Jack Ryder (cricketer) explained

Jack Ryder
Country:Australia
Fullname:John Ryder
Nickname:The King of Collingwood
Birth Date:8 August 1889
Birth Place:Collingwood, Victoria, Australia
Death Place:Fitzroy, Victoria, Australia
Heightm:1.85
Batting:Right-handed
Bowling:Right-arm Fast-Medium
Role:All-rounder
International:true
Testdebutdate:17 December
Testdebutyear:1920
Testdebutagainst:England
Testcap:111
Lasttestdate:8 March
Lasttestyear:1929
Lasttestagainst:England
Club1:Victoria
Columns:2
Column1:Tests
Matches1:20
Runs1:1,394
Bat Avg1:51.62
100S/50S1:3/9
Top Score1:201
Deliveries1:1,897
Wickets1:17
Bowl Avg1:43.70
Fivefor1:0
Tenfor1:0
Best Bowling1:2/20
Catches/Stumpings1:17/0
Column2:First-class
Matches2:177
Runs2:10,499
Bat Avg2:44.29
100S/50S2:24/55
Top Score2:295
Deliveries2:15,481
Wickets2:237
Bowl Avg2:29.80
Fivefor2:9
Tenfor2:1
Best Bowling2:7/53
Catches/Stumpings2:132/0
Date:29 February
Year:2008
Source:https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/0/381/381.html CricketArchive

John Ryder (8 August 1889 – 3 April 1977) was a cricketer who played for Victoria and Australia.

Born in the inner-city Melbourne suburb of Collingwood, Ryder was known as the "King of Collingwood" for his long association with the local cricket team. An all-rounder, he claimed 612 wickets and scored 12,677 runs in 338 district matches.

Career

He played in four series against England and one against South Africa. In 1921–22, he averaged more than 100 in a series against South Africa. Ryder was an aggressive batsman and strong on the drive. He was also a useful medium-pace bowler. His best performance was an innings of 201 not out against England, made in six and half hours at Adelaide in 1924–25. This included century partnerships of 134 (with Tommy Andrews) and 108 (with Bert Oldfield). He made 88 in the second innings.

In 1926–27, he made his highest first-class score of 295 (in four hours) for Victoria against New South Wales, in a world record team total of 1,107. Ryder smashed six sixes, including two in three balls, and was out attempting to hit another six to bring up his triple century. For over 50 years after his retirement, he held the record for games played and runs scored in Melbourne District Cricket, before being passed by district stalwart John Scholes.

Ryder's bowling brought him 150 wickets for Victoria and 805 in all grades and he was an outstanding fieldsman, who once caught five English batsman in a Test innings.

Selector

Ryder's career as an Australia team selector was unusual. As Test captain, he was on the selection panel for the 1930 Ashes tour of England, but was out-voted for a place on the team, and the captaincy passed to Bill Woodfull. In 1946, he was made a selector again and held the post for 23 years, forming a long association with Sir Donald Bradman and Chappie Dwyer.

Statistics and legacy

He remains the only Test cricketer to be run out in both innings of his debut Test match.[1] Ryder was also the first Australian to complete a Test Career of more than 20 innings with a batting average over 50.00.

He was the oldest former player present at the Centenary Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in 1977. He died just weeks after the match.

Ryder's long district cricket career for which he is best known spanned 37 years, from 1906–07 until 1942–43. His career of 338 games was played almost entirely for Collingwood, except for six games for Northcote in 1933–34 and 12 games for the VCA Colts in 1939–40. He scored 12,677 runs at 41.83 with 37 centuries, and took 612 wickets at 16.83 with 46 five-wicket hauls.[2] The medal for the outstanding player of the season in Melbourne Premier Cricket is named in his honour, and was first presented in 1973–74.

He holds the record for facing the most number of balls in a single test innings when batting at number seven position(461)[3]

He was also inducted into the Australian Hall of Fame by the CA in 2015.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Frindall, Bill . Ask Bearders . Bill Frindall . 2009 . BBC Books. 978-1-84607-880-4 . 35–36 .
  2. Web site: VCA 1st XI Career records 1889–90 to 2014–15, N-R. 28 November 2015. Cricket Victoria. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208100929/http://premier.cricketvictoria.com.au/files/3/files/player-register-career-stats/VCA%201st%20XI%20CAREER%20RECORDS%201889-90%20to%202014-15%20N-R.pdf. 8 December 2015. dmy-all.
  3. News: Batting records Test matches Cricinfo Statsguru ESPN Cricinfo. Cricinfo. 15 August 2017.
  4. Web site: Australian Cricket Awards | Cricket Australia.