Joe Darling

Joe Darling

Infobox cricketer biography
playername = Joe Darling
female =


country = Australia
fullname = Joseph Darling
nickname = Paddy
living =
partialdates =
dayofbirth = 21
monthofbirth = 11
yearofbirth = 1870
placeofbirth = Glen Osmond, South Australia
countryofbirth = Australia
dayofdeath = 2
monthofdeath = 1
yearofdeath = 1946
placeofdeath = Hobart
countryofdeath = Australia
heightft =
heightinch =
heightm = 1.72
batting = Left-hand batsman
bowling = –
role = Batsman
international = true
testdebutdate = 14 December
testdebutyear = 1894
testdebutagainst = England
testc

lasttestdate = 14 August
lasttestyear = 1905
lasttestagainst = England
club1 = South Australia
year1 = 1893/94–1907/08
deliveries = balls
columns = 2
column1 = Tests
matches1 = 34
runs1 = 1657
bat avg1 = 28.56
100s/50s1 = 3/8
top score1 = 178
deliveries1 = –
wickets1 = –
bowl avg1 = –
fivefor1 = –
tenfor1 = –
best bowling1 = –
catches/stumpings1 = 27/–
column2 = First-class
matches2 = 202
runs2 = 10635
bat avg2 = 34.52
100s/50s2 = 19/55
top score2 = 210
deliveries2 = 68
wickets2 = 1
bowl avg2 = 55.00
fivefor2 = –
tenfor2 = –
best bowling2 = 1-5
catches/stumpings2 = 148/–
date= 10 February
year = 2008
source = http://www.cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/0/172/172.html CricketArchive

Joseph "Joe" Darling CBE (21 November 1870 – 2 January 1946) was an Australian cricketer who played 34 Test matches as a specialist batsman between 1894 and 1905. As captain, he led Australia in a total of 21 Tests, winning seven and losing four. In Test cricket, he scored 1657 runs at an average of 28.56 per innings, including three centuries. Darling toured England four times with the Australian team—in 1896, 1899, 1902 and 1905; the last three tours as captain. He was captain of the Australian cricket team in England in 1902, widely recognised as one of the best teams in Australian cricket history.

He was a stocky, compact man and a strong driver of the ball, playing most of his cricket as an opening batsman. He was a patient batsman and was known for his solid defence, but he was able to score quickly when required. In Sydney in 1897–98, he scored 160 in 165 minutes, including 30 boundaries to assist his team in defeating the English. He was the first man to score 500 runs in a Test series and was also the first to score three centuries in a series. His captaincy was disciplinarian in nature but his teammates respected his broad cricket knowledge. Even tempered with a strong personality, he was a stickler for fair play on the field. His teammates gave him the nickname "Paddy" due to a supposed resemblance to the Australian boxer, Frank "Paddy" Slavin.

His cricket career was interrupted several times due to his obligations as a farmer, first growing wheat in South Australia, and later as a wool-grower in Tasmania. He was a member of several bodies dedicated to agriculture in Tasmania, including the responsible authority for the Royal Hobart Show. He was a pioneer in activities such as rabbit eradication and pasture improvement. He entered politics in 1921, standing as an independent in the Tasmanian Legislative Council, where he was a forceful speaker. He retained his seat in the Tasmanian Parliament until his death following a gall bladder operation in 1946.

Early life and career

Darling was born on 21 November 1870 in Glen Osmond, South Australia, the sixth son of John Darling, a grain merchant and his wife Isabella, née Ferguson. He was educated at Prince Alfred College, where he took an interest in cricket. At the age of 15, he scored a record 252 runs in the "inter-collegiate" match, the annual fixture against fierce rival St Peter's College.cite web | last = Darling | first = D. K. | year = 1981 | url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A080233b.htm | title = Darling, Joseph (1870 - 1946) | work = Australian Dictionary of Biography - online edition | publisher = Australian National University | accessdate = 2008-01-27] His future Test team mate, Clem Hill, would later beat this record, scoring 360.cite web | last = Daly | first = John A. | year = 1983 | url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A090300b.htm | title = Hill, Clement (Clem) (1877 - 1945) | work = Australian Dictionary of Biography - Online Edition | publisher = Australian National University | accessdate = 2008-01-18] Not long after, he was included in a combined South Australian/Victoria XV that played the Australian XI in 1886. He made only 16 runs, but the manner in which he made them saw senior players hail him as a future champion.Pollard, pp. 322–325.]

