List of cricketers who died in road accidents

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George Street - "He was riding a motor-cycle and, in endeavouring to avoid a lorry at a cross-roads, crashed into a wall and died immediately." Apparently, pressed the accelerator instead of the brake.

Ted McDonald - Australian Test player. Car collided with another car near Bolton. Was run over by a passing car while standing on the road.

Dudley Pope

Charlie Bull

Reggie Northway - "car overturned on the A6 road at Kibworth, Leicestershire. Northway was flung from the car and killed, his body being found in a roadside ditch." The same accident ended the career of Fred Bakewell

Dallas Page

Jack Iddon - English Test player

Collie Smith-West indian Test player

Riaz-ur-Rehman

Hugo Yarnold Record-breaking wicketkeeper and Test umpire

Richard Edmunds Fast bowler from Rutland, played a couple of times for Leicestershire in 1989 and for England Youth Test side

Graham Kersey

Ben Hollioake - English Test player

Dhruv Pandove - Indian first-class player

Suryaveer Singh - Indian first-class player, brother of Test player Hanumant Singh

Keki Tarapore - Indian Test player

Alec Bedser, South African first class cricketer and twin brother of Eric Bedser - they were named after the English cricketing twins of the same name.

Basil Fussell

Donald Pringle, father of Derek. Played ODIs for East Africa in the 1975 World Cup.

Clem Hill, suffered head injuries due to a fall while trying to board a tram in the corner of Queen and Collins street on May 17, 1945. In the Royal Melbourne Hospital, he was taken off the "danger list" ten days later. But a heart condition developed and he died on September 5.

Stanley Jackson, run over by a taxi. Died some while afterwards, but allegedly never recovered.

Govind Chauhan, father of Rajesh Chauhan, scooter accident.

Wisden 1966 reported that Wally Hammond died aged 62 "from an illness due in great part to severe injuries suffered in a motor accident five years earlier".

reports Ron Oxenham did not recover from road accident injuries

Laurie Williams - West Indian first-class player (also played ODIs for West Indies) car crash

C.N.Bruce (Lord Aberdare) died after his car left a road and fell into a river in Yugoslavia

Ian Cromb - New Zealand Test player

Manjural Islam Rana - Bangladesh Test player

Sajjadul Hasan

Stanley de Silva, Sri Lankan first-class player, also played ODIs in the 1979 World Cup. Died aged 23-147, motor cycle accident

Bashir Miandad

Anthony Rohrs, car accident

Sharad Mandan,

Masood Salahuddin, , aged 90

Nasir Wasti

Albert Frederick "Spinney" Lane. Car came off the road and hit a hedge near Stratford upon Avon

Mark McPhee "four-wheel-drive collided with a road train carrying milk near Gingin, north of Perth"

Vic Jackson killed in a motor-car accident in Australia

Shervan Prag [citation needed]

Reg Bettington "his car fell 100 feet on to a railway line"

Malcolm Walker, died in a motorcycle accident

Tiger Lance, died four weeks after being seriously injured in a road accident

Peter Barrett, died in a moped accident in Everton, Hampshire on 28 October 1983.

George Shaw, died in a car accident outside Port Pirie, South Australia on 2 August 1984.

MP Dastur, motor cycle accident

Runako Morton - West Indian Test player, also ODIs

Kishore Bhikane two-wheeler hit by a truck

AJW Bavin, not fcc, Aug 6, 1956, aged 60

Saleem Pervez, one ODI for Pakistan in 1980

Merrick Elderton, hit by a cyclist near to his home in Sherborne, fell on the road and died of head injuries.

Aubrey Sharp, after a car accident

Brian Swift (cricketer), Cambridge University wicketkeeper in 1957 University Match, killed in car accident March 1958

Sandeep Singh

Robert Baynton, died in hospital from a fractured skull after an accident that also killed his brother

Joe Filliston - umpired at Lord's at the age of 100. Knocked down by a motor scooter at 102.

Yashpal Mohanty

George Vernon Gunn

Hugo Hood

Derek Hall (cricketer)

Harry Crick

Sripal Silva died on February 27, 2020 died "from injuries sustained in a motor accident some time ago"

Robin Buckston, collapsed and died at the wheel of his car near Burton on Trent

Len Dolding

Ramnath Parkar, his scooter was hit by a bus. Died after being in a coma for 43 months.

Najeeb Tarakai, Afghan T20I and ODI player, hit by a car while crossing the road.

Amien Variawa, head on collision, accident in Azadville near Johannesburg on 31/12/1985

Ezra Moseley

Harry Freeman - died in a motorcycle crash near Portsmouth Arms railway station in 1926

Sarah Stokes

Edmund King

Alfred Birkett

Andrew Symonds

Rudi Koertzen, Test umpire.

