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Edward Rose (cricketer)

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Full name
  
Edward McQueen Rose

Bowling style
  
Right-arm off-spin

Name
  
Edward Rose

Batting style
  
Left-handed

1958–1960
  
Cambridge University

Role
  
Cricket Player

Born
  
2 September 1936 (age 87) (
1936-09-02
)
Oxted, Surrey, England

Edward McQueen Rose (born 2 September 1936, Oxted, Surrey) is a former cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University from 1958 to 1960.

Rose was educated at Rugby School. In 1955 he captained the First XI, and also opened the batting for the schools team The Rest in the annual match against Southern Schools at Lord's. He went up to Cambridge University, where he played irregularly over three years as an opening and middle-order batsman without achieving a Blue. His best season was 1959, when he played 14 of the team's 19 matches and scored 500 runs at an average of 18.51. His highest score was 57 against Kent in 1959.

He played a few matches for Surrey Second XI between 1959 and 1962. He kept playing club cricket, especially for the Limpsfield club in Surrey, and was a National Cricket Association coach. He captained the Rugby Meteors to victory in the Cricketer Cup in 1973, and toured the USA in 1992 and Canada in 1994 with MCC.

He was an industrialist. He wrote How to Win at Cricket, or, the Skipper's Guide (published in 1988), which John Arlott described as "a perceptive and thought-provoking study of captaincy which is expressed most cogently and is, above all, full of good, sound common sense".

References

Edward Rose (cricketer) Wikipedia