His father, disapproving of Darling's fondness for sport, sent him away from his cricket and Australian rules football teams to spend twelve months at Roseworthy Agricultural School. later, Darling worked in a bank for a time and before his father appointed him manager of one of a wheat farm. Working on the farm added size and strength to an already stocky and athletic frame.Robinson, pp. 75–87.] He was selected for the South Australian team at age 19, but his father would not allow him time off the farm to play.

After two years in the bush, Darling returned to Adelaide and cricket. He opened a sports store on Rundle Street, Adelaide and was soon selected to represent South Australia in inter-colonial cricket. He made his first-class cricket debut against New South Wales at the Adelaide Oval; scoring 5 and 32 as South Australia won the match by 237 runs.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/4/4064.html | title = South Australia v New South Wales: Sheffield Shield 1893/94 | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29] The next season, against the touring England team captained by Andrew Stoddart, Darling made 115, his maiden first-class century.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/4/4246.html | title = South Australia v AE Stoddart's XI: AE Stoddart's XI in Australia 1894/95 | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29]

Test career

Consolidation

The First Test of 1894–95 against England, at the Sydney Cricket Ground, saw Darling make his Test debut. In an innings where Australia make 586 runs, including centuries for George Giffen and Syd Gregory, Darling was dismissed for a golden duck, bowled first ball by Tom Richardson.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/4/4253.html | title = Australia v England: AE Stoddart's XI in Australia 1894/95 (1st Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29] He played in all five Tests in the series, scoring 258 runs at an average of 28.66 per innings.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/0/172/t_Batting_by_Season.html | title = Test Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Joe Darling | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29] He was included in the Australian team to tour England in 1896, where he topped the scoring aggregates for the tour with 1555 runs at an average of 29.90, including three centuries.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Events/ENG/Australia_in_England_1896/f_Australians_Batting.html | title = First-class Batting and Fielding for Australians: Australia in England 1896 | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29] "Wisden Cricketers' Almanack" stated that Darling "proved himself perhaps the best of present-day left-handed batsmen" during the tour.cite web | year = 1897 | url = http://content-www.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/154328.html | title = The Australians in England, 1896 | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online edition | publisher = John Wisden & Co. | accessdate = 2008-01-29] England won the series two Tests to one.

Andrew Stoddart brought another team to Australia to contest "The Ashes" in 1897–98. Australia won the series comfortably, four Tests to one.cite web | year = 1899 | url = http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/154329.html | title = England in Australia, 1897-98 | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online edition | publisher = John Wisden & Co.| accessdate = 2008-01-29] Darling started the season poorly, scoring a duck and one against the tourists for South Australia in a match in which team mate Clem Hill scored a double century.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/4/4911.html | title = South Australia v AE Stoddart's XI: AE Stoddart's XI in Australia 1897/98 | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29] Darling went on, however, to dominate the series with the bat. His maiden Test century, 101 in the First Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground after Australia was made to follow-on, was the first made by a left-hander in Tests. It was not enough to prevent England winning by nine wickets.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/4/4915.html | title = Australia v England: AE Stoddart's XI in Australia 1897/98 (1st Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-29]

In the Third Test in his home town of Adelaide, Darling scored 178 runs and Australia won the match by an innings and 13 runs.cite web | title = Australia v England: AE Stoddart's XI in Australia 1897/98 (3rd Test) | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/4/4924.html | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-01-30] He reached his century by hitting Johnny Briggs over the eastern gate and into the nearby park. This is the only time in Ashes Tests where a player has reached 100 with a hit out of the ground. During this innings, he also became the first player to hit a six in a Test in Australia (prior to 1910, a six was awarded only if the ball was hit out of the ground). He later also hit the first six in a Test in England.cite web | author=Lynch, Steven| year=2006| title=The Lahore run-fest, and a flurry of sixes | work=Cricinfo - Ask Steven | url=http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/columns/content/story/234084.html | accessmonthday=January 24 | accessyear=2006] Returning to Sydney for the Fifth and final Test, Darling scored 160 runs from 253 scored in total. He batted for 165 minutes, hitting 30 boundaries as Australia successfully chased 273 in the fourth innings. His first 100 came in 91 minutes; at the time, the fastest Test century scored. By the end of the season, Darling became the first player to score 500 runs in a series and the first player to score three centuries in a series.