Barlow Carkeek, struck by a car while crossing the road in rain

Jean Clark

Clyde Butts

Ian Rutherford

Train accidents

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Drowned

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Aviation accidents

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Cricketers who were murdered

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See List of cricketers who were murdered

Shahabuddin murdered in his village in 1948.

The 1939-40 MCC Touring Party

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(wherein the curious will find the answer to Q268 of the Cricket Quiz)

Flight-Lieut Jack Holmes (capt) Hugh Bartlett John Brocklebank Billy Griffith Roger Human Bob Wyatt Emrys Davies Tom Dollery Harold Gimblett George Pope John Langridge Gerald Mobey Stan Nichols Jack Parker Peter Smith Arthur Wellard

Tests to be played at Bombay, Calcutta and Madras.

Holmes, Bartlett, Brocklebank, Human, Davies, Langridge, Mobey and Parker never played Test cricket.

The manager was to have been Lieut.-Col. C.B. Rubie; in the event, Col. Rubie died on 3 November, 1939 after an operation, so his participation must have been doubtful.

Tryout Championship

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Position Team Played Won Lost Drawn No Dec 1st inn

lead match L

1st inn

lead match D

Points
Pts 12 4 4
=1 Lancashire 28 16 2 10 0 1 6 220
=1 Surrey 28 17 4 6 1 0 4 220
3 Yorkshire 28 14 2 10 2 0 8 200
4 Warwickshire 28 8 6 13 1 1 8 132
5 Derbyshire 28 8 9 9 2 3 4 124
6 Worcestershire 28 7 9 9 3 0 7 114
=7 Gloucestershire 28 6 6 16 0 2 9 112
=7 Somerset 28 8 8 10 2 1 3 112
9 Kent 28 6 12 8 1 3 5 108
10 Northamptonshire 28 6 4 15 3 2 6 104
11 Glamorgan 28 6 4 9 9 0 7 100
12 Hampshire 28 7 9 9 2 0 2 96
13 Sussex 28 5 11 11 1 6 2 92
14 Middlesex 28 5 12 8 3 2 4 84
15 Nottinghamshire 28 3 6 17 2 0 8 68
16 Leicestershire 28 3 13 11 1 2 5 64
17 Essex 28 4 12 11 1 0 3 60

Promoted: Dundee United, Clydebank
Relegated: Johnstone, Forfar Athletic

Tryout cricket tables

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1963 English cricket season leading batsmen by average
Name Innings Runs Highest Average 100s
Gary Sobers34133311247.604
Mike Smith391566144*47.453
Geoff Boycott431628165*45.223
Basil Butcher34129413344.622
Conrad Hunte37136718244.093
Clive Inman511708120*42.701
Brian Bolus572190202*41.325
Ken Barrington451568110*41.262


1963 English cricket season leading batsmen by aggregate
Name Innings Runs Highest Average 100s
Brian Bolus572190202*41.325
Peter Richardson56211017239.075
John Edrich55192112540.022
Alan Jones581857187*34.383
Ken Suttle57185414134.983
1963 English cricket season leading bowlers by average
Name Balls Maidens Runs Wickets Average
Charlie Griffith4208192152711912.83
Fred Trueman5067206195512915.15
Ken Palmer6113289223413916.07
Alan Moss385724913558416.13
David Sydenham4915239175310816.23
Brian Statham4746168187411316.58
1964 English cricket season leading bowlers by aggregate
Name Balls Maidens Runs Wickets Average
Derek Shackleton8325583244614616.75
Barry Knight6743207304214021.72
Ken Palmer6113289223413916.07
Fred Trueman5067206195512915.15
Don Shepherd7713540237312618.83
1930 English cricket season - leading bowlers by average
Name Balls Maidens Runs Wickets Average
Hedley Verity24371547956412.42
Charlie Parker6099301229917912.84
Dick Tyldesley6313352226314016.16
Harold Larwood372612416229916.38
Frank Booth1131474322616.61

11-column Championship

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Position Team Played Won Lost Drawn Tied No Dec 1st inn

lead match L

1st inn

lead match D

Points
Pts 12 6 4 4
1 Middlesex 26 19 5 2 0 0 1 1 236
2 Gloucestershire 26 17 4 5 0 0 1 2 216
3 Lancashire 26 13 1 10 1 1 0 6 186
4 Kent 26 12 8 6 0 0 2 5 172
5 Derbyshire 26 11 9 5 0 1 3 4 160
6 Surrey 26 10 7 8 0 1 0 5 140
=7 Worcestershire 26 7 11 8 0 0 4 5 120
=7 Yorkshire 26 8 7 10 0 1 1 5 120
=9 Glamorgan 26 8 8 8 0 2 3 2 116
=9 Sussex 26 9 12 5 0 0 1 0 116
=11 Essex 26 6 9 10 1 0 1 4 100
=11 Nottinghamshire 26 6 6 13 0 1 1 6 100
=11 Somerset 26 8 12 6 0 0 0 1 100
14 Leicestershire 26 6 14 5 0 1 2 3 92
15 Warwickshire 26 6 12 7 0 1 2 1 84
16 Hampshire 26 4 11 8 1 2 0 6 78
17 Northamptonshire 26 2 16 6 1 1 2 4 54

