- Nigel Haig
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Nigel Haig Personal information Batting style Right-hand bat Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium International information National side English Career statistics Competition Tests First-class Matches 5 513 Runs scored 126 15220 Batting average 14.00 20.90 100s/50s -/- 12/61 Top score 47 131 Balls bowled 1026 78172 Wickets 13 1117 Bowling average 34.46 27.48 5 wickets in innings - 47 10 wickets in match - 2 Best bowling 3/73 7/33 Catches/stumpings 4/- 220/- Source: [1], Nigel Esme Haig (12 December 1887 in London – 27 October 1966 in Eastbourne, Sussex) was a cricketer who played for Middlesex and England.
Tall, stringy and deceptively frail in appearance, Haig played regularly from 1912 to 1934 as an amateur batsman who could open the innings or bat further down the order and as a tireless swing bowler somewhat above medium pace. His all-round usefulness is shown by the fact that he made 1,000 runs in a season six times and took 100 wickets five times. He did the all-rounder's double of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets in a season three times, in 1921, 1927 and 1929. He was captain of Middlesex for six seasons from 1929, sharing the job in the last two years with H. J. Enthoven.
Haig's Test match career was undistinguished. He was brought in to the England team, like so many others, for just one match and then discarded in the 1921 series against the all-conquering Australians under Warwick Armstrong. Eight years later, in 1929-30, he was a member of Freddie Calthorpe's team that played the first four Tests in the West Indies.
Haig was a nephew of Lord Harris and an all-round sportsman, good at real tennis, lawn tennis, rackets and golf.
Sporting positions Preceded by
Frank MannMiddlesex County Cricket Captain
1929–1934
(jointly with Tommy Enthoven 1933–4)Succeeded by
Walter RobinsCategories:- England Test cricketers
- English cricketers
- Middlesex cricket captains
- Middlesex cricketers
- 1887 births
- 1966 deaths
- England cricket team selectors
- English international cricketer stubs
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