Captaincy

Darling was chosen by his team mates as captain for the 1899 Australian team touring England. The team was one of the strongest seen in England to that time, with the cricket reference book "Wisden" stating, "By common consent the [1899 Australians] formed the strongest combination that had come from the Colonies since the great side captained by Mr. W. L. Murdoch in 1882." and that "Darling proved himself one of the very best captains that ever took a team into the field." The Australians lost only three of the 35 matches they played on the tour, winning 16 and another 16 finishing in draws. [Pollard, p. 408.] The only Test to reach a decisive result was the Second Test at Lord's, where Australia won by ten wickets due in part to centuries by Hill and Victor Trumper and a ten wicket haul by fast bowler Ernie Jones.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/5/5218.html | title = England v Australia: Australia in England 1899 (2nd Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-02] Aside from Hill, Darling was seen by "Wisden" as the best batsman among the Australians. "Wisden" claimed, "Up to a certain point the responsibilities of captaincy seemed to tell against Darling, but during the last weeks of the tour he played marvellous cricket."cite web | last = Pardon | first = Sydney
year = 1900 | url = http://content-www.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/151879.html | title = The Australians in England, 1899 | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online archive| publisher = John Wisden & Co. | accessdate = 2008-02-01
] Over the tour, he scored 1941 runs at an average of 41.29, topping both the averages and the aggregate for his team,cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Events/ENG/Australia_in_England_1899/f_Australians_Batting.html | title = First-class Batting and Fielding for Australians: Australia in England 1899 | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-01] and was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year.cite web | year = 1900 | url = http://content-www.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/154797.html | title = Cricketer of the Year - 1900: Joe Darling | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online archive| publisher = John Wisden & Co. | accessdate = 2008-02-02]

Darling's deeds as a cricketer had reconciled his father to his sporting endeavours, but not to his sports store operation. In 1900, his father purchased "Stonehenge", a sheep station covering convert|10000|acre|ha in central Tasmania and ordered Darling to run the property on pain of exclusion from his will. Darling complied with his father's wishes and moved his family to the remote station, convert|34|km|mi along a dirt track from the nearest town, tiny Oatlands. Darling stood out of first-class cricket for nearly two years.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/0/172/First-Class_Matches.html | title = First-Class Matches played by Joe Darling (202) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-08]

It was not until December 1901 that Darling was convinced to return by the Melbourne Cricket Club to captain the Australians against the touring English for the first three Tests only. The English, captained by Archie MacLaren, won the First Test in Sydney convincingly by an innings and 124 runs.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/5/5840.html | title = Australia v England: AC MacLaren's XI in Australia 1901/02 (1st Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-08] The Second Test in Melbourne was played on a rain-affected pitch. MacLaren won the toss and sent Australia in to bat on the "sticky wicket". Within three hours, both teams had been dismissed; Australia holding a lead on the first innings of 51 runs. Realising the danger the pitch held to his leading batsmen, Darling re-ordered the batting line-up and opened the batting himself alongside Hugh Trumble. The pair held out the English for 90 minutes; Darling considered his 32 runs one of his best innings . Nevertheless, Barnes managed to grab five wickets in the final half-hour to leave the Australians 5/48See scoring (cricket) for an explanation of cricket score formats. This score and all others in the article follow the Australian format of wickets fallen followed by runs made.] when stumps was called.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/5/5846.html | title = Australia v England: AC MacLaren's XI in Australia 1901/02 (2nd Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-08] Twenty five wickets fell in the day's play. Importantly, Australia had a 99 run lead and batsmen of the calibre of Hill, Trumper, Reggie Duff and Warwick Armstrong still to bat. The next day, on a perfect pitch, the Australian batsmen established a match-winning lead, eventually winning the Test by 229 runs. In the Third Test in Adelaide, Australia became the first team to score over 300 runs to win the fourth innings of a Test match. Darling, along with Hill and Trumble, led the record making run chase; Darling scored 62 runs.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/5/5849.html | title = Australia v England: AC MacLaren's XI in Australia 1901/02 (3rd Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-08] Hugh Trumble captained the final two Tests as Darling returned to his farm. Australia won both Tests and the series to retain "The Ashes".Perry, pp. 76–91.]