Tryout football tables

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Position Team Played Won Drawn Lost For Against Difference Points
1 Clyde 39 21 11 7 71 32 39 53
2 Raith Rovers 39 19 15 5 63 34 29 53
3 Dunfermline Ath 39 18 12 9 64 41 23 48
4 Berwick Rangers 39 16 16 7 68 51 17 48
5 Falkirk 39 15 14 10 51 46 5 44
6 Forfar Athletic 39 17 8 14 61 55 6 42
7 Queen's Park 39 13 15 11 52 51 1 41
8 Albion Rovers 39 16 8 15 68 68 0 40
9 East Stirlingshire 39 15 8 16 55 65 -10 38
10 Cowdenbeath 39 13 8 18 75 78 -3 34
11 Stranraer 39 13 7 19 54 63 -9 33
12 Stenhousemuir 39 10 10 19 43 67 -24 30
13 Meadowbank Thistle 39 6 10 23 43 89 -46 22
14 Brechin City 39 7 6 26 45 73 -28 20


Infobox

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Antony Durose
Personal information
Full name
Antony Jack Durose
Born (1944-10-05) 5 October 1944 (age 81)
Dukinfield, Cheshire, England
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast-medium
RoleBowler
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1964–1969Northamptonshire
Career statistics
Competition First-class List A
Matches 70 11
Runs scored 447 23
Batting average 9.31 3.83
100s/50s –/– –/–
Top score 30 10
Balls bowled 9,159 597
Wickets 150 18
Bowling average 26.90 20.83
5 wickets in innings 2
10 wickets in match 1
Best bowling 7/23 3/17
Catches/stumpings 24/– 3/–
Source: CricketArchive, 11 January 2026

Refs

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[1]

[2]

[3]

[4]

[5]

[6] [7]

[8]

[9]

[10]

  1. "The Pakistanis in England, 1992". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1993 ed.). Wisden. p. 291.
  2. Mike Oakley. Gloucestershire Railway Stations (2003 ed.). Dovecote Press, Wimborne. p. 3739. ISBN 1 904349 24 2.
  3. Although he claimed himself to be younger. "The Pakistanis in England, 1992". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1993 ed.). Wisden. p. 291.
  4. "Obituary: Norman Mitchell-Innes". The Guardian. 2007-01-12. Retrieved 2007-12-31. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. "Births". The Times. No. 54739. London. 6 April 1960. p. 1. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  6. "No. 60095". The London Gazette (invalid |supp= (help)). 23 March 2012.
  7. "No. 60096". The London Gazette (invalid |supp= (help)). 23 March 2012.
  8. J. Venn and J. A. Venn. "Alumni Cantabrigienses: Thomas (Tom) Collins". www.archive.org/Cambridge University Press. p. 100. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  9. "Former Noted Scots Cricketer Dead". Dundee Evening Telegraph/British Newspaper Archive. Dundee. 7 July 1938. p. 3. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  10. "Dreadful Railway Accident". Evening Standard. London. 24 January 1876. p. 5. Retrieved 20 January 2024 via British Newspaper Archive.

Map play

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Bristol and North Somerset Railway
Stations opened September 3 1873, unless otherwise stated.
MR
Bristol Harbour
GWR
Bristol Temple Meads
St Philips Marsh
(TMD)
River Avon
GWR
Brislington
Whitchurch Halt
(Opened in 1925)
Pensford
Pensford Viaduct
(Over River Chew)
Clutton
Camerton branch
Hallatrow
Farrington Gurney Halt
(Opened in 1927)
Paulton Halt
(Opened in 1914)
Radford and Timsbury Halt
(Opened in 1910)
Camerton
(Opened in 1882)
Dunkerton Colliery Halt
(Opened in 1911)
Dunkerton
(Opened in 1910)
Combe Hay Halt
(Opened in 1910)
Midsomer Norton and Welton
Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway
Radstock West
Midford Halt
(Opened in 1911. Not connected to S&D station at Midford. Closed in 1915)
Monkton Combe Halt
(Opened in 1910)
Wessex Main Line
Limpley Stoke
Mells Road
(Opened in 1887)
Westbury
Wessex Main Line
Whatley Quarry
Heart of Wessex Line
Frome
Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Stonehouse (Bristol Road)
Line and station closed
  Stonehouse and Nailsworth Railway
Midland Railway
  Dudbridge
Line and station closed


morebox

Marlborough and Savernake Area
M&SWJR to Swindon
Marlborough (M&SWJR station)
Marlborough (GWR station)
Link (1883-98, 1926-64)
Marlborough tunnel
Link (1933-64)
Burbage Wharf Goods Station
Savernake High Level
Savernake Low Level
Reading to Plymouth Line
Grafton and Burbage
M&SWJR to Andover

