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Dai Davies      

Full name David Davies

Born August 26, 1896, Llanelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales

Died July 16, 1976, Llanelli, Carmarthenshire, Wales (aged 79 years 325 days)

Major teams Glamorgan, Wales

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak

Other Umpire

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct St
First-class 421 696 62 15390 216 24.27 16 73 198 0
Bowling averages
Mat Balls Runs Wkts BBI Ave Econ SR 5w 10
First-class 421 22479 9633 275 6/50 35.02 2.57 81.7 4 0
Career statistics
First-class span 1923 - 1939
Umpiring statistics
Test debut England v South Africa at Lord's, Jun 21-25, 1947 scorecard
Last Test England v New Zealand at Lord's, Jun 19-21, 1958 scorecard
Test matches 22
Test statistics
Profile

Dai Davies was Glamorgan`s first home-bred professional to make an impact in first-class cricket. During his career from 1923 to 1939, the Llanelli-born all-rounder scored over 15,000 runs, and took 275 wickets. He was also a fine fielder, holding 195 catches, and was described by Jack Hobbs as the finest cover point he ever saw.

Dai initially played for his native Carmarthenshire and worked in the Llanelli steelworks. His fine all-round performances at both club and Minor County level drew the attention of the Glamorgan selectors. They were keen to blood local talent and Dai won a regular place in the Glamorgan side from 1923. Over the next 16 years, Davies became one of the county`s most consistent and reliable batsmen, scoring three consecutive hundreds in 1928, including 165* against Sussex at Eastbourne.

In 1932 Davies played one of his most memorable innings during the match with Nottinghamshire at the Arms Park, scoring 106 and sharing a stand of 220 for the third wicket with Maurice Turnbull as the visiting bowlers experimented with `Bodyline` bowling. In 1939 Davies scored a career best double-hundred during the ill-tempered match with Somerset at Newport. The Glamorgan players had been annoyed by the visitors slow play on the first day, so when they prolonged their innings into the second day, Maurice Turnbull told his batsmen to stay out in the middle for the rest of the game. Davies duly answered his captain`s request with an innings of 216.

After the Second World War, Davies became a first-class umpire, and stood in 23 Tests between 1947 and 1958. He was also standing in the match at Bournemouth in 1948 when Glamorgan defeated Hampshire to win the Championship for the first time. Legend has it that when Dai gave the last Hampshire man out, leg before wicket, he said "That`s out and we`ve won the Championship!"(contributed by Andrew Hignell - April 2000)

Latest Photos

1955

Dai Davies - Glamorgan cricketer and Test umpire

Dai Davies

© Glamorgan County Cricket Club

Dai Davies: Portrait

Dai Davies: Portrait

© Glamorgan County Cricket Club

Country Fixtures Country Results
3rd ODI: South Africa v England at Cape Town
Nov 27 (14:30 local, 12:30 GMT)
4th ODI: South Africa v England at Port Elizabeth
Nov 29 (10:00 local, 08:00 GMT)
5th ODI: South Africa v England at Durban
Dec 4 (14:30 local, 12:30 GMT)
Sth Af In XI v England XI at East London
Dec 9-10 (10:30 local, 08:30 GMT)
Sth Af In XI v England XI at East London
Dec 11-12 (10:30 local, 08:30 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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