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Albert Knight

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Full name
  
Albert Ernest Knight

Batting style
  
Right-handed


National side
  
England

Name
  
Albert Knight

Born
  
8 October 1872 (
1872-10-08
)
Leicester, England

Died
  
25 April 1946(1946-04-25) (aged 73) Edmonton, Middlesex, England

Test debut (cap 141)
  
1 January 1904 v Australia

Last Test
  
8 March 1904 v Australia

Anderson Chapel 113th Church Anniversary Rev. Albert Knight Guest Minister


Albert Ernest Knight (8 October 1872 in Leicester – 25 April 1946 in Edmonton, Middlesex) was an English professional cricket player. He was educated at Wyggeston Grammar School for Boys.

From 1895 until 1912 he played for Leicestershire as a somewhat dour batsman in a generally weak team. He represented England in three matches of the 1903-04 Ashes series against Australia, with a highest score of 70 not out at Sydney.

A. A. Thomson saw his innings of 147 against Yorkshire at Sheffield when Leicestershire were following-on, made in his final season of 1912. He wrote: "His batting was unencumbered by frills, but strong and solid, attuned to the difficulties of the situation. Albert was a man of admirable character and a Methodist local preacher."

His most important contribution to the game was a book, The Complete Cricketer, published in 1906. Sir Derek Birley, in his A Social History of English Cricket, described it as "a masterpiece of its kind, stuffed full of learned observations in weighty prose". Wisden called it "grandiose in style, containing much startling metaphor".

After retirement, Knight was cricket coach at Highgate School.

References

Albert Knight Wikipedia


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