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Norman Gordon

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Full name
  
Norman Gordon

Name
  
Norman Gordon

National side
  
South Africa


Bowling style
  
Right-arm fast

Role
  
Cricket Player

Norman Gordon Norman Gordon the first Test cricketer to have lived 100

Born
  
6 August 1911 (
1911-08-06
)
Boksburg, Transvaal, South Africa

Test debut (cap 151)
  
24 December 1938 v England

Last Test
  
14 March 1939 v England

Died
  
September 2, 2014, Johannesburg, South Africa

Batting style
  
Right-handed batsman

Norman Gordon (6 August 1911 – 2 September 2014) was a South African cricketer who played in five Tests in the 1938–39 South African cricket season.

Contents

Norman Gordon Norman Gordon at his golf club

He was born in Boksburg, Transvaal. He is the only male Test cricketer to live beyond 100 years of age. Gordon became the oldest-ever Test cricketer on 23 March 2011, when he surpassed New Zealander Eric Tindill, who died on 1 August 2010, approximately four months before his 100th birthday.

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Personal life

Norman Gordon Norman Gordon Latest News Photos Biography Stats

Gordon was Jewish, and was born in Boksburg, Transvaal.

Cricket career

Norman Gordon Former South Africa fast bowler Norman Gordon celebrates

Gordon played first-class cricket for Transvaal from 1933–34 as a right-handed fast bowler and a tail-end right-handed batsman.

He made his Test debut against England in December 1938, playing every Test of the five-match series. In the first Test, he took his best Test match figures of 7–162, including 5–103 in the first innings. He was stumped by Les Ames off the bowling of Tom Goddard for a first-ball duck in the drawn match. In the second match he took 5–157 in England's only innings, but was again stumped by Ames off the bowling of Goddard for 0 in another drawn match.

In the third match, Gordon took 2–127 in England's only innings and was out for 1 and 0, falling to Ken Farnes and Hedley Verity as England won by an innings and 13 runs. In the fourth match, he took 2–47 and 3–58 but did not bat in the drawn Test. In the final Test Gordon took match figures of 1–256 and was not out in each innings, scoring 0 and 7. This match was the famous Timeless Test, which took 10 days and was eventually declared a draw by agreement between the teams. It was Gordon's final Test match.

He took his best innings figures of 6–61, followed by 3–86 in the second innings, for Transvaal against Natal at Johannesburg in 1939–40. He continued playing for Transvaal until the 1948–49 season.

Later life

Gordon ran a sports shop in central Johannesburg. He was the last living male to have played Test cricket before World War II. He turned 100 in August 2011 and lived in central Johannesburg.

References

Norman Gordon Wikipedia