of them fearfully backing away to square
leg. He took 29 wickets in the four-Test series at 13.
But still his progress was not smooth. He was sharp-tongued and insubordinate,
and more vulnerable than anyone seemed to realise. Around this time, the first
stories spread that eventually developed into the great canon of Trueman legend,
including the (uncorroborated and implausible) allegation that he had told the
Indian High Commissioner: "Pass the salt, Gunga Din." In 1953, England again
ignored him, until the final Test, when England regained the Ashes, and Trueman
took four important wickets. "Erratic, yes; wild, most certainly; but full of fire
and dynamite," wrote Jack Fingleton. But these virtues were questionable on
his first tour, a politically charged trip to the Caribbean that winter, and not
all that effective in a cricketing sense either. Though he did well in the MCC
match against Jamaica, "Mr Bumper Man" became a figure of fun on the Kingston
stage: What shall we do with Freddie Trueman?
What shall we do with Freddie Trueman?
Trueman's bowling bumpers.
Not that it mattered.
Four hundred odd the scoreboard rises
Four hundred odd the scoreboard rises
He's still bowling bumpers.
He was dropped from the Test team after the opening game and missed the next
two: his run-up became stuttering on the matting pitches. However, the words
did not become stuttering in the face of erratic local umpiring. "As a friend -
and I admire many things in this blunt Yorkshire lad," wrote Alex Bannister in
Cricket Cauldron, "I urge him, with all my force, to make a serious and determined
effort to keep himself in control." He was picked one tour too early, Bannister
thought later. The upshot was that, though he was devastating in England in 1954,
with 134 wickets at 15, Trueman was not picked for the Tests against Pakistan
and, devastatingly, passed over in favour of Frank Tyson for the Ashes tour. It
remained a source of grievance all his life, the more so since Tyson returned
home a hero. For the next two years, he remained a fringe Test player, and treated
like a naughty child, which came to a head before the Headingley Test in 1956
when Gubby Allen put a handkerchief down in the nets and instructed the great
bowler, in front of a gathering Yorkshire crowd, to hit it. "Fred felt diminished
and humiliated," wrote Mosey. He was excluded from the South African tour that
winter too.
By the spring of 1957, Trueman had played just seven Tests after his opening
series against India. But now finally he became accepted. Until this point, he had
partnered Brian Statham in the Test team only four times. Now it became the
norm, and would remain so for the next six years. Trouble was never that far
away with Fred: there was an exchange of bouncers with the even fierier Jamaican
Roy Gilchrist in 1957, with Fred threatening to "pin 'im to t' bloody sightscreen".
But he managed to rise above most of the vituperative politics of the Yorkshire
dressing-room. And he was by now as complete a fast bowler as the world had
ever seen. "It is a mistake to think of Fred Trueman as simply a bowler of speed,"
wrote John Arlott in Fred: Portrait of a Fast Bowler. "He had outswing, inswing,
a yorker that only Lindwall could match... Indeed, he shared with Lindwall the
rare ability to 'do' as much as a fast-medium bowler at a fast bowler's speed."
And he had an extraordinary capacity for hard work that would make a modern
bowler gasp. He came back - his own reputation undamaged - from England's
unhappy Ashes tour of 1958-59 to play all five Tests against another weak Indian
team in the hot summer of 1959, taking 24 wickets at 16. But in all, he bowled
nearly 1,100 overs, and took 140 wickets. He had a much happier tour to the
West Indies the following winter. For once, and rather improbably, he got on with
the tour manager, R. W. V. Robins. He made great use of his swinging yorker,
and showed the crowds his humour, not his temper. When Statham flew home,
Trueman was made senior professional. He played ten Tests in the first eight
months in 1960 and took 46 wickets - and the small matter of 132 in the County
Championship as well. At Headingley in 1961, he had perhaps his finest hour of
all, or finest 25 minutes. On a pitch offering no help to pace, he shortened his
run, relied on cut, and dismissed Harvey, O'Neill, Simpson, Benaud and Mackay in the second innings without conceding a run. The crowd's response was rapturous,
and England beat Australia for the first time since Laker's Test.
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But controversy was never far away even now. In 1962, he captained the Players
in what turned out to be the very last match at Lord's against the Gentlemen. He
went down to Taunton - "knackered" -
for Yorkshire's match there, overslept, and
was sent home by the captain, Vic Wilson.
