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David Lloyd      

Full name David Lloyd

Born March 18, 1947, Accrington, Lancashire

Current age 62 years 238 days

Major teams England, Cumberland, Lancashire

Nickname Bumble

Playing role All-rounder

Batting style Left-hand bat

Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Other Umpire, Coach, Commentator, Journalist, Author

Education Accrington Secondary Technical School

Relation Son - GD Lloyd

David Lloyd
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 9 15 2 552 214* 42.46 1342 41.13 1 0 54 0 11 0
ODIs 8 8 1 285 116* 40.71 526 54.18 1 0 25 1 3 0
First-class 407 652 74 19269 214* 33.33 38 93 334 0
List A 288 276 39 7761 121* 32.74 7 44 89 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 9 2 24 17 0 - - - 4.25 - 0 0 0
ODIs 8 1 12 3 1 1/3 1/3 3.00 1.50 12.0 0 0 0
First-class 407 15598 7172 237 7/38 30.26 2.75 65.8 5 1
List A 288 1251 893 39 4/17 4/17 22.89 4.28 32.0 1 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v India at Lord's, Jun 20-24, 1974 scorecard
Last Test Australia v England at Adelaide, Jan 25-30, 1975 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut England v West Indies at The Oval, Sep 7, 1973 scorecard
Last ODI England v West Indies at Leeds, May 28-29, 1980 scorecard
ODI statistics
First-class span 1965 - 1983
List A span 1966 - 1985
Profile

David Lloyd was an unlucky cricketer. Many of his admirers - and probably he himself - were disappointed that he did not achieve more. A talented allrounder, and especially a brilliant strokemaker, he was very much, and proudly, a man of what Neville Cardus called the Lancashire hinterland (Accrington). He promised to - and almost did - reach the top; but remained calmly cheerful and humorous despite his setbacks. In short, in his Second Test- against India in 1974- he scored a splendidly fluent 214 not out. That alone ensured his selection for the following winter's tour of Australia where, in a side routed by the `heart-line' attack of Lillee and Thomson, he was effectively shocked and shattered out of Test cricket.

Like several other capable and loyal professionals of his period, he took on the captaincy of his county - which he had never sought - out of loyalty. In a term of office from 1973 to 1977 he led the county to three Gillette finals, one of which they won. As a captain, his natural modesty probably caused him to use his left-arm slow bowling much less than he might have done. For many years he was one of the bravest and finest close fieldsmen in the world.

Always considerate of young players, he helped considerably in the development of, in particular, Graeme Fowler. He returns now to league cricket in his native town; leaving behind many good memories as a man; and figures which, though useful, do less than justice to his ability.
John Arlott (January 1984)

Footnote
After retiring, Lloyd briefly became a first-class umpire, before turning his hand to radio commentary and then coaching. In 1996 he became England coach and helped with the professionalisation of the side. He was always a ready source for a quote, but his boundless enthusiasm made him enemies in high places, and he departed after the 1999 World Cup. He returned to commentating with Sky Sports.

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Jul 25, 2008

David Lloyd, Richie Richardson and Kevin Pietersen, Stanford announcement, Rose Bowl, July 25, 2008

David Lloyd, Richie Richardson and Kevin Pietersen

© Stanford2020.com

Aug 17, 2007

Sky commentators (back L-R) Michael Holding, David Gower, (front L-R) Nasser Hussain, David Lloyd, Michael Atherton and Ian Botham pose for a photograph as they celebrate Sky's 100th Live Test Match, England v Pakistan, fourth Test, The Oval

Sky commentators (back, l to r) Michael Holding, David Gower; (front l to r) Nasser Hussain, David Lloyd, Michael Atherton and Ian Botham

© Getty Images

Jul 22, 2007

David Lloyd holds up a box, Lord's, July 22, 2007

David Lloyd holds up a box

© Siddhartha Vaidyanathan

Country Fixtures Country Results
2nd T20I: WI Women v Eng Women at Basseterre - Nov 10
WI Women won by 5 wkts (with 5 balls remaining)
3rd T20I: WI Women v Eng Women at Basseterre
Nov 12 (10:00 local, 14:00 GMT)
1st T20I: South Africa v England at Johannesburg
Nov 13 (18:00 local, 16:00 GMT)
2nd T20I: South Africa v England at Centurion
Nov 15 (14:30 local, 12:30 GMT)
Sth Africa A v England XI at Potchefstroom
Nov 17 (14:30 local, 12:30 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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