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Cecil Buttle

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Role
  
Cricket Player

Name
  
Cecil Buttle

1926–28
  
Somerset


Full name
  
Cecil Frederick Douglas Buttle

Born
  
11 January 1906 (
1906-01-11
)
Norton Fitzwarren, Taunton, Somerset, England

First-class debut
  
22 May 1926 Somerset v Gloucestershire

Last First-class
  
20 June 1928 Somerset v Nottinghamshire

Died
  
December 15, 1988, Taunton, United Kingdom

Batting style
  
Right-handed batsman

Bowling style
  
Right-arm fast-medium

Cecil Frederick Douglas Buttle, known as "Cec", born at Norton Fitzwarren, Taunton, Somerset on 11 January 1906 and died at Taunton on 15 December 1988, was associated with Somerset County Cricket Club for more than 50 years as a player, a net bowler, a substitute fielder, a reserve umpire and, for about 30 years after the Second World War, the groundsman at the County Ground, Taunton.

Contents

Cricket player

As a player, Buttle was a right-arm fast-medium bowler, but though he was on Somerset's ground staff for many years, he played only two first-class matches, one each in the 1926 and 1928 seasons, and failed to take a wicket in either of them.

Buttle was interviewed by writer David Foot for his 1980s history of Somerset cricket. Foot writes that Buttle was "a very good club bowler, fast by those standards and able to move the ball away." Buttle himself is quoted as saying: "Harry (Harry Fernie, the groundsman) was always short staffed and but for that I think I'd have got a few games on some of the northern tours. I was frequently fielding for one side or the other at Taunton, but it wasn't the same."

Groundsman and umpire

As head groundsman at Taunton from 1946, Buttle was also called on when there were problems with other cricket pitches in Somerset: in 1953, he was forced into emergency action after the newly-relaid pitch at the Recreation Ground, Bath produced a farcical one-day result on the first day of what was meant to be a three-match festival of three-day games – the match, against Lancashire, was Bertie Buse's benefit match and was finished before six o'clock on the opening day. Buttle told Foot: "I had to take drastic action, and I decided on plenty of liquid marl and cow manure. We used a watering can to spread it across the wicket. The problem was knowing how to camouflage what we'd done. Then I hit on the use of cut grass. I sprinkled it all over the top and gave it a good roll." The other matches in the Bath cricket festival were saved.

In addition to his groundsmanship duties, Buttle was also called on to umpire in less important first-class matches in Somerset, such as those against university sides or early-season friendly matches. He also stood as umpire in several second eleven matches.

References

Cecil Buttle Wikipedia