Bill Whitty

Bill Whitty

Cricketer Infobox



nationality = Australian
country = Australia
country abbrev = AUS
name = Bill Whitty
picture = BillWhitty.jpg
batting style = Right-handed batsman
bowling style = Left-arm fast-medium
Group1 = show
G1 title = Career
Heading1 = Tests
H1 matches = 14
H1 runs = 161
H1 bat avg = 13.41
H1 100s/50s = 0/0
H1 top score = 39*
G1 oversORballs = Balls
H1 amountbowled = 3357
H1 wickets = 65
H1 bowl avg = 21.12
H1 5s = 3
H1 10s = 0
H1 best bowling = 6/17
H1 catches/stumpings = 4/0
Heading2 = First-class
H2 matches= 119
H2 runs = 1465
H2 bat avg = 11.53
H2 100s/50s = 0/1
H2 top score = 81
H2 amountbowled = 24948
H2 wickets = 491
H2 bowl avg = 23.40
H2 5s = 26
H2 10s = 4
H2 best bowling = 8/27
H2 catches/stumpings = 35/0
Group2 = hide
debut-last cat = Test
debut date = 27 May
debut year = 1909
last date = 19 August
last year = 1912
date = 23 January
year = 2006
source = [http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/australia/content/player/8222.html Cricinfo.com]

William James (Bill) Whitty (August 15, 1886 in Sydney – January 30, 1974 in Tantanoola, South Australia) was an Australian Test cricketer who played 14 Tests from 1909 to 1912.

Early career

Born in Sydney, Whitty had only played junior cricket before he was noticed by Test batsman Victor Trumper, who recommended him for coaching and gave him the opportunity to bowl to the New South Wales state team. In 1907, at the age of 21, Whitty made his first-class debut for New South Wales against Queensland at the Sydney Cricket Ground, taking 3 wickets.ref|debut This was the only first-class match Whitty played for his home state, as he was recruited to Adelaide by Clem Hill to play for South Australia in 1908. Whitty played 5 first-class games in the 1908–09 Australian season, including one match for a "Rest of Australia" team against the Australian XI, where he took 3 wickets.ref|restofaustralia Over the entire season, Whitty took 11 wickets with a strike rate of 96.3,ref|190809stats which was enough to earn him selection into the Australian team to tour England in 1909.

Test career

Whitty played in the first Test of the series, recording figures of 0/43 and 0/18 as England posted a dominant 10 wicket victory.ref|1909ashes_test1 Whitty was replaced for the second Test, which Australia won, along with the third, in retaining the Ashes. Despite his struggle to hold on to his Test position, Whitty took 77 wickets on the tour, at the impressive average of 20.42. On his return home to Australia, he continued to play for South Australia in 1909–10, helping them to win the Sheffield Shield for the second time in their history. In the final match of the season against New South Wales, Whitty took 5/43 as his former team was dismissed for just 92 in their first innings.ref|sthaus_v_nsw_190910

Whitty's six-foot tall frame allowed him to swing the new ball considerably, and he also bowled reasonably quick left-arm orthodox deliveries with the older ball. He was seen as the ideal partner for fast bowler Tibby Cotter, and the pair opened the bowling at home against South Africa in 1910–11. This series has been described as Whitty's "greatest Test success",ref|greatest_Test_success as he played all 5 Tests to take 37 wickets at the outstanding average of 17.08. Whitty took 8 wickets in the first Test, followed by 3 in the first innings of the second Test in Melbourne. In the second innings, with South Africa requiring 170 runs for victory, Whitty produced one of the "most sensational" bowling spells by an Australian in the period,ref|most_sensational taking 6/17 in 16 overs as South Africa were bowled out for 80.ref|aus_v_rsa_191011test2 Whitty's good form continued throughout the series, including a further 8 wickets in the third Test, and 5/79 for South Australia against the tourists.ref|sthaus_v_rsa In the fourth Test, Whitty produced his best Test performance with the bat, making 39 not out in an 82-run partnership with Vernon Ransford, which remained a record for the 10th wicket in Tests between the two nations until it was broken by Mike Hussey and Glenn McGrath in 2005–06.ref|abcref|broken

Whitty was again selected in the Australian team for the first two Tests against England during their 1911–12 tour of Australia, but managed just 3 wickets at 61.67, and was left out of the team for the remainder of the five-Test series. Despite this performance, and partly due to a "boardroom brawl" which saw Australia leave behind many of its best players, Whitty was selected to tour England for the 1912 Triangular Test series, which also featured South Africa. The squad has often been described as "one of the worst teams Australia ever sent overseas",ref|worst_team 10 of the 15 players having never travelled to England before. Whitty took 25 wickets in the 6 Test matches, including 7 wickets against England at The Oval,ref|v_eng_oval and 5/55 against South Africa at Old Trafford.ref|v_rsa_oldtrafford He finished the tour with 109 wickets at 18.08, second only in averages to Charles Macartney.

