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John Watkins (South African cricketer)

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Batting style
  
Right-hand bat

Role
  
Cricket Player

Name
  
John Watkins

National side
  
South African

Bowling style
  
Right-arm medium


John Watkins (South African cricketer) Matthew Nicholson Phil Emery and John Watkins among 69 to play one

John Cecil Watkins (born 10 April 1923) is a former South African cricketer who played in fifteen Tests from 1949 to 1957. He was born in Durban, Natal.

His best series with the bat was in Australia in 1952-53, when he made 352 runs at 35.20. In the Fifth Test at Melbourne, after Australia batted first and made 520, Watkins, batting at number three, hit 92 (his highest Test score) and 50 to help South Africa to victory by six wickets, to square the series two-all. His best bowling figures came in the next Test, against New Zealand at Wellington, where he opened the bowling, taking 4 for 22 in the second innings and figures of 50.5-31-51-5 for the match; again South Africa won. In his five Tests against New Zealand (in 1952-53 in New Zealand and in 1953-54 in South Africa) he took 18 wickets at 13.50.

He played for Natal from 1946-47 to 1957-58, with a highest score of 169 against Orange Free State at Durban in 1950-51, and one other century, 144 against Transvaal, also at Durban, in 1955-56. His best bowling figures were 5 for 37 against Rhodesia at Salisbury in 1957-58, in his second-last match.

Christopher Martin-Jenkins described him as "a right-handed batsman with a fine range of scoring strokes - his batting, like the man himself, was cavalier and joyous".

He worked as a secretary-accountant. He is the last surviving member of the side that toured Australasia in 1952-53. Following the death of Lindsay Tuckett on 5 September 2016, Watkins became the oldest living Test cricketer.

References

John Watkins (South African cricketer) Wikipedia