Families in Test cricket, Part Four

By Kersi Meher-Homji / Expert

The Australian cricket team for the 5th Test against the West Indies at Sydney in January 1952. Richie Benaud is back row, second from right.

In the final article of the series, brothers who played Test cricket but not together are listed. Also are mentioned husbands and wives, brothers-in-law and brothers and sisters who played in Tests.

Let’s start off with brothers who played in Tests but not together.

Australia

England

South Africa

West Indies

New Zealand

India

Pakistan

Sri Lanka

Will Australia’s David Hussey join his elder brother Mike at Test level, although they have played together in one-day Internationals?

Australia’s fast-medium bowler Terry Alderman’s younger sister Denise opened Australian women’s batting in the 1981-82 World Cup and scored 117 and 77.

Roger and Ruth Prideaux were the first husband and wife to play Test cricket. Roger played three Tests for England in 1968 and Ruth (married surname Westbrook) had represented England earlier as a wicket-keeper in the 1957-58 series in Australia.

Sir Richard Hadlee and Karen Hadlee provide another Test playing couple. Karen represented New Zealand in the 1970’s.

Her finest performance was in a minor match in 1973 when she captured all ten wickets for twelve runs. Even the great Richard has not been able to duplicate this achievement.

Now let us broaden the focus by bringing in in-laws. England’s Chris White is the brother-in-law of Australia’s Darren Lehmann. They played together in the first three Ashes Tests of 2002-03 in Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth. White dismissed Lehmann in the Adelaide and Perth Tests.

To end on a quirky note, Tom Lowry, New Zealand’s first Test captain, had two sisters who married cricket captains; England’s Percy Chapman and Reg Bettington of NSW and Oxford University.

Did you know that Australia’s Steve and Mark Waugh and New Zealanders James and Hamish Marshall are not the only twins to play together in a cricket Test?

In women’s cricket two pairs of twins have represented their countries. Jamaica fielded identical twin sisters Molly and Polly Coombs in their inaugural Test series against England in 1970. New Zealand included sisters Elizabeth and Rosemary Signal against England in the 1984 Leeds Test.

The brotherhood of cricket is alive and well despite many recent problems. In a way the game itself is one big family and may its camaraderie prosper.

Roarers are requested to add to my compilations.

Sources: Famous Cricketing Families by KM-H, Simon & Schuster, Aust., 2000; Almanac, Perivale, Aust., 2006; several Wisden publications UK.

The Crowd Says:

2013-03-08T06:43:52+00:00

Sohaib Alvi

Roar Rookie


If I'm not wrong, the third Test Match at Karachi between England and Pakistan in 1977-78 is the first time Pakistan played a Test without at least one of the Mohammad brothers as Sadiq was dropped and Mushtaq was not allowed to play as he was contracted with Kerry Packer at the time.

2010-01-01T08:20:49+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Guest


Thanks, Brett, for pointing out my omission (not deliberate!) of Kate and Alex Blakewell. They became the first set of identical twins -- male or female -- to play Test cricket together for Australia. The first time they played together was against England at Hove, UK, in August 2005.

2010-01-01T05:22:56+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


..and I'm only going off what Mike Hussey said one day on the Cricket Show.... Actually Kersi, Mark Taylor is another one of we wacky ambidextrous types - he of course bats left handed, but plays golf right-handed, as do I (though I'm not sure if he putts left-handed, like I do. Puts a lot of people off actually...) Anyway, I've thought of one of your possibly-deliberate omissions and/or the answer to the quiz question: Kate and Alex Blackwell would have to be the other twins to have played Test cricket together...

2009-12-31T23:33:13+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Guest


Hi Roarers, hope you had a grand New Year's eve. Happy New Year to yous all. (See I am writing like a true Aussie!) But about time you woke up and make comments on my omissions!! Still asleep? Let me comment on my post myself to start the ball rolling. Zimbabwe's Flower brothers Grant and Andy were unique. Grant batted right-handed and bowled left-arm orthodox. Andy batted left-handed but bowled right-arm off-breaks (when he did not keep wickets). And I have on Brett McKay's authority that brothers Mike and David Hussey are both right-handed. But Mike switched to being a leftie after watching Allan Border bat. Brett should know. He is ambidextrous himself.

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