Full name Arthur Owen Jones Name Arthur Jones National side England | Batting style Right-handed Role Cricket Player | |
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Born 16 August 1872 ( 1872-08-16 ) Shelton, Nottinghamshire, England Test debut (cap 128) 14 August 1899 v Australia Last Test 16 June 1909 v Australia Died December 21, 1914, Dunstable, United Kingdom | ||
Bowling style Right arm leg break |
Arthur Owen Jones (16 August 1872 – 21 December 1914), was a cricketer, noted as an all-rounder, and a rugby union player, he played full back or three quarter.
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He was born in Shelton, Nottinghamshire, and educated at Bedford Modern School and Jesus College, Cambridge.
Cricket career
He played for Cambridge University, Nottinghamshire, London County and England. Jones was named Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1900.
He was the first substitute to keep wicket in a Test match, when he did so against Australia at The Oval in 1905.
Jones was a brilliant, sometimes impetuous, opening batsman and a leg-break and googly bowler. In 1903 he made what was then the highest-ever score by a Nottinghamshire batsman, scoring an unbeaten 296 against Gloucestershire at Trent Bridge, Nottingham. Jones played 12 Test matches for England, but lost the two games he captained. He led Nottinghamshire to the County Championship in 1907 and was captain of the 1907/08 England tour to Australia. But he only appeared in two matches because of illness. He remained captain of Nottinghamshire until a few months before his death from tuberculosis, in Dunstable, Bedfordshire.
Rugby career
Jones made 15 appearances for Bedford between 1889 and 1895 before moving to Leicester Tigers in 1895. He was appointed captain between 1896–99 and then again between 1902-04. He was club captain when Tigers secured their first piece silverware, the Midlands Counties Cup, though missed the final through injury. He was captain in the victorious finals of 1899, 1903 and 1904 and played in the victorious final of 1900 and 1901. He became the first player to pass 500 points for the club against Moseley in 1903.
Between 1906-12 he refereed 5 rugby internationals, including France's first test victory against Scotland in 1911.