Return to cricket

Darling agreed to once again lead the Australian cricket team in England in 1902. In what was a very cold and wet summer, the Australian team won a close fought series against the strong English team two Tests to one. Given the strength of the opposition, this Australian team is often referred to as one of the best Australian teams ever assembled. The team included players of the calibre of Trumper, Hill, Armstrong, Trumble and Monty Noble; all of whom would be later included in the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame. The team lost only two matches during the tour, with "Wisden" saying, "No travelling team ever strove harder for victory or more completely subordinated all personal considerations to the prime object of winning matches. They formed a splendid all-round combination".cite web | year = 1903 | url = http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/151848.html | title = The Australians in England 1902 | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online archive | publisher = John Wisden & Co. | accessdate = 2008-02-09] The First Test at Edgbaston finished in a draw. Rain saved the Australians after they were dismissed for only 36 in their first innings; Wilfred Rhodes took seven wickets for only 17 runs.Frith, p. 75.] Rain again ruined the Second Test at Lord's when the final two days were washed out.Frith, p. 77.] The Third Test, the first and only Test match played at Bramall Lane, saw Australia win by 143 runs due in part to a century by Hill and Noble taking 5/51. Darling was dismissed twice by Barnes without scoring, the first Test captain to make a "pair". Australia won the Fourth Test at Old Trafford by three runs; Trumble took ten wickets for the match.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/6/6024.html | title = England v Australia: Australia in England 1902 (4th Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate =2008-01-19] The last batsman, Fred Tate, came in with England needing eight runs to secure victory. Darling brought the field in and Trumble prevented Rhodes scoring from the last three balls of his over. This left Tate to face Jack Saunders, who dismissed him with the fourth ball of his over to win the match for Australia. England won the Fifth and final Test at the Oval by one wicket.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/6/6056.html | title = England v Australia: Australia in England 1902 (5th Test) | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate =2008-01-19] Chasing 263, England were 5/48 when Gilbert Jessop scored a century in 75 minutes to help England to victory. [Roebuck, pp. 133–134.]

The star for the Australians was Trumper who scored 2,570 runs, easily beating Darling's own record for a colonial batsman in an English season set in 1899. So important was Trumper to the Australian team that Darling, who had previously checked that all the Australians were on board the carriage to the ground, was later simply to ask "Is Vic aboard?" before giving the driver the go-ahead. Darling himself had a mixed tour with the bat. quote|Darling started the tour in a way that promised great things, but he did not keep up his form and fell a good deal below his standard of 1896 and 1899. His tremendous hitting power, however, was several times of the utmost value, and very likely in a season of hard wickets he would have had as good a record as ever.|Wisden Cricketers' Almanack|

On the return trip to Australia, the touring team stopped to play three Tests against South Africa, the first between the two nations. Australia won the series two Tests to nil, but Darling's own form was poor. In successive innings, Darling made 0, 14, 6, 4 and 1. After the tour, he returned to Stonehenge and took a two year break from first-class cricket. In his absence, Monty Noble captained the Australian team against the touring English in 1903–04.

Final tour and retirement

Before the Australian team to tour England in 1905 was selected, Darling returned to first-class cricket for South Australia. He won selection in the touring squad and was named as captain. A weaker Australian bowling attack saw Darling resort to defensive measures throughout the tour. These measures included directing Armstrong to bowl his leg breaks down the leg side, where Darling had placed up to seven fielders. These measures, unpopular with the English public, saw 19 matches on the tour finish in draws, three more than the 16 matches won by Australia. "Wisden" said, "Leaving aside Duff's long score at the Oval, Darling was the finest batsman on the side in the Test games, playing superb cricket under very trying conditions."cite web | last = Pardon | first = Sydney | year = 1906 | url = http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/155166.html | title = The Australians in England 1905 | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online archive | publisher = John Wisden & Co. | accessdate = 2008-02-09] At Old Trafford in the Fourth Test, he made 73 out of 105 in less than ninety minutes. His innings included thirteen boundaries, all but one of them being drives. Despite his efforts, England still won the Test by an innings and 80 runs.cite web | year = 1906 | url = http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/150183.html | title = Fourth Test match: England v Australia 1905 | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack - online archive | publisher = John Wisden & Co. | accessdate = 2008-02-09]

After losing six tosses against his English opposite number Stanley Jackson during the summer, Darling decided on a different approach before the Scarborough Festival match late in the tour. At the toss, he approached Jackson stripped to the waist and suggested, in fun, a wrestle for choice of innings.

