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Bob Appleyard      

Full name Robert Appleyard

Born June 27, 1924, Wibsey, Bradford, Yorkshire

Current age 85 years 135 days

Major teams England, Yorkshire

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm medium

Robert Appleyard
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 9 9 6 51 19* 17.00 0 0 4 0 4 0
First-class 152 145 54 776 63 8.52 0 1 80 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 9 17 1596 554 31 5/51 7/45 17.87 2.08 51.4 1 1 0
First-class 152 29980 10965 708 8/76 15.48 2.19 42.3 57 17
Career statistics
Test debut England v Pakistan at Nottingham, Jul 1-5, 1954 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at Nottingham, Jun 7-12, 1956 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1950 - 1958
Profile

There are few tales as remarkable as that of Bob Appleyard's brief first-class career which did not start until he was 27. An offspinner who bowled at close to medium pace, with a deceptive dipping flight, and great accuracy, he was devasting on a wet wicket, and economical on batsman's pitches.

When he was seven his mother left home; when he was 13 he lost his younger sister Margaret to diphtheria and when he was 15 his father, stepmother and two little sisters were found gassed in the bathroom of their home. The young Appleyard was taken in by his stepmother's parents who were devout Christians. He did not turn away from religion but embraced it and has worshipped regularly ever since. The war years held back his development but when he decided to join the Bradford League and went for nets at Bowling Old Lane he immediately caught the eye of club president Ernest Holdsworth, a former captain of Yorkshire 2nds.

His Yorkshire debut came in 1950 when he played in three matches and took 11 wickets but there was little indication of what was to happen the following season when he took 200 wickets (the only man to do so in his first campaign).

A deep-thinking cricketer, Appleyard could already bowl pace or off-spin but the addition of leg-cutters and off-cutters made him as lethal as he was unique. In the middle of that season he fell ill for a short while and was treated for pleurisy but the following spring, after only one match, he was diagnosed with tuberculosis. He was not expected to live, let alone play cricket, but he bounced with 154 wickets in 1954 and an England call-up. He took 5 for 51 on debut, and 31 wickets at 17.87 in his nine Tests. A change in the lbw law and a chronic shoulder injury drastically reduced his effectiveness, and he quit in 1958, after only five full seasons.

Appleyard became a successful business rep and he was working for the British Printing Corporation in 1981 when it was taken over by Robert Maxwell. Appleyard quickly saw Maxwell for the crook that he was and when Maxwell dismissed him on the strength of trumped up allegations, Appleyard battled for a fair settlement and won, shrewdly taking his money out of the BPC pension fund at the same time! The death from leukaemia of his young son, Ian, and later the death of a grandson, John, from the same disease, have kept grief a regular visitor to Appleyard's door but always he has battled on, fighting to bring Yorkshire back to Bradford Park Avenue for a while and being largely responsible for setting up the Yorkshire Academy on the ground as well.

Stephen Chalke's book on Appleyard - No Coward Soul - is a remarkable story and a recommended read.
Cricinfo staff

Notes

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1952
Awarded the MBE in 2007

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Dec 20, 2004

Bob Appleyard

Bob Appleyard

© Cricinfo Ltd

Sep 15, 1954

Bob Appleyard, Vic Wilson and Len Hutton in London before heading out for the tour of Australia, London, September 15, 2008

Bob Appleyard, Vic Wilson and Len Hutton in London before heading out for the tour of Australia

© Getty Images

Jun 20, 1954

Bob Appleyard leads Yorkshire off, 1954

Bob Appleyard leads Yorkshire off

© The Cricketer International

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SAf A v England XI at Bloemfontein
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3rd T20I: WI Women v Eng Women at Basseterre
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1st T20I: South Africa v England at Johannesburg
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