The XI last-minute call-ups
Better late than never: the eleven last-minute call-ups
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1 Alastair Cook
With England bereft of Marcus
Trescothick, and Michael Vaughan's
dodgy knee reaching Comptonlike
seriousness, the Test selectors
plundered the A side in West Indies
for the young Essex left-hander,
Cook. A letter might have arrived
quicker, as he took 48 hours over a
protracted journey to Nagpur. Two
and a bit days later he was compiling
an assured 60, and next time round
the 21-year-old became the youngest
England Test debutant to score a
century. He later claimed that his late
arrival helped ease the pressure on
him, joking that "the jet lag probably
helped a bit".
2 Austin Carr
In 1921, a depleted Worcestershire
urgently called up the local
cricketing headmaster Gilbert
Ashton, but being indisposed he
summoned Carr, a junior member
of staff, from his lessons and
ordered him to go to New Road
to make up the numbers. Carr
protested that he was no good,
but in an era of less developed
employee rights, he thought it
wise to obey. However, batting at
No. 8 he caned the Essex bowlers
like schoolboys, striking 82 for the
highest score of a drawn match.
3 Keith Rigg
The Australia batsman was an
emergency call-up in 1936-37 but
found out only the night before, at
a New Year's Eve party. "What are
you doing here?" asked a friend.
"You're in the Test!" After Rigg had
hotfooted it to Melbourne, England
tactically declared at 76 for 9 on
a sticky wicket and in the second
innings Rigg, coming in at 3 for 2,
hit an invaluable 47. His two-hour
ordeal enabled Bradman, batting
at No. 7, to make 270 on a now
much-improved pitch. Australia,
2-0 down, won the match and
the series.
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4 Lionel Tennyson
'Bulldog Drummond' personified,
Tennyson was spending a convivial
night with his chums at the
Embassy Club on Old Bond Street
when, well past midnight, he
received a message that he was
required for the 1921 Ashes Test
at Lord's, starting later that day.
Tennyson's response was that if he
had heard the good news earlier he
would have "knocked off a cigar or
two". He then confidently struck
a £50 wager that he would crack a
half-century. England lost but his
swashbuckling undefeated 74 won
him the bet and also the captaincy.
5 Nick Cook
In the middle of a county
match at Chelmsford in 1983
the Leicestershire spinner was
commandeered by England to
make his Test debut at Lord's,
Phil Edmonds having ricked his
back getting out of his car. Cook
took five New Zealand wickets
in the first innings and finished
with match-winning figures of
8 for 125. Edmonds himself was
memorably recalled by Middlesex
in 1992. Forty-one years old, he had
not played a first-class match for
nearly five years, but after arriving
at Trent Bridge by Rolls Royce, he
reprised his old double-act with
John Emburey, both spinners
taking four wickets.
6 Jonathan Agnew
The former fast bowler was
persuaded to abandon the
commentary box by his old county Leicestershire, after injury struck
before the 1992 NatWest Trophy
semi. Fellow writers mockingly
wagered on how dreadful his
bowling would be, quotes ranging
from 40 runs conceded to the high
70s. However, Aggers not only
took a wicket but didn't concede
a boundary as Nasser Hussain,
perhaps concerned about being
risibly dismissed by a stand-in
bowler, batted with exaggerated
defence. Agnew finished with 12-2-
31-1 - bowled straight through lest
he seize up - but politely declined
the final.
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7 Harold Gimblett
With Jack Meyer suffering from
malaria and amateurs thin on the
ground, Somerset sent an SOS to
Gimblett, a village cricketer who
had just been sent packing after
an unsuccessful county trial. After
missing the morning bus, Gimblett
had to hitchhike and when he
arrived at Frome, Somerset were
in dire straits at 107 for 6. Then
something straight from the
pages of a schoolboy ripping yarn
happened. The young farm boy,
aged 20 and clad in his Watchet
CC sweater, borrowed a bat and
slogged the Essex attack, thumping
17 fours and three haymakers for
six in a 63-minute hundred, the
quickest of the 1935 season. He
ended up with 123, with Somerset
winning by an innings.
8 Henry Blofeld
The TMS commentator, a
Lord's centurion for Cambridge
University, had been tipped to
play for his country before being
hit by one of his beloved buses
while at Eton. So when England
were stricken by illness before the
Bombay Test of 1963-64, Blowers
was asked to stand by. By now a
journalist, he agreed with Billy
Bunter-type cheek: "I don't care
if Cowdrey and Parfitt are flying
out as replacements. If I make 50
or above in either innings, I'm
damned if I'll stand down for
Calcutta." However, Cowdrey's
future career was saved when at
the 11th hour it was decided that
Micky Stewart would play despite
illness. Stewart appeared on the
scorecard as `Absent ill 0.'
9 Peter Smith
In 1933 the Essex leg-break bowler
was in a Chelmsford cinema when
he was suddenly called outside.
There his excited father produced a
telegram from the Essex secretary;
Smith had been chosen for the
next day's Test. He dashed to The
Oval next morning but it proved
a wild goose chase as his selection
had been an elaborate hoax. Two
more abortive debuts followed:
India 1939-40, when Hitler stopped
play, and Old Trafford 1946,
when Smith was injured. He was
eventually capped later that summer at The Oval, 13 years after
the first false start.
10 Graham Gooch
The fifth day of the 1988 Lord's
Test against Sri Lanka overlapped
with Essex's visit to Surrey, but
after the Test novices crashed to
63 for 6 in the first innings, Essex
presumptuously picked Gooch
anyway. But Sri Lanka wouldn't
roll over and the England captain
found himself double-booked. When
England needed a single for victory
shortly before lunch, he clutched
his car keys but Tim Robinson
played for the break, blocking three
successive balls. Meanwhile Essex,
only allowed 10 fielders, were being
put to the sword, before Gooch
finally arrived, appearing on two
scorecards in the same day.
11 Phil North
The slow left-armer North had a
very modest first-class career, with
a bowling average of 42 and one of
his greatest sporting achievements
listed as machining some disc
brakes on Richard Noble's recordbreaking
speed car `Thrust II'. So
he couldn't believe his luck when,
after an eight-year gap, his old
club Glamorgan wanted him for a
match against Notts in 1997. But
calamity struck when his wake-up
call never came through. After
turning up late, North was told he
was no longer required.
This article was first published in the May issue of The Wisden Cricketer.
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