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David Walker (cricketer)

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Full name
  
David Frank Walker

Name
  
David Walker

1933–35
  
Oxford University

Batting style
  
Right-handed


David Walker (cricketer) Report Lions to hire David Walker as running backs coach

Born
  
31 May 1913 (
1913-05-31
)
Loddon, Norfolk, England

Died
  
7 February 1942(1942-02-07) (aged 28) unknown; buried Trondheim, Norway

Bowling style
  
Slow left arm orthodox

David Frank Walker (31 May 1913 – 7 February 1942) was an English cricketer. He was a right-hand batsman and slow left-arm bowler who played first-class cricket for Oxford University and minor counties cricket for Norfolk.

Born in Loddon, Norfolk, Walker began his cricket career with Uppingham XI topping the batting averages in his three seasons (1930-1932) with them.

At this time Walker also played for Norfolk, in his second match scoring 73 not out against Kent Second XI in the Minor Counties Championship, the innings was the highest for Norfolk that season. He scored his maiden century for Norfolk two seasons later against the same opposition. Walker continued to play for Norfolk until the Second World War, in nine seasons scoring 4034 runs at an average of 62, seven times he topped the County averages and three times heading the Minor Counties Competition's. His highest score came in 1939 when he made an innings of 217 against Northumberland, he shared in a Minor Counties record first-wicket partnership of 323 with Harold Theobald.

While attending Brasenose College, Oxford, Walker played 34 first-class matches for the University team between 1933 and 1935, scoring 1799 runs at 30.49 with two centuries. The first came against Gloucestershire in only his second appearance, the second against Worcestershire in 1934. He was appointed captain of the team in 1935, his highest score of that season came against the touring South Africans, he scored 83 having shared in a 198 run stand with Mandy Mitchell-Innes.

After undertaking an educational role in Sudan, Walker joined the RAF in South Africa. He died in military action when his Lockheed Hudson was shot down off the Norwegian coast, and was buried at Trondheim, Norway. Aged 28 at the time of his death, he had married three months earlier.

References

David Walker (cricketer) Wikipedia