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Denis Hendren

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Full name
  
Denis Hendren

1905–1919
  
Middlesex

Batting style
  
Right-handed

Name
  
Denis Hendren

Bowling style
  
Right-arm slow

Role
  
Cricketer

1910–1921
  
Durham


Born
  
25 September 1882 (
1882-09-25
)
Turnham Green, Middlesex, England

Relations
  
Patsy Hendren (brother)

Died
  
May 29, 1962, Paddington, London, United Kingdom

Denis Hendren (25 September 1882 – 29 May 1962) was an English cricketer and umpire. Hendren was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm slow. He was born at Turnham Green, Middlesex.

Hendren made his first-class debut for Middlesex against Gloucestershire in the 1905 County Championship. He made seven further first-class appearances for Middlesex between 1905 and 1907, playing his final match against Nottinghamshire in the 1907 County Championship. During this period he met little success, scoring 86 runs with a high score of 23. He also took 2 wickets, which came at a bowling average of 42.50.

Hendren moved to the north of England, where he made his debut for Durham in the 1910 Minor Counties Championship against Norfolk. Between 1910 and 1914, he made forty Minor Counties Championship appearances, with World War I leading the cancellation of county cricket until 1919. Hendren served as a private in the Durham Light Infantry during the war. He made a return to first-class cricket after the war with Middlesex in the 1919 County Championship at Lord's, where he played alongside his more famous brother and future England Test cricketer Patsy Hendren. He claimed the wicket of Harry Dean in this match, while with the bat he scored 15 runs in Middlesex's first-innings, before being dismissed by Charlie Hallows, while in their second-innings he was unbeaten on 8, with the match ending in a draw. This match represented his final first-class appearance, he returned to Durham in 1921, playing in two Minor Counties Championship matches against Northumberland and the Yorkshire Second XI.

He later stood as a first-class umpire between 1931 and 1957, standing in 390 matches. He died at Paddington, London on 29 May 1962.

References

Denis Hendren Wikipedia