The 1905 tour was Darling's last Test cricket foray, as he claimed that continuing to tour was unfair to his wife. He retired from first-class cricket during the 1907–08 season. In his first-class career, Darling made 10635 runs, including 19 centuries at an average of 34.52.cite web | url = http://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/0/172/172.html | title = Joe Darling | publisher = CricketArchive | accessdate = 2008-02-09] In club cricket in Adelaide, Joe scored heavily. He averaged 144 for East Torrens Cricket Club in 1899–1900, 98.66 for Adelaide Cricket Club in 1896–97 and 86.20 for Sturt Cricket Club in 1904–05. He continued to make runs in Tasmanian club cricket right through middle age. In 1921, he made 100 runs in an hour, including 29 in one eight-ball over playing for Claremont Cricket Club. At age 52, he made 133 not out during a successful run chase where his team, Break-o'-Day, made 6/219 in 90 minutes.

He was contemptuous of the newly formed Australian Board of Control for International Cricket Matches (now known as Cricket Australia), who he saw as attempting to remove control of international cricket tours from the players. He would often refer to cricket administrators as “Dead Heads”. He later represented the Tasmanian Cricket Association as a delegate to the Board of Control.cite news | first = Peter | last = Newlinds | title = Cricket legend who called Tasmania home | url = http://www.abc.net.au/tasmania/stories/s885698.htm | publisher = Australian Broadcasting Corporation | date = 2003-06-23 | accessdate = 2008-02-10]

Outside cricket

Following his retirement from big cricket, Darling returned to his Tasmanian sheep station, where he was involved in a range of agricultural activities. He pioneered measures to eradicate rabbits, an introduced pest then in plague proportions throughout Australia. He was an active member of organisations such as the Tasmanian Stock Holders and Orchardists' Association and the Royal Agricultural Society of Tasmania, the organising body of the Royal Hobart Show. Darling imported South Australian merino rams to improve his flock, and his wool topped the Hobart sales on several occasions. He also introduced subterranean clover to Tasmania.

In 1919, Darling moved from Stonehenge to Claremont House, around which the Hobart suburb of Claremont later formed. He was elected to the Cambridge electorate in the Tasmanian Legislative Council in 1921 as an independent. He retained his position in the Parliament until his death in 1946.cite web | url = http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/history/tasparl/darlingj370.htm | title = The Parliament of Tasmania from 1856: Joseph Darling | publisher = Parliament of Tasmania | accessdate = 2008-02-10] In Parliament, one of his colleagues was Charles Eady, his teammate from the 1896 tour of England. Darling was recognised by his colleagues as a forceful, no-nonsense speaker. In the 1930s, he won an exemption from land tax for small farmers, and toward the end of his parliamentary career, a Royal Commission was appointed to investigate charges Darling had made regarding maladministration. The findings of the commission, released after his death, saw a government Minister and two others found guilty of accepting bribes. Darling was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1938 in recognition of his work as a member of the Legislative Assembly.cite web | url = http://www.itsanhonour.gov.au/honours/honour_roll/search.cfm?aus_award_id=1064615&search_type=quick&showInd=true | title = Search Australian Honours: Joseph Darling | work = It's an Honour: Australia celebrating Australians | publisher = Australian Government | accessdate = 2008-02-10]

Darling married Alice Minna Blanche Francis, a wheat farmer's daughter from Mundoora, South Australia in 1893. Together they raised 15 children: ten sons and five daughters. After surgery for a ruptured gall bladder, Darling died in Hobart on 2 January 1946. He was buried at Cornelian Bay cemetery after a Congregationalist ceremony and was survived by his wife and twelve of his children.

