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[6] [7] In March 1987, Gavaskar became the first player to cross the 10,000 run mark in Tests during a match against Pakistan. [8] As of January 2025, fifteen players—from seven teams that are Full Members of the International Cricket Council (ICC)—have scored 10,000 runs in Tests.
In the 1965–66 Ashes series he made 290 runs (48.33) and hit his fair share of boundaries, but a missed stumping off Peter Burge in the Second Test cost England a chance of regaining the urn. [6] The cricket writer Colin Bateman commented, "Parks was a gifted batsman and a most effective wicketkeeper".
The Series 7 is a three-hour, forty-five-minute exam. [1] It is held in one four-hour session. There are 125 questions on the test. Candidates have to score at least 72% to pass. The SIE Exam and the Series 7 Exam are co-requisite exams. [9] Average study time is between 80 and 150 hours depending on current financial knowledge. [10]
Born in Mitcham, Surrey, Strudwick took to wicket-keeping, apparently on the advice of a local lady, at the age of ten.He first played for Surrey in a few games in 1902, but during his first full season the following year dismissed a record 91 batsmen (71 catches and 20 stumpings) – a feat made more remarkable by the decline of Surrey's top fast bowlers Tom Richardson and William Lockwood ...
This is a list in alphabetical order of cricketers who have played for Gloucestershire County Cricket Club in top-class matches since the club was founded in 1870. . Gloucestershire has always had first-clas
Phillips played cricket as a wicketkeeper at high school, but concentrated on batting once he started grade cricket with Sturt district cricket club. [citation needed] He would occasionally keep wicket and was a reserve wicketkeeper with Australian Under-19 team. However his club, Sturt, had the South Australian state keeper, Russell Vincent ...
This is a list in alphabetical order of cricketers who have played for Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club in top-class matches since the club was founded in 1841. Like the Nottinghamshire county teams formed by earlier organisations, essentially the old Nottingham Cricket Club, the county club has always held first-class status. [1]
John Henry Bickford Waite (19 January 1930 – 22 June 2011) [1] was a South African cricketer who played in fifty Tests from 1951 to 1965.. He was born in Johannesburg, Transvaal, and educated at Hilton College and Rhodes University. [2]