Sneha Girap (Editor)

William Robertson (Canterbury cricketer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
William Robertson

Education
  
University of Edinburgh

Role
  
Historian

William Robertson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Died
  
June 11, 1793, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

People also search for
  
William H. Prescott, George Ticknor, Robert H Dreisbach, John Foster Kirk, Wilfred Harold Munro

Books
  
The history of the reign of the Em, An Historical Disquisiti, The history of the discovery, History of the Reign of Charle, The history of the reign of the em

Cleverest man in the army the life of fm sir william robertson


William Robertson (4 March 1864 – 5 April 1912) was a New Zealand cricketer who played first-class cricket for Canterbury from 1894 to 1901 and played in New Zealand's first representative matches.

An off-spinner who opened the bowling, on his first-class debut for Canterbury against Auckland in January 1894 Robertson took 8 for 59 then, bowling unchanged throughout the second innings, 6 for 48. In his next match he took 6 for 72 (unchanged again) and 2 for 72. Selected for New Zealand's first representative match in February 1894, he was New Zealand's outstanding player, taking 6 for 76 and 4 for 73 in a 160-run loss to New South Wales. He then took seven wickets against Otago and eight against Hawke's Bay to give him 47 wickets in five matches at an average of 12.12. He was New Zealand's leading wicket-taker for the season.

After taking only one wicket in the first match in 1894-95, he then took 4 for 65 and 9 for 98 against Wellington, 6 for 54 and 5 for 40 against Fiji, and four wickets against Otago, to finish with 29 wickets at 14.00. He was New Zealand's joint leading wicket-taker for the season.

He played only one match in 1895-96, for New Zealand against New South Wales, when he took three wickets and made his highest score, 15, in a tenth-wicket partnership of 67 with Arthur Fisher that gave New Zealand a sufficient lead to enable them to go on to their first victory. After a gap of five years he returned to the Canterbury side in 1900-01 for his final two matches, and took six wickets.

Dick Brittenden said of Robertson: "He spun the ball either way a prodigious amount ... Small and slender, he suffered much ill-health, and asthma ended a brilliant career cruelly early." An accident in his youth had resulted in the loss of two fingers of his left hand.

References

William Robertson (Canterbury cricketer) Wikipedia