tyle and personality

Darling had a stocky, compact build, standing 5 feet 8 inches (1.72 m) and weighing 12 stone 12 pounds (82 kg). His teammates thought his dark hair, blue eyes and moustache were similar to the boxer, Frank "Paddy" Slavin, and he answered to the nickname "Paddy" during his time in cricket. His time working on his father's farm had developed his strength. During his first game for South Australia, he was challenged to a naked wrestle by the fast bowler and ex-miner Ernie Jones, an informal initiation into the team. To his team mates' surprise, Darling managed to defeat the much larger Jones. The left-handed Darling was a strong driver of the ball who showed the batsman the full face of the bat. When necessary, he was a dour defender of his wicket. His fellow players thought that was sometimes unnecessarily defensive in his approach to batting and that he was at his best when driving hard. His South Australian and Australian team mate George Giffen thought that no Australian's cut shots travelled faster past point.

Darling had a strong personality and an independent outlook. Those who knew him well thought him destined to be a leader in whatever he undertook. He shunned strong drink and tobacco and found it difficult to tolerate overindulgence in alcohol. Normally even-tempered, he did show displeasure at the barracking of the crowd at Lord's at his obstinate defensive effort in the face of an Australian batting collapse. He was a stickler for fair play, but his actions against the English batsman KS Ranjitsinhji would today be seen as gamesmanship. During the bowler's approach and after the bowler had looked at the field, the Australian fielders moved behind Ranjitsinhji's back. This worried the Indian prince when playing his leg glance and eventually saw him left out of the English team.

The journalist Ray Robinson wrote that "of all Australian captains he came closest to being a disciplinarian". Regardless, his team mates continued to select him as captain, trusting in his knowledge and understanding of the game. On a wet day during the 1899 tour, a delay in play saw some of the Australians accept an invitation to the Player's tobacco factory in Nottingam. While away, the weather cleared and play began with Darling leading a team of five Australians and five substitutes onto the field. Darling later called a team meeting that saw the culprits fined ₤5 for breaching team rules. His approach to the hard-drinking Ernie Jones was similarly tough. To ensure that the fast bowler would not drink to excess, he selected Jones as twelfth man in a match against an English county team. When Jones refused to play, a team meeting saw him facing expulsion from the team. Darling spoke to him privately and made it clear that without an apology to his team mates and a promise to curb his drinking, he would be on the next boat bound for Australia. The firm and prompt action had a lasting effect on team discipline during his time as Australian captain. "Wisden" noted that "as a captain he inspired his men to reveal their best form."cite web | year =
url = http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/155700.html | title = Obituary: Joseph Darling | work = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack | publisher = John Wisden & Co | accessdate = 2008-02-10
] As a captain he was a reformer, suggesting rule changes that included making six runs the reward for clearing the boundary rather than the entire ground, and using of sawdust to fill holes in bowler's run-ups.

Test match performance

Notes

References

*cite book |last=Frith|first=David|authorlink=David Frith |title=Australia versus England: An illustrated history of every Test match since 1877 |year=2007|edition=12th ed.|publisher=Viking |location=Melbourne |isbn=978 0 670 07073 2
*cite book |last=Robinson |first=Ray |coauthors=Haigh, Gideon |title=On top down under: Australia's cricket captains (revised edition) |year=1996 |publisher=Wakefield |location=Adelaide |isbn=1 86254 387 9
*cite book |last=Perry|first=Roland|authorlink=Roland Perry |title=Captain Australia: A History of the Celebrated Captains of Australian Test Cricket |year=2000 |publisher=Random House |location=Sydney |isbn=1 74051 093 3
*cite book |last=Pollard |first=Jack |authorlink=Jack Pollard |title=Australian Cricket: The game and the players |year=1988 |publisher=Angus & Robertson |location=Sydney |isbn=0 207 15269 1
*cite book |last=Roebuck|first=Peter|title=Great Innings|authorlink=Peter Roebuck |year=1990 |publisher=Pan|location=Sydney|isbn=0 7329 0359 9

External links

* [http://content.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/4897.html Cricinfo Article on Joe Darling]

Persondata
NAME=Darling, Joseph
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Joe
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Cricketer
DATE OF BIRTH=21 November 1870
PLACE OF BIRTH=Glen Osmond, Adelaide, South Australia
DATE OF DEATH=2 January 1946
PLACE OF DEATH=Hobart, Tasmania


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