The five best bowling performances in cricket history

By Anindya Dutta / Roar Guru

Hedley Verity, George Geary, Premangshu Chatterjee, Bert Vogler and Albert Moss. I can see you shaking your heads at these names.

Other than Verity, who has had a couple of excellent books written about his exploits, the other names are unlikely to ring any bells in the minds of most Roarers.

And yet, these fine men, forgotten largely by history as they are, hold the records for the best bowling figures in the history of First Class Cricket. Records which have stood the test of time, so much so that the only performance that is even remotely modern dates back to 1957.

Hedley Verity 10-10
It is 1932, World War 2 is still seven years away, and peace reigns in a England whose wounds have barely healed from the loss of a generation of its young men in the great War.

Hedley Verity has just made his Test debut at the Oval against New Zealand the previous year, and will go on to earn fame as the man who dismissed Don Bradman more times than any other Test bowler, with his left arm spin.

He will also go on to form a close friendship with Douglas Jardine and Harold Larwood, whose example he had followed in making it out of the Coal pits into the bright sunshine of English cricket fields.

Verity would play 40 Tests for England in the intervening years, and take 144 wickets at 24.37 with a best performance of 8 for 43. He would finally earn immortality by passing away from his wounds as a prisoner of war in the country of his birth, Italy, in 1943, at the age of 38.

But we go back to 1932 when Yorkshire is playing Nottinghamshire at Leeds. Notts scores 234 in their first innings and Yorkshire replies with 163 for 9 before declaring on the third and final morning, in an effort to force a result. Notts takes the score to 44 for no loss, when Verity gets the ball.

In a remarkable collapse, Notts goes from 44 for no loss to 67 all out. In his first spell, Verity takes 3 wickets, and then in his second, he takes the other 7 in a jaw dropping 15-ball effort, including a hat-trick. His full figures are 19.4 overs, 16 maidens, 10 runs, 10 wickets.

It had rained the previous night, but that doesn’t fully explain his achievement, because right after Notts is dismissed, Yorkshire opening batsmen Percy Holmes and Herbert Suttcliffe have an unbroken 139 run stand and take Yorks to a famous 10-wicket victory.

It is only fitting that 85 years later, we are still talking about this performance as being unmatched in its enormity.

George Geary 10-18
George Geary was the greatest cricketer Lancashire had produced until the advent of a certain David Gower.

But the closest parallel to bowling style that Geary had, was a certain Aussie, who decades later, would become perhaps the greatest Australian fast bowler of all time – Glenn McGrath.

Contemporary accounts say: “Because he was tall and very solidly built, he was able both to get bounce and to bowl the long spells required for success in Australian conditions which destroyed the reputations of all English bowlers of slighter build.”

They also go on to say: “Geary was able to swing the new ball very effectively but relied for most of his success on his amazing persistence and ability to bowl with slight yet well-disguised variations of pace and cut. He was able to bowl quite incredible numbers of overs on unresponsive pitches.”

Sounds familiar?

Unlike Verity however, Geary was a far more successful First Class bowler than a Test performer, where he took 46 wickets at 29.41. In First Class cricket, he took a staggering 2063 wickets at an unbelievable 20 runs per wicket.

To witness his best bowling figures, however, we go back to 1929 when Glamorgan are playing Leicestershire at Pontypridd.

Leicester is bowled out for 102 with only three players reaching double figures. Glamorgan, despite a fighting 70 from opener William Bates, can only score 160, with Geary taking 6 for 78 in a long 35-over spell.

Leicester does not do much better the second time and is bowled out for 141, leaving Glamorgan an easy 84 runs to win the match. With a day and a half left in the 3-day match, Leicester’s players are already packed, when they come out to bowl.

George Geary, however, has other ideas.

In a remarkable 16-over opening spell, he scythes through the Glamorgan batting, and takes all 10 wickets for a miserly 18-runs.

Leicester wins the game by 16-runs in one of the most stunning turnarounds in First Class cricket.

PM Chatterjee 10-20
If you haven’t heard of George Geary, it is even less likely that you have come across the name of Premangshu Chatterjee.

Chatterjee was a left arm medium pace bowler who played for Bengal in India’s Ranji Trophy in the 1940s and 50s. Despite his lack of genuine pace, he had the uncanny ability to swing the ball on any surface.

His contemporary Sujit Mukherjee, once described facing him: “The ball was by no means new when I went in, but I found it curving and dipping as if with a life of its own. Premangshu bowled round the wicket and barely at medium pace, but was apparently able to swing the ball all day on any ground in Calcutta … three times I looked for the ball everywhere, and three times my bat was nowhere near the ball as it swung in, pitched and whisked away … The fourth ball was of fuller length, way outside the off-stump, and I put my left leg right across and prepared to push it firmly away into the covers. I am sure I went through all the motions correctly, but again missed the ball – which, this time, did not miss my leg-stump.”

