Test Cricket Tours - Australia to England 1938
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Tour of England 1938 Captain : Don Bradman |
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19th Australian Test tour 18th
Test-playing tour of England by Australia (March - September 1938) |
While the touring
party’s batsmen had an outstanding season, with Bradman scoring nearly 2500
runs and Brown, Hassett and Badcock
also being prolific scorers, their bowling seemed much more ordinary.
Nevertheless the Australians retained the Ashes because they bowled better on
the one helpful pitch of the series at Headingley,
where O’Reilly scythed through the English batting with ten wickets and
Fleetwood-Smith seven. In the final Test at The Oval England took revenge and
racked up the record total (903 - 7) in first-class cricket in England. O'Reilly
shouldered most of the the load all summer and it
was a mistake that Grimmett was left behind in
Australia. McCormick, built up as a great fast bowler, took only 34 wickets
on the tour. In his opening spell of the tour at Worcester McCormick bowled
eight no-balls in his first over and nine in his second and never really
recovered his confidence. Only at Lord’s was he
menacing. The tourists lost
a Scarborough Festival match, which was the first defeat outside Tests since
1921. As in 1890, the
Test match at Manchester was abandoned without a ball being bowled because of
persistent rain, so it was in effect a four-Test series. The manager Bill
Jeanes, a long-serving administrator who also acted as treasurer, was awarded
the OBE in the June honours list. Most
of his requests to the Australian Board of Control were flatly refused but at
least he gained permission that the players' wives could meet them at the end
of the tour. Earlier the Board had refused Mrs Bradman permission to join her
husband in England after the fifth Test.
Jeanes also gratified the tired players by persuading the
Board to decline an invitation to play four matches in Jamaica on the way
home. |
Other
Australian Tours Previous tour South
Africa 1935-36 Next tour New
Zealand 1945-46
1948 |
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Members of the Test tour party (16) Opening batsmen: Jack Fingleton,
Jack Badcock, Bill Brown. Middle-order batsmen Donald Bradman, Sidney Barnes, Arthur Chipperfield,
Lindsay Hassett, Stan McCabe. Wicket-keepers Ben
Barnett, Charlie Walker Slow bowlers ‘Chuck’ Fleetwood-Smith, Bill O’Reilly, Frank Ward, Ted White. Fast bowlers Ernie McCormick, Mervyn Waite. Comments from
Barry Valentine’s “Cricket’s Dawn That
Died” 1991 pages 236-7. |
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State representation Sheffield
Shield teams N - New South Wales (6) Q - Queensland
(1) S - South Australia (5) V - Victoria
(4) Average age of team at time of first Test match (10 June 1938) : 28
yrs 3 months |
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Test Appearances made before the tour |
McCabe 35, Bradman 33,
O'Reilly 22, Fingleton 14, Chipperfield 13,
Brown 12, McCormick 9, Fleetwood-Smith 6, Badcock 3, Ward 3,
Barnes 0, Barnett 0, Hassett 0, White 0,
Waite 0, Walker 0. |
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Tour Officials |
W
H Jeanes, secretary of the Australian Cricket Board of Control, was appointed
manager on 22 September 1937. Dr Roly Pope again
accompanied the touring side as a general assistant, the last of his tours to
England. The Board appointed Dr Isaac Jones of London as medical
advisor who could arrange hospital treatment for injured players. |
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Selectors |
Don Bradman (South Australia), E A ‘Chappie’ Dwyer (New South Wales), W J Johnston (Victoria). |
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Selection |
Not available: None known. Tour Party Announced
: 27 January 1938. Not selected : Don
Tallon. His non-selection for
the touring party surprised commentators. He was Bradman's preference but the
other two selectors considered that previous experience in English
conditions was important and out-voted Bradman. All three
agreed that Oldfield was past his best. Tallon's omission was overshadowed by
the row over Clarrie Grimmett, who had a superb
record in South Africa in 1935-36 and had topped the 1938-39 Sheffield Shield
averages, showing he had lost none of his skills. But Bradman lobbied for Frank Ward, partly
because Grimmett was a liability in the field. Another not picked was batsman Ross
Gregory, though there is a question over whether he was available. Jack Badcock's place was in doubt and
he needed a medical confirmation in February, otherwise Keith Rigg of Victoria would have toured. |
Time between selection and departure from Australia 53 days (27 January - 21 March) |
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Travel Fremantle T Southampton ‘Orontes’ |
On 25 February 1938 the team
went from Melbourne to Tasmania. After two matches in Tasmania and one in
Western Australia the team sailed from Fremantle on 21 March on the 'Orontes' via Colombo (30 March), Aden
(5 April) and Suez (9 April). The Australians would not play at the Gezira
Club, Cairo. Sailing on via Naples, Villefranche and Gibraltar, the ship berthed at
Southampton at 1 pm on 20 April. The team then went by train to Waterloo
Station. Next day there was a practice
session at Lord's Ground and a presentation at Australia House but the first
match did not take place for another ten days. The team’s headquarters were
the Victoria Hotel, near Trafalgar Square. |
Time spent in England 156 days (20 April - 24 September) |
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On-tour selection panel |
Don Bradman (captain), Stan McCabe (vice-captain), Ben
Barnett. |
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Reinforcements |
Sidney Barnes fractured his wrist as he fell when exercising on
the sea voyage; he kept his injury secret until the tourists had passed Gibraltar, for fear
of being sent home. He was unable to play until
the end of June, after the second Test.