South Australia took their 3rd Sheffield Shield in 1912–13, with Whitty taking figures of 5/65 in Melbourne and 5/92 (and a run out) in Sydney.ref|5for65ref|5for92 He was selected in the Australian team scheduled to tour South Africa in 1914–15, but the tour was cancelled due to World War I, effectively ending Whitty's Test career.

During his Test career, Whitty also toured New Zealand, the United States, Canada and Bermuda. In the United States, at the end of the 1912 England tour, Australia incredibly lost to a Philadelphian team, with Whitty being one of only two players to score over 20 in Australia's first innings, before being bowled on the fourth delivery of the final over, with Australia needing 3 runs for victory.ref|phili

After World War I

Whitty continued to play domestically after the War ended, and was still good enough to regularly take 5-wicket hauls in first-class cricket up to the age of 38. Whitty played his final first-class game as New South Wales wrapped up the 1925–26 Sheffield Shield. A feature of Whitty's first-class career was his remarkable success bowling to his hero Trumper, with Whitty dismissing him seven times in ten innings - Trumper remaining not out in the other three.

At lower levels, Whitty played for East Torrens in Adelaide from 1908–15, consistently taking over 50 wickets a season, and leading district bowling averages for four consecutive years from 1911. He played for Glenelg from 1920–27, and continued playing in the Mount Gambier region until 1937. He was also an enthusiastic golfer, and at one stage played off scratch. Whitty lived on his property at Tantanoola from 1938, where he died aged 87, the longest surviving of Australia's pre-WWI Test cricketers.

Footnotes


# cite web | title=New South Wales v Queensland at Sydney Cricket Ground, 26–30 Dec 1907 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1900S/1907-08/AUS_LOCAL/OTHERFC/NSW_QLD_26-30DEC1907.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=Australian XI v Rest of Australia at Melbourne, 12–15 Feb 1909 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1900S/1908-09/AUS_LOCAL/OTHERFC/AUS-XI_R-O-AUS_12-15FEB1909.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=Australian First-Class Season 1908/09: Bowling Averages | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1900S/1908-09/AUS_LOCAL/STATS/FC_1908-09_BOWL.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=1st TEST: England v Australia at Birmingham, 27–29 May 1909 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/1900S/1909/AUS_IN_ENG/AUS_ENG_T1_27-29MAY1909.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=New South Wales v South Australia at Sydney Cricket Ground, 8–11 Jan 1910 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1900S/1909-10/AUS_LOCAL/SS/NSW_SOA_SS_08-11JAN1910.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# [http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/australia/content/player/8222.html [1] ]
# "200 Years of Australian Cricket" 1997, p. 153
# cite web | title=2nd TEST: Australia v South Africa at Melbourne Cricket Ground, 31 Dec 1910 – 4 Jan 1911 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/1910S/1910-11/RSA_IN_AUS/RSA_AUS_T2_31DEC1910-04JAN1911.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=South Australia v South Africans at Adelaide Oval, 10–13 Mar 1911 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/1910S/1910-11/RSA_IN_AUS/RSA_SOA_10-13MAR1911.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite book | year=2005 | title=The ABC Cricket Magazine 2005-06 | editor= Jim Maxwell| others=Statistics compiled by Ric Finlay & David Fitzgerald | pages=64 | publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|location=Sydney, Australia
# cite web | author=Buckle, Greg| year=2005| title=Hussey rescues Aussies | work=Fox Sports | url=http://foxsports.news.com.au/story/0,8659,17670443-23212,00.html | accessdate=January 22 | accessyear=2006
# Pollard 1982, p. 381
# cite web | title=3rd TEST: England v Australia at The Oval, 19–22 Aug 1912 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1910S/1912/TRI-TEST/ENG_AUS_T3_19-22AUG1912.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=1st TEST:Australia v South Africa at Manchester, 27–28 May 1912 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1910S/1912/TRI-TEST/AUS_RSA_T1_27-28MAY1912.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=Victoria v South Australia at Melbourne Cricket Ground, 1–3 Jan 1913 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1910S/1912-13/AUS_LOCAL/SS/VIC_SOA_SS_01-03JAN1913.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# cite web | title=New South Wales v South Australia at Sydney Cricket Ground, 10–14 Jan 1913 | work=Cricinfo | url=http://aus.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1910S/1912-13/AUS_LOCAL/SS/NSW_SOA_SS_10-14JAN1913.html | accessdate=January 23 | accessyear=2006
# "200 Seasons of Australian Cricket" 1997, p. 161

References

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