Chatterjee finished his First Class career having taken 134 wickets at 17.75 apiece. But his crowning glory came in a Ranji Trophy match against Assam played at Jorhat in 1957.

With a formidable batting line up led by one of India’s greatest opening batsmen Pankaj Roy, Bengal bat through almost two full days of the four day match to score 505.

Premangshu Chatterjee then comes in to bowl his left armed medium pace, and immediately starts swinging the ball prodigiously.

In a remarkable 19-over spell, Chatterjee gets the opener Guha Roy caught in the slips with an outswinger he is unable to take the bat away from, and then runs through the rest of the side with in swinging deliveries that are virtually unplayable. The Assam innings folds up for a paltry 54, with Chatterjee taking all ten wickets.

Assam follows on and makes 245, but Bengal wins the match by an innings and 206 runs.

Premangshu Chatterjee’s 10-20 remains the best bowling figures ever achieved in First Class cricket outside The United Kingdom, and the third best figures of all time.

Albert Ernest Vogler 10-26
Bert Vogler was a South African leg break bowler who had a mean googly. Much to the dismay of contemporary batsmen, he also combined the speed of Anil Kumble and the flight and turn of Shane Warne in the same delivery. Just to confuse the batsmen further, he was also a good fast medium bowler who often opened the bowling.

In the first decade of the 20th century, he was reputed to be the most difficult bowler in the world to bat against and was named Wisden Cricketer of the year in 1908.

Vogler played 15 Tests for South Africa, taking 64 wickets at 22.73 apiece. His First Class figures were even more impressive with 393 wickets bought at just over 18 runs each. He was also an accomplished middle order batsman in both formats of the game.

Bert (or Ernie) Vogler, will however remain immortal for a Currie Cup match that was played in December 1906 between Eastern Provinces and Griqualand at Johannesburg.

Eastern Provinces scores a massive 403 with Bert Vogler contributing 79. Vogler opens the bowling with his fast medium, picks up two wickets and soon switches to leg breaks and takes four more. He ends up with figures of 6-12 and Griqualand is all out for 51.

Griqualand follows on and this time, Vogler changes his tactics. He opens the bowling, and in tactics that would be used by the likes of MS Dhoni a hundred years later, he starts with his leg breaks.

The effect is simply devastating.

Vogler runs through the Griqualand batting on his own this time. When the opposition is dismissed for a second time that day at the identical score of 51, Bert Vogler’s figures read 12-2-26-10.

A hundred years later, this remains the best bowling figures ever achieved in the game in the Southern Hemisphere.

Albert Moss 10-28
Cricket was a bowler’s game in the nineteenth century. A law change in 1884 outlawed any covering of the pitch once play was under way, which meant conditions could change drastically during a match, usually in the bowler’s favour. A wet pitch that was drying out would produce uneven bounce and still have enough moisture for the ball to move off the seam.

Born in the English town of Coalville, Leicestershire, in 1863, Albert Moss was the second of six children to Edward and Ann Moss. He immigrated to New Zealand in 1889, a decision that would transform the record books.

It is December 1889 at Christchurch, and Canterbury are playing Wellington. Albert Moss has just come up the ranks thanks to his club performances and is making his debut for Canterbury in a First Class match.

Canterbury scores 138 on a difficult pitch and rain ends the day early. The next morning Wellington comes in to face Moss on a wicket that is tailor made for his style of fast bowling which depended on movement off the pitch.

Moss is in his elements and in a performance never before or after seen in New Zealand, he runs through the entire Wellington line up taking 10 wickets for 28 runs in his 19.3 overs. Wellington is dismissed for 71. Moss then takes 3 wickets in the second innings and Canterbury wins the match by 33 runs.

Despite the talent, Moss was to go on to play only 4 First Class matches in total. He was tried and convicted for trying to murder his new wife with an axe, but on grounds of insanity, jailed for five years then deported to Rio de Janeiro. There he was to recover his mental strength, join the Army and have a successful career. He was also to marry his childhood English sweetheart and wife for a second time when Mary moved to Rio after she learnt he had recovered.

