Charlie Bull | |
Country: | England |
Fullname: | Charles Harry Bull |
Birth Date: | 29 March 1909 |
Birth Place: | Lewisham, London, England |
Death Place: | Margaretting, Essex, England |
Batting: | Right-handed |
Club1: | Kent |
Year1: | 1929–1930 |
Club2: | Worcestershire |
Year2: | 1931–1939 |
Columns: | 1 |
Column1: | First-class |
Matches1: | 175 |
Runs1: | 6,801 |
Bat Avg1: | 23.61 |
100S/50S1: | 5/30 |
Top Score1: | 161 |
Deliveries1: | 108 |
Wickets1: | 0 |
Bowl Avg1: | – |
Fivefor1: | – |
Tenfor1: | – |
Best Bowling1: | – |
Catches/Stumpings1: | 63/– |
Date: | 5 August |
Year: | 2008 |
Source: | http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/10131.html CricInfo |
Charles Bull | |
Fullname: | Charles Harry Bull |
Charles Harry Bull (29 March 1909 – 28 May 1939) was an English sportsman who played in 175 first-class cricket matches between 1929 and 1939 for Kent County Cricket Club and later for Worcestershire County Cricket Club. Bull also represented England at table tennis, winning a number of World Table Tennis Championships medals between 1928 and 1932.
After having made a number of appearances for Kent's Second XI in the late 1920s, Bull made his first-class cricket debut against Surrey in July 1929; he scored 23 in his only innings and sent down three overs for 19.[1] He played a further two first-class games that season, and another one in 1930, but had little success and left the county at the end of the season.[2]
Bull's Worcestershire debut came against the New Zealanders in May 1931, when opening the batting he scored just 8 and 6,[3] but his career for his new county truly began in 1933.In that year he made 25 appearances, scoring 743 runs at 21.85, though his highest score was only 79.[4]
The four seasons from 1934 to 1937 were the best years of Bull's career. He passed a thousand runs in each season, making five centuries, the highest of these being the first: 161 against Glamorgan in June 1934.[5] His most productive summer was that of 1937, when he hit 1,619 runs including two centuries, this being the only season of his career in which he reached three figures more than once.
Bull played 15 times in 1938, but passed 50 only three times and scored under 500 runs in the season. In late May 1939, during the weekend of the match against Essex at Chelmsford, he was killed in a car accident which also left his team-mate Syd Buller injured.[6]
Bull spent his winters playing table tennis and was one of the top players in England. He represented England several times in the World Table Tennis Championships. In the 1928 Stockholm World Championship, he was one of the three teenagers in the English team with Fred Perry and Adrian Haydon.
The England team pulled off a sensation defeating the World Champions Hungary 7–2 in the league. In his three matches, Bull defeated the defending champion Roland Jacobi, and Zoltán Mechlovits and Laszlo Bellak who would play the singles final in 1928. In the three-way play-off to decide the medals, England lost to Austria and Hungary after Fred Perry twisted his ankle. Bull again defeated Mechlovits but lost to Bellak.[7] [8] Bull won a silver in 1931, and another bronze in 1929 with the England team.[9] With Perry, Bull won a silver in men's doubles in 1928. Perry would go on to win three Wimbledon tennis singles titles in the 1930s. Bull also won bronzes in 1928 and 1932 for mixed doubles and men's doubles respectively. The Prague tournament of 1932 was the last time he represented England in table tennis.
As professional cricketer, Bull paid his own expenses to take part in the table tennis World Championships. When some countries protested against a professional sportsman taking part in the game, the International Table Tennis Federation responded by removing the distinction between amateurs and professionals, one of the first sports federations to do so.[10]
Bull was killed on the night of Sunday, 28 May 1939, when the car he was passenger in rammed into the rear of a stationary lorry. Bull was playing in the Worcestershire-Essex county match at the time, but Sunday was a rest day. He had spent the day playing golf and was returning to the hotel with four fellow players. William Joseph Bone, the driver, was blinded by the light of a car travelling in the opposite direction. The lorry had its rear light damaged. Its driver, Hyman Bunner, was underneath the lorry repairing it when the car hit it at around 45 miles per hour. Both drivers were exonerated of any blame.[11]