Bob Massie made his Ashes mark at Lord's

By David Lord / Expert

In the 130 Test matches played at Lord’s, no bowler has made such a stunning debut than Australian medium-pacer Bob Massie with his match figures of 16-137 in June 1972.

It is still the home of cricket’s record for most match wickets, most wickets on debut, and was the all-time debut record until Indian leggie Narendra Herath broke it by the barest possible margin with 16-136 against the Windies at Chennai in January 1988.

But in one of Test cricket’s great mysteries, Massie came, saw, conquered, and was gone from the Test arena in just six months – after just six caps.

That was a combination of poor form and poor health, but to fall from such lofty heights in so short a time left Massie bewildered, and cricket-lovers scratching their heads in disbelief.

So where did Bob Massie come from?

Born in Subiaco, Massie made his Sheffield Shield debut for Western Australia in the 1965-66 season and while he had success the national selectors of Sir Donald Bradman, Jack Ryder and Dudley Seddon took their time before giving him a baggy green cap.

That was until the Rest of the World series in Australia that replaced the cancelled South African tour for the 1971-72 season.

Massie made his presence felt in three unofficial ‘Tests’ claiming 11 wickets at 27.27 apiece, including 7-76 off 20.6 eight-ball overs at the SCG where he dismissed the top six in the batting order – Sunil Gavaskar, Hylton Ackerman, Asif Masood, Zaheer Abbas, Graeme Pollock, and skipper Gary Sobers.

Selected for the 1972 Ashes tour toEngland, Massie wasn’t picked for the first Test at Old Trafford where Dennis Lillee, David Colley, Graeme Watson and Doug Walters were the pace attack.

Australia lost by 89 runs, so Massie replaced Watson for Lord’s.

The rest, as they say, is history.

Massie bowled Geoff Boycott in the first dig for 12, and had his opening partner John Edrich caught by Rod Marsh in the second dig for 6.

Mike Smith was bowled for 34, and caught by Ross Edwards for 30.

Basil d’Oliveira was leg before for 32, and caught by Greg Chappell for 3.

Tony Greig was caught by Marsh for 54, and caught by Ian Chappell for 3.

Alan Knott was caught by Colley for 43, and caught by Greg Chappell for 12.

Skipper Ray Illingworth was leg before for 30, and caught by Keith Stackpole for 12.

John Snow was bowled for 37, and caught by Marsh for a duck.

And Norm Gifford was caught by Marsh in the first dig for 3, and John Price was caught by Greg Chappell for 19 in the second.

Bob Massie had the spectacular stats of 8-84 off 32.5 in the first dig, and 8-53 off 27.2 in the second for his 16-137 off 60.1

A simply magnificent display of pin-point accurate swing bowling, mixed with off-cutters. In the humid, cloudy conditions, Bob Massie made the ball talk to the best England batsmen in the land.

That was the first of Massie’s six caps.

He followed that with 4-43 and 1-49 at Trent Brdiege, 0-34 at Headingley, and finished the Ashes series with 0-69 and 2-77 at The Oval.

Back home in the next summer, Massie played twoTests against Pakistan wirh 4-70 and 0-26 at Adelaide, and 3-123 and 1-49 at the SCG.

And that ended Bob Massie’s Test career with 31 wickets at 20.37, still very cheap by any standards.

Just 18 months later, he was dropped from the Western Australian side, his cricket career over.

Years later Bob Massie popped up on ABC radio as an expert commentator, and he was just as brilliant in that capacity as he was at Lord’s.

And they don’t come any better than that.

The Crowd Says:

2015-07-01T04:28:01+00:00

Atawhai Drive

Roar Guru


One of the most frustrating things about watching "Massie's Match" on DVD is that all of his 16 wickets are shown from the same camera position, with Massie running towards the camera. The batsman's body gets in the way and it is hard to see just how much swing Massie was getting, or how late that swing occurred. Some years later, having plucked up the courage to talk to Dennis Lillee over the fence as the great man fielded on the boundary, I asked him about Massie. Lillee, diplomatically, put his fellow Australian's loss of form down to a lack of confidence caused by the ball not swinging for him in the West Indies in 1973. Massie wasn't exactly a one-Test wonder, but he certainly had a wonderful Test at Lord's in 1972.

2015-07-01T03:55:30+00:00

CT

Guest


What happened to Bob Massie. Was it a mental thing. The expectation too high. Could not take the pressure? Surely he was not expected to replicate the incredible 16 wickets for a single match every time he went out to bowl. Terry Alderman had two very successful England ashes series. Eclipsing Massie for wickets taken. Yet the fellow West Aussie swingman went onto a long and fruitful test career unlike his predecessor.

AUTHOR

2015-06-30T22:39:40+00:00

David Lord

Expert


Cornish, Bob Massie toured the West Indies in 1973, but couldn't crack the Test team with Max Walker, Jeff Hammond, Doug Walters, and Greg Chappell the pacemen. But Bob did grab 7-52 off 16.4 in the game against Guyana late in the tour that included the scalps of Roy Fredericks and Steve Comacho. That was Bob's last game for Australia, more's the pity. He was a great bloke who deserved better.

2015-06-30T18:01:15+00:00

UncleRon

Guest


Swings the thing over there David. Like T Alderman. A lot of people are tipping Josh Hazlewood to clean up in this series. Soon find out.

2015-06-30T17:17:46+00:00

Cornish

Roar Rookie


Thanks for that David, I remember that remarkable bowling display and have been wracking my brains recently trying to remember who the guy was. Always wondered why he never toured again.

Read more at The Roar