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Trish McKelvey

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Batting style
  
Right-handed

Role
  
Cricket Player

Name
  
Trish McKelvey

National side
  
New Zealand


Trish McKelvey Trish McKelvey Cricket Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand

Born
  
5 January 1942 (age 82) (
1942-01-05
)
Lower Hutt, New Zealand

Education
  
Wellington Girls' College

Patricia "Trish" Frances McKelvey CNZM MBE (born 5 January 1942) is a former New Zealand cricketer, cricket administrator and educator.

Contents

Trish McKelvey Hansen Receives Trish McKelvey Medal Wairarapa Cricket Association

Early life

McKelvey was born in Lower Hutt in 1942. She was educated at Wellington Girls' College from 1955 to 1959, where she was captain of both the senior 'A' netball and 1st XI cricket teams.

Cricket career

She played 15 women's Test matches for New Zealand, captaining the side in all of them. The record was two wins, three defeats and five draws. Her Test career spanned the period 1966 to 1978/9, and included Tests against not only traditional rivals England and Australia, but also against South Africa and India. The three-Test tour of South Africa in 1971/2, which was won 1–0, was the last official representative match any South African cricket team, men's or women's, would play for 18 years as teams boycotted South Africa because of the apartheid regime.

McKelvey scored 699 Test runs at an average of 29.12, with a highest score of 155 not out. She also captained New Zealand in all 15 women's one-day internationals she played in, winning seven, losing seven, with one tie. McKelvey also played for the International XI in the 1973 women's World Cup, finishing fourth out of seven teams.

McKelvey's 15 Tests as captain means she has captained New Zealand more times than the next two women in the list combined. As of July 2005, she remains the only New Zealand women's Test captain to have won a Test match.

In 1992, McKelvey became the first woman board member of New Zealand Cricket. She has also served on the board of Bowls New Zealand.

Education career

Outside of cricket, McKelvey had a distinguished career in education. She trained as a physical education teacher and taught at Hutt Valley Memorial College, Solway College and Wellington High School. She was principal of Wellington High School for seven years, retiring in 1994. She has since served on the boards of other educational institutions, including being a member of the Council of Victoria University of Wellington from 2007 to 2012 and chair of The Correspondence School board of trustees.

Honours

McKelvey was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire for services to women's cricket in the 1981 Queen's Birthday Honours. In the 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours she was made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to education.

References

Trish McKelvey Wikipedia