For ever after, opponents know that such-and-such played ‘big cricket’ and will expect him to perform accordingly. Even when his achievements lie elsewhere, biographers and obituarists will sagely note his appearances, however limited, and readers will infer that the subject has a special talent for the game.
Nine thousand cricketers have played in just one first-class match, but for some their one appearance was more memorable than for others, for good reasons or otherwise. In 1924, Fred Hyland spent less than ten minutes on the field of play before rain washed out the game. Poor Josiah Coulthurst didn’t even step onto the playing area in a damp Lancashire contest in 1919. Emile McMaster’s only match, in South Africa in 1889, was later awarded Test match status. Bob Richards, playing for Essex at Leyton in 1970, didn’t learn till afterwards that his solitary appearance was a first-class game. Nobody can now be sure who was the Wilkinson who played a match at Oxford in 1939.
Some one-match wonders have achieved much in their brief days in front of the cricket-watching public, centuries even and ‘eight-fors’: others have gone on to exceptional achievements in fields sporting, political and military. Keith Walmsley reports on the ‘struts’ and ‘frets’ of some players who appeared just once on the first-class ‘stage’ and then were ‘heard no more’.
Keith Walmsley is a retired chartered town planner, resident for nearly 40 years in Reading, whose interest in the more esoteric facts and figures of cricket began long before the sad discovery that, as a player, he would never be worth a place in any XI. Despite this, he played for almost twenty years in the Reading Midweek League, mainly because he owned his team’s only pair of wicketkeeping gloves. He has been a member of the ACS since the mid-1970s, and Statistical Officer of The Cricket Society, in succession to the late Derek Lodge, since 1996. His previous publications have included three editions of Mosts Without in Test Cricket and the ACS Famous Cricketers volume on long-time hero Clem Hill.