But Albert Moss was never to play cricket again.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-01-29T11:17:02+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks so much Ants. This kind of appreciation makes my day. My Twitter handle is @hingdoi and I shall have my website up soon. I can be contacted on email at anindya@thecricketwriter.com

2017-01-29T01:22:35+00:00

Ants32

Roar Rookie


Thanks Anindya. It was a shot in the dark. I should've realised that Pakistani surnames are limited because they are more like clan titles. :/ Thanks for taking to time to research my question, on top of the obvious effort you put in researching your articles. I wonder if I can "subscribe" or "follow" you somehow. I enjoy your articles that much. :D

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T18:45:11+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Hi Ants - No he is not a relation as far as I can tell. Did a bit of background check and there doesn't seem to be a connection. Akhtar is a pretty common name in that part of the world.

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T16:44:20+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Wow that's superb material you just added there Dav! Thanks so much for going back to do that research! Bolger is sitting up there somewhere smiling I am sure at the sudden revival of interest in his life and achievements! Fascinating stuff cricket history, isn't it? Thanks again.

2017-01-28T14:01:43+00:00

davSA

Guest


All sorted Anindya . Ha ha . .....Thought I might do your article some justice by doing a bit of homework on Bert Vogler. ..He is from a very small place called Swartwater outside of Queenstown . A Rural South African town in the Eastern Cape. For what its worth Tony and Ian Greig as well as Darryl Cullinan are from there . At first what got my attention was that he may have been Afrikaans due to his surname. This would have been very unusual as it was only in the last 30 years or so that they embraced cricket as a sport. Certainly not in the early 20th Century. It was seen as an English sport and to put it mildly the English were not their best friends. The name is in fact German and this made sense as a large swathe of the Eastern Cape farming areas were developed by German emigrants. There is even a district close by called New Germany. Queenstown is in fact close by a town called Stutterheim and Berlin (yes I got that right., which is only an hour or so by car away) . They mostly arrived in the early 1820,s and interestingly enough embraced the SA English culture and not that of the Afrikaners as did their predecessors 200 or so years prior. When he went to Middlesex in England to play county cricket he encountered resistance from the English , not because of his German ancestory but because they already had 2 colonials in the team (thanks Wikipedia) . ...Echoes from the past reverberating into the present.. Cheers

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T06:50:12+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks Ants appreciate it!

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T06:49:00+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks KK.

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T06:48:31+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


My apologies for the typo Zenn, that should obviously have read Leicestershire since I was writing about a Leicester match. Missed that in my pre submission edit.

2017-01-28T04:00:18+00:00

zenn

Guest


My recollection is David Gower was born and educated in Kent before playing for Leicestershire then Hampshire. I do not understand the Lancashire reference,

2017-01-28T01:46:27+00:00

Ants32

Roar Rookie


Hear, here. +1 Like (y) My thoughts, exactly. :D

2017-01-28T01:43:34+00:00

Ants32

Roar Rookie


Naeem Akhtar 10-28 Rawalpindi Blues v Peshawar Peshawar 1995-96 My question is he any relation to Shoaib Akhtar, known as the Rawalpindi express?

2017-01-28T00:53:28+00:00

K K

Roar Rookie


Well written AD

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T00:16:13+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Should have said "really glad" you continue to enjoy them. For some reason the edit function is not working at the moment.

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T00:11:14+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Chinmoy - Truly appreciate the kind words and the encouragement as I go further along this journey. It's readers like you guys here who encourage me to keep seeking deeper in the books for these long forgotten gems. Really galas you continue to enjoy them.

AUTHOR

2017-01-28T00:09:02+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks so much davSA! Have a few beers for me. Always thirsty, that's me ?

2017-01-27T17:12:39+00:00

Chinmoy Jena

Guest


Such a commendable article about the little known yet highly accomplished feats! I knew about Chatterjee but was completely unaware of the other bowlers and their remarkable achievement. Anybody can collect these facts from the Internet but to describe all the feats in detail is the hallmark of an accomplished writer who tries to let us know about the achievements through thorough research. Thanks Anindya for this remarkable write-up.

2017-01-27T14:06:37+00:00

davSA

Guest


Fantastically written article with tons of research. This is the first I've heard of these guys , even Bert Vogler . Now when I have a beer at the local I'm going to amaze all with my newfound knowledge.

AUTHOR

2017-01-27T14:04:40+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Actually even in Test cricket there have been better performances than the one from broad, at least 4 of them, not to even speak of First Class cricket.

2017-01-27T13:53:03+00:00

Stephen Martin

Guest


Pah! Stuart Broad, 8-15.

AUTHOR

2017-01-27T08:27:12+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks Ritesh. Debasis Mohanty was a wonderful bowler in his time. His 10-46 ranks 28th (there are a lot of people bunched together at same figures so ranking would actually be higher at No. 18) in the all time list.

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