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Arthur Edward Ochse

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Batting style
  
Right-hand bat

Role
  
Cricket Player

Name
  
Arthur Ochse


National side
  
South African

Bowling style
  
-

Died
  
1918

Arthur edward ochse top 5 facts


Arthur Edward Ochse (11 March 1870 in Graaff-Reinet, Cape Colony, South Africa – 11 April 1918 at Messines Ridge, France), played Test cricket in the first matches played by the South African team in 1888–89.

A middle-order batsman, Ochse, like the rest of the side, made his first-class debut in his country’s very first Test match, which was played against England at Port Elizabeth. At 19 years and 1 day old, he was South Africa’s youngest Test debutant (a record since surpassed) and he retained his place for the second Test played two weeks later. But like so many of his team-mates, his inexperience against such good opposition showed. In four innings against Major Warton’s team, Ochse scored just 16 runs as England ran out comprehensive winners in South Africa’s first two representative matches played on level terms. During the second innings of the second Test, played at Cape Town, Ochse was bowled by England's slow left arm spinner, Johnny Briggs. And by so being, along with seven of his team-mates, all of them bowled, he became one of Briggs' eight victims in a then Test record of eight wickets for 11 runs in an innings (and 15 for 28 in a match). Domestically, he played occasionally for Transvaal, once in 1891 and twice more in 1895. In the match against Kimberley played at Johannesburg in the Currie Cup season of 1890/91, he was unlucky to miss out on a maiden century when, in the second innings, he fell one run short of that respectable milestone. By scoring 45 runs in Transvaal’s first innings and taking 2 wickets for 27 runs in Kimberley’s first innings (2 for 75 in the match), this match proved to be the height of Ochse’s cricketing achievements. Killed on the Western Front during Germany’s 1918 Spring Offensive, his death went unrecorded at the time. Therefore, no obituary appeared within the covers of Wisden for him.

References

Arthur Edward Ochse Wikipedia