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Trevor Bailey      

Full name Trevor Edward Bailey

Born December 3, 1923, Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex

Current age 85 years 354 days

Major teams England, Cambridge University, Essex

Nickname Barnacle, The Boil

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Other Commentator, Journalist, Author

Education Dulwich College; Cambridge University

Trevor Edward Bailey
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 61 91 14 2290 134* 29.74 1 10 2 32 0
First-class 682 1072 215 28641 205 33.42 28 150 426 0
List A 7 7 1 93 38 15.50 0 0 3 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 61 95 9712 3856 132 7/34 11/98 29.21 2.38 73.5 5 5 1
First-class 682 116659 48170 2082 10/90 23.13 2.47 56.0 110 13
List A 7 504 290 11 4/37 4/37 26.36 3.45 45.8 2 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v New Zealand at Leeds, Jun 11-14, 1949 scorecard
Last Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Feb 13-18, 1959 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1946 - 1967
List A span 1963 - 1967
Profile

Trevor Bailey was one of the hardest, most doughty opponents you would wish to meet. An outstanding fast-medium bowler, brilliant fielder and generally dull batsman, whose resolute defence, rescued England from many a fix and earned him the nickname "Barnacle".

A precocious schoolboy cricketer at Dulwich, he played for England at Lord's in 1944 and after a spell in national service, became a regular in the Essex side and won Blues in 1947 and 1948 at Cambridge. He made his Test debut in 1949, and for a decade, during which time England were the leading side in the world, he was at the heart of the team.

He thrived in a crisis and in 1953, when England regained the Ashes after 19 years, their success owed much to him. At Lord's he batted for four-and-a-half hours in a famous last-day stand with Willie Watson, and at Headingely he bowled negative leg theory to put the skids on Australia's push for victory. That winter he took 7 for 34 against a powerful West Indies. He bowed out after England's wretched Ashes series in 1958-59, during which he made first-class cricket's slowest half-century, in 357 minutes at Brisbane, one of 14 matches in which he opened.

For many years, Bailey was Essex, acting as club secretary from 1955 to 1967 and captain from 1961 to 1966. He passed 1000 runs 18 times and took 100 wickets on nine occasions. He achieved the double eight times , the most for any post-war player, tied with Fred Titmus. Bailey was also a skilled footballer, winning a Blue as well as an FA Amateur Cup medal with Walthamstow Avenue.

After retiring he wrote books and for newspapers, and became a popular member of the Test Match Special team on the BBC.
Martin Williamson

Notes

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1950

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Nov 18, 1958

Trevor Bailey on tour with England

Trevor Bailey on tour with England

© Getty Images

Jun 8, 1957

Trevor Bailey leads Essex out at Colchester in 1957

Trevor Bailey leads Essex out at Colchester in 1957

© Colchester CC

Jun 2, 1957

Trevor Bailey

Trevor Bailey

© The Cricketer International

Country Fixtures Country Results
2nd ODI: South Africa v England at Centurion
Nov 22 (10:00 local, 08:00 GMT)
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)
SAA Ch XI v England XI at East London
Dec 9-10 (10:30 local, 08:30 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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