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Bill Brown      

Full name William Alfred Brown

Born July 31, 1912, Toowoomba, Queensland

Died March 16, 2008, Murrumba Downs, Queensland (aged 95 years 229 days)

Major teams Australia, New South Wales, Queensland

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

William Alfred Brown
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 22 35 1 1592 206* 46.82 4 9 1 14 0
First-class 189 284 15 13838 265* 51.44 39 66 110 1
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 22 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 189 169 110 6 4/16 18.33 3.90 28.1 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v Australia at Nottingham, Jun 8-12, 1934 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at Lord's, Jun 24-29, 1948 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1932/33 - 1949/50
Profile

WA (Bill) Brown was an outstanding opening batsman and excellent fieldsman for Australia on either side of the Second World War, his achievements perhaps overshadowed by his more lauded contemporaries. He averaged nearly 47 in Tests, and over fifty in first-class cricket, making 39 first-class hundreds. He would have undoubtedly played more Test cricket if it were not for the war. An unspectacular bat, he was a superb glancer, and deft placer of the ball. He had a full range of shots, however, and was hard to tie down.

Brown's cricket career got off to a most inauspicious start when in his debut first-class innings for New South Wales in 1932 he was run out for a duck without facing a ball. He made a good impression in the Sheffield Shield, and to the surprise of some was picked to tour England in 1934. He had an outstanding tour; his 119 against Lancashire earned him a place in the first Test, where his second innings 73 helped Australia earn victory after Woodfull, Ponsford and Bradman had failed. He made his debut Test hundred in the second Test, as Australia experienced a rare loss at Lord's, and was promoted to open with Ponsford in the third Test where he made a useful 72. He failed in the final two Tests, but had proven himself as a Test player of class, ending up third in the Test averages.

He scored consistently on the 1935-36 tour of South Africa, with four fifties and a century in the five Tests, but was less successful in the two home Tests he played against England. 1936 saw him accept a coaching position in Brisbane and he represented Queensland from 1936-37. In 1937-38 he was appointed Queensland captain and by 1938 he was at the height of his ability, and stood out in a side marked by outstanding batsmen (Bradman, Fingleton, McCabe and Hassett). He made a century in the first Test after Australia had followed on, and he carried his bat for a superb unbeaten 206 at Lord's. He missed the third Test through injury, but was the top Australian scorer in either innings at the Oval Test so dominated by Hutton.

During the war he served in the Pacific with the RAAF as a flight lieutenant. After the war he was not the dominating player he had been before, and he had lost possibly his most productive cricket years. He did captain Australia in their inaugural Test against New Zealand, presiding over a 2-day rout, and making the highest score of the match. In the final Test against India in 1947-48 he was most unluckily run out for 99, but was chosen to tour England with the "Invincibles" in 1948. He played in the first two Tests but then lost his place to Neil Harvey. He made eight centuries on that tour, but with the advent of fine young players like Morris and Harvey, he retired at the end of the following season after captaining the Australian second team to New Zealand. He was a Queensland selector from 1950-51 to 1959-60 and an Australian selector in 1952-53. In 1992 the Queensland Cricket Association elected him a life member.

A likeable, popular and modest man was awarded Medal of the Order of Australia in 2000 for services to cricket. He died on March 16, 2008, aged 95, after being ill for a few months.
David Liverman

Notes

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1939
Awarded Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in 2000 Queen's Birthday honours list for services to cricket

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Nov 3, 2005

Michael Hussey receives his Test cap from Bill Brown, Australia's oldest living Test cricketer , Australia v West Indies, 1st Test, Brisbane, 1st day, November 3, 2005

Michael Hussey receives his Test cap

© Getty Images

Jun 8, 2005

Bill Brown, Bill Johnston, Neil Harvey and Sam Loxton pose for a photo during  a reunion of the remaining Invincibles in Sydney, June 8, 2005

Bill Brown, Bill Johnston, Neil Harvey and Sam Loxton

© Getty Images

Nov 2004

Bill Brown of Australia, 2004

Bill Brown

© Wendy Cook

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