On 23 April manager Jeanes asked the Australian Board for an
additional batsman as replacement for Barnes (which would have been Gregory, Rigg or Lee). This was refused because Barnes was not regarded
as a key member of the Test side. (Bill O’Reilly wrote the opposite in the Sydney Morning Herald 5 February 1948,
that the Board wanted to replace Barnes with another player but the
‘executive’ of Bradman, McCabe and Jeanes stuck with Barnes). Barnes was saved from being sent home by a clause the Australian
Board had inserted that under no circumstances could air transport be
used. He subsequently played from
mid-tour and scored 1000 runs. The deputy 'keeper Charlie Walker broke a finger and was out for
six weeks. Barnes deputised for Ben Barnett in two county matches. Arthur Chipperfield entered a Dundee
nursing home to recover from appendicitis and did not play again on the
tour. Don Bradman fractured his ankle
in the Oval Test and saw out the rest of the tour recuperating at the home of
Walter Robins. |
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Fixtures/Results Mr Harry Mallett, Australia’s
representative at the ICC in England, prepared the draft programme for the
tour |
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† not first-class Time
spent in England before First Test: 50 days (20 April - 10 June) *
In the Lord’s Test, cameras broadcast a Test match for the first
time. |
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Test appearances on tour |
4 - Badcock, Barnett,
Bradman, Brown, Fingleton, Fleetwood-Smith, Hassett, McCabe, O'Reilly 3 - McCormick 2 - Waite 1 - Barnes, Chipperfield,
Ward. 0 - Walker, White. |
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Highlights |
• Bradman said of Stan
McCabe's innings at Trent Bridge (232) ‘You will never see the like again.’ • Following-on, Brown
(133) and Bradman (144*) stopped England in their tracks and made the Trent
Bridge game safe. • Bill Brown bettered
this innings with 204 not out at Lord’s, becoming the fourth Australian to
carry his bat through an innings in England. • On a wearing pitch at Headingley Bill O’Reilly had figures of 5-66 and 5-56,
while Fleetwood-Smith had 3-73 and 4-34. |
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Tour Summary |
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Return to Australia Tilbury T Adelaide ‘Orontes’ |
Nine players (O'Reilly, Fleetwood-Smith, Chipperfield,
Fingleton, Walker, Ward, Hassett,
Barnett, Waite) left on Saturday 24 September. They
sailed out of Tilbury on the 'Orontes' On the following Tuesday 27 September, manager Bill Jeanes and
vice-captain McCabe and their wives left Victoria Station, London, on the
boat train to catch the 'Orontes'
at Naples. On the Thursday Bradman and
his wife left Victoria for Toulon where they would catch the ship. The team arrived back in Fremantle on 25 October,
and Adelaide on 31 October. |
Time away from Australia 218 days (21 March to 25 October) |
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Finances |
The Australian Board of Control received £36 000 as their share
of the tour profits |
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Written accounts of the tour |
“Test Cricket Souvenir 1938” (1938)
from The Age and The Leader (David Syme
& Co) “Australian Cricket Tour 1938 – 19th Visit to England” (1938) edited by A.W. Simpson “Cricket’s Dawn that Died” (1991)
by Barry Valentine (Breedon Books, Derby) Valentine’s is the
only full tour book. He explains that
other sources included Neville Cardus’s daily press
reports, which were included in “The
Essential Neville Cardus”, and Jack Fingleton’s “Cricket
Crisis” |
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Postscript |
It was the last
exchange between Australia and England made before the Second World War
because the proposed MCC visit in 1940-41 could not take place. The
Australian Cricket Board of Control also abandoned their plans to tour New
Zealand towards the end of the 1939-40 season. Valentine’s
judgement on 1938 was “The fact that a side with so little display of
individual brilliance could retain the Ashes against a rising England side …
was a tribute to Bradman’s inspiring and disciplined leadership” (Cricket’s Dawn That Died, 1991) |
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