HENDRENS_LAST_MATCH_OCT1995
JGLiverman`s recollections of Hendren`s last match....
01-Jan-1970
"He made a duck in his first match for Middlesex, and a duck
in his last, a memory which gave him as much pleasure as that of
his 170 centuries."
JGLiverman`s recollections of Hendren`s last match.....
>From my own memories I would add a comment on Hendren`s last
county match which I saw as a schoolboy of sixteen. The outstanding event was not the duck he scored in the second innings
but the century he scored in the first. It was a three day
match against, I think, Surrey. At Lord`s there was a capacity crowd of at least 15000, not unusual in those days before
television and one-day matches, many of us coming to cheer and
send a fond farewell to our idol `Patsy` - possibly the most popular cricketer who ever played though there can be no statistics
to prove it. Throughout my cricket watching days in the thirties
he was a regular century maker for Middlesex against other counties and against the touring sides. The only time he seemed uncomfortable at the crease was before he got off the mark, and he
aimed to reduce this time to the minimum by stealing a single,
usually by a cheeky prod to leg, off his first ball.
A speedy deep fielder in his youth - he had been a wing forward
in first class soccer - Middlesex put him in the slips when he
began to slow down in the field. In his last two years, however, his eyesight was not so keen, one or two slip catches went
astray, and he returned to the deep field, probably at his own
request , where he covered the ground with remarkable alacrity,
held some fine catches, and was well placed to exchange jokes
across the boundary with the crowd.
On this last county match in 1937 he strode to the crease to
sustained cheers from the huge crowd and treated us to an entertaining innings of great distinction and showing remarkable energy and stamina for a man in his 49th year. He reached his hundred
in little over two hours and the crowd rose to him. We gave him
three cheers and sang `For he`s a jolly good fellow` and tears
were running down many a furrowed cheek among supporters who had
enjoyed his cricket for thirty years. We readily forgave him
his all too brief second innings. Those who saw that last century, his one hundred and seventieth, now nearly sixty years ago,
will treasure the memory.