And again

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Name County Birth date Batting Style Bowling Style Refs
Lord Hawke (Captain)Yorkshire16 August 1860 (aged 34)Right-handed[1]
Gerald BardswellLancashire7 December 1873 (aged 20)Right-handedRight-arm medium pace[2]
Lawrence BathurstMiddlesex4 June 1871 (aged 23)Right-handedLeft-arm medium pace[3]
Charles de TraffordLeicestershire21 May 1864 (aged 30)Right-handed[4]
Ledger HillHampshire26 July 1871 (aged 23)Right-handedRight-arm underarm[5]
George HillyardLeicestershire6 February 1864 (aged 30)Right-handedRight arm fast-medium[6]
Robert LucasMiddlesex17 July 1867 (aged 27)Right-handedRight-arm medium pace[7]
Kenneth McAlpine11 April 1858 (aged 36)Right-handed[8]
Gerald MordauntKent20 January 1873 (aged 21)Right-handedRight arm underarm slow[9]
Sandford RobinsonNottinghamshire5 February 1868 (aged 26)Right-handed(Wicketkeeper)[10]
William Whitwell12 December 1867 (aged 26)Right-handedRight arm fast[11]
Charles WrightNottinghamshire27 May 1863 (aged 31)Right-handed(Wicketkeeper)[12]

Match template

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28–29 September 1894
CricketArchive
Lord Hawke's XI
v
211 (107.1 overs)
Robert Lucas 46
Walter Clark 3/20 (12 overs)
107 (58.3 overs)
Clark 24
William Whitwell 4/33 (21 overs)
64 (33.1 overs)
Clark 18
Whitwell 5/25 (16.1 overs)
Lord Hawke's XI won by an innings and 40 runs
Germantown Cricket Club Ground, Philadelphia
  • Lord Hawke's XI won the toss and chose to bat



Name Main FC team Birth and death Cause of death Ref Other details
George Street England 6 December, 1889 – 24 April, 1924 "He was riding a motor-cycle and, in endeavouring to avoid a lorry at a cross-roads, crashed into a wall and died immediately."
Ted McDonald Australia Car collided with another car near Bolton
Dudley Pope
Charlie Bull
Reggie Northway Northants "Car overturned on the A6 road at Kibworth, Leicestershire. Northway was flung from the car and killed, his body being found in a roadside ditch." The same accident ended the career of Fred Bakewell
Dallas Page
Jack Iddon
Collie Smith West Indies
Riaz-ur-Rehman
Hugo Yarnold
Richard Edmunds
Graham Kersey
Ben Hollioake
Dhruv Pandove
Suryaveer Singh
Keki Tarapore
Alec Bedser (South African cricketer)
Basil Fussell
Donald Pringe
Clem Hill
Stanley Jackson
Govind Chauhan
Wally Hammond
Ron Oxenham
Laurie Williams
C. N. Bruce
Ian Cromb
Manjural Islam Rana
Sajjadul Hasan
Stanley de Silva
Bashir Miandad
Anthony Rohrs
Sharad Mandan
Masood Salahuddin
Nasir Wasti
Spinney Lane
Mark McPhee
Vic Johnson
Shervan Prag
Reg Bettington
Malcolm Walker
Tiger Lance
Peter Barrett
George Shaw
Manek Dastur
Runako Morton
Kishore Bhikane
AJW Bavin
Salim Pervez
Meldrick Elderton
Aubrey Sharp
Brian Swift
Sandeep Singh
Robert Baynton

Furthermore

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If you put "Yeabsley" and "Harlequins" into the search engine for The Times you come up with a single reference showing D. I. Yeabsley playing at No 6 for Harlequins against Birkenhead Park in March 1967, and scoring a try in a 17–5 victory.<ref>{{cite news| title = Solid tackling fails to stop Harlequins | newspaper = [[The Times]] | subscription = yes |issue = 56846 | page = 5 | location = London | date = 23 January 1967 }}</ref> If you put "Yeabsley" and "Saracens" into the same search engine, there's again a single reference, this time recording Yeabsley, described as "the Saracens flank forward", replacing a fellow Saracens player in the Hertfordshire county XV.<ref>{{cite news| title = Rugby Union: Internationals return for Surrey| newspaper = [[The Times]] | subscription = yes |issue = 58037 | page = 15 | location = London | date = 1 December 1970}}</ref>