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Merv Wallace      

Full name Walter Mervyn Wallace

Born December 19, 1916, Grey Lynn, Auckland

Died March 21, 2008, Auckland (aged 91 years 93 days)

Major teams New Zealand, Auckland

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Relation Brother - GF Wallace, Son - GM Wallace

Walter Mervyn Wallace
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 13 21 0 439 66 20.90 0 5 2 5 0
First-class 121 192 17 7757 211 44.32 17 43 68 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 13 1 6 5 0 - - - 5.00 - 0 0 0
First-class 121 34 18 0 - - - 3.17 - 0 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v New Zealand at Lord's, Jun 26-29, 1937 scorecard
Last Test New Zealand v South Africa at Auckland, Mar 13-17, 1953 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1933/34 - 1960/61
Profile

Merv Wallace should have been one of the greatest names in New Zealand's cricket history. That he wasn't is largely because of the whims of selectors. Considered by many contemporaries to be one of the best New Zealand batsmen of his generation, he scored all round the wicket, although his cover-driving was particularly notable. He was outstanding in England in 1937, and when he returned 12 years later he ended the tour with 1722 runs at (49.20) - he reached 910 runs in May alone.

In 1937 he scored a pair of fifties on his debut at Lord's, but after that tour he was robbed of his best years by the war, and by the time New Zealand's international cricket resumed he was past his best. During his first-class career of 121 games, he finished with a much more indicative example of his worth with a first-class average of 44.32. And just what might have been had the Second World War not broken out in 1939 was obvious from his highest score of 211 recorded in the summer of 1939-40.

But his greater legacy should have been as a coach and thinker in the game. He had the all-too-rare ability to communicate technical cricket matters in a way that was effective and simple. But he was rarely called upon; his abilities wasted at a time when New Zealand could least afford to ignore them. Given the impact he made in 1956 when called in to assist as coach for a New Zealand team ravaged by a demanding tour of India and Pakistan, and facing the West Indies at home, Wallace did enough to have been New Zealand coach from 1956 until 1970. New Zealand won its first Test in the last Test of that 1956 series, had a good showing against an Australian 2nd XI a year later, and then Wallace was not reappointed.

"The most under-rated cricketer to have worn the silver fern." That was former New Zealand captain John Reid's assessment of Wallace.
Lynn McConnell

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May 19, 1937

Merv Wallace on the 1937 New Zealand tour of England

Merv Wallace on the 1937 New Zealand tour of England

© Getty Images

Country Fixtures Country Results
Canterbury v Auckland at Christchurch
Nov 24-27 (10:30 local, 21:30 GMT)
Central Dist v Otago at Napier
Nov 24-27 (10:30 local, 21:30 GMT)
Northern Dis v Wellington at Hamilton
Nov 24-27 (10:30 local, 21:30 GMT)
1st Test: New Zealand v Pakistan at Dunedin
Nov 24-28 (12:00 local, 23:00 GMT)
Auckland v Northern Dis at Auckland
Dec 3-6 (10:30 local, 21:30 GMT)
Canterbury v Central Dist at Rangiora
Dec 3-6 (10:30 local, 21:30 GMT)
Otago v Wellington at Queenstown
Dec 3-6 (10:30 local, 21:30 GMT)
2nd Test: New Zealand v Pakistan at Wellington
Dec 3-7 (12:00 local, 23:00 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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