The normal furore ensued. The next Ashes
tour began with him contemptuously
rejecting the fitness regime initiated by
the athlete Gordon Pirie on board the
Canberra. And, though he confirmed that
he was, at 32, still England's leading
bowler - not least with five crucial
wickets in the win at Melbourne - he
had a third of his £150 tour bonus
deducted. He channelled his grievances
into a spectacular performance against
the brilliant 1963 West Indians when he
(temporarily) got England back into the
series with a devastating second-innings
burst at Edgbaston. "With his hair
escaping in dark and wild curls," wrote
John Woodcock in The Times, "and his
run a thing of gathering strength, he
took control of the game. Every ball
was charged with danger." Woodcock
concluded that on moist English wickets
Trueman remained as great as he ever
was. "He bowled with his brain as much
as with his muscle. Beneath a clouded sky
he moved the ball with late and vicious
swing; off the seam it cut, like a rattlesnake, this way and that." At The Oval in
1964, he became the first bowler ever to take 300 Test wickets, and was cheered
there to an extent last seen at Bradman's farewell. Woodcock pointed out that this
landmark did not of itself prove Trueman was the greatest of all time. "Yet on his
day he has displayed, to the highest degree, the beauty and skill and the manliness
and the terror of his calling."
He faded out of Tests halfway through the following summer. Until 1968, he
continued as a Yorkshire elder statesman in a side which won the Championship
three times running (and had to wait until the next millennium to do it again).
He also led the county to victory over the 1968 Australians at Bramall Lane. It
might have been the moment to retire - Statham went out with a flourish in a
Roses match - but the great showman went quietly, with a polite letter to the
committee after the season, probably before the committee wrote one to him, once
and for all.
But there was no quiet retirement. More deliberately and self-consciously than
anyone before (except, perhaps, in his discreet way, Bradman), Trueman turned
his cricketing celebrity into gold. He had a rather embarrassing spell doing cabaret
in the northern clubs. But eventually this mutated into a cricket dinner speech,
for which clubs would invariably pay handsomely, though its mixture of coarse jokes and cricketing egocentricity could be fairly unedifying. He introduced, pint in hand, the TV programme Indoor League. He had a regular column in The
People, which was fine, except on the occasions when he was expected to write
it himself. And he kept playing for another 20 years: briefly in the Sunday League
for Derbyshire in 1972 and then - as a daytime counterpart in the nostalgia market
to his speaking - for the Old England XI and the British Airways Eccentrics. And
for 25 years, with Trevor Bailey, he was the summariser on Test Match Special.
Unfortunately, as English cricketing indignities worsened, Trueman found it ever
harder to find a kind word for his successors, summed up in his (often misquoted)
mantra: "I don't know what's going off out there." His family life - turbulent
during his first marriage to the strong-minded daughter of a mayor of Scarborough
- became much happier when he settled down with Veronica. He loved his kids
and, increasingly, wintering in Spain, while maintaining a punishing schedule of
appearances in Britain. Much of his work was for good causes; and he did much
to stabilise Statham's finances in his old mate's more troubled old age. Trueman
raced around until he was diagnosed with cancer, a few weeks before he died.
The anecdotes kept growing to the point where every cricket story ever told
somehow attached itself to Fred. Some, at least, had the ring of truth. One, recalled
by Mosey, fits with the scorecard of a game against Tyson at Northampton in
1954. Johnny Wardle was bowled, horribly, by Tyson for nought. "A bloody fine
shot that were," snorted Trueman, as he went out, just before meeting a similar
fate. "And a bloody fine shot that were, an' all," was Wardle's greeting to Fred.
But Trueman had a knack of getting in the last word: "Aye, I slipped on that pile
o' shit you left in the crease."
Yet the image was substantially false. He drank sparingly: what Fred loved was
chat, especially about cricket, and most especially about himself. He was also
curiously insecure, and soft-centred. He was deeply hurt both by being voted off
the Yorkshire committee in 1984 in the midst of the civil war over Geoff Boycott,
and by his sacking from the TMS team in 1999. Once again, there was no goodbye,
and this time it was not his choice. His speeches became less ribald, more elegiac.
In 2004, at the 364 Club lunch at Headingley, to honour Len Hutton, he made a
much-admired tribute, then broke down before the end, overcome by the memories.
Fred Trueman died on the morning of a one-day international against Sri Lanka
at Headingley. (England were terrible, so it was just as well he wasn't on the
radio.) When the news was announced, there was prolonged, appreciative, applause
for him before the minute's silence.