Lawrence Eckhoff Explained

Larry Eckhoff
Full Name:Lawrence Raymond James Eckhoff
Birth Date:1952 5, df=yes
Birth Place:Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand
Batting:Right-handed
Bowling:Right-arm fast-medium
Club1:Otago
Year1:1975/76
Source:https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/21/21830/21830.html CricketArchive
Date:27 February
Year:2024

Lawrence Raymond James Eckhoff (born 19 May 1952) is a former New Zealand cricketer. He was born at Dunedin in Otago in 1952 and educated at Otago Boys' High School where he played cricket.[1] [2]

An "energetic" right-arm fast-medium bowler who was described by The Press as "an interesting recruit" ahead of his senior debut in November 1975,[3] [4] Eckhoff played one first-class and one List A cricket match for Otago during the 1975–76 season. On debut, in a List A match against Canterbury, he took the only two Canterbury wickets to fall, those of Barry Hadlee and Peter Coman,[5] his "explosive action" generating out-swing which caused the opposing batsmen difficulties, although he was "plagued by no balls, and sometimes erred in length and line".[6]

Writing in The Press after the match Dick Brittenden considered that "more, surely, will be heard of him",[6] but in the event Eckhoff only played in one more representative match for Otago. After taking a single wicket opening the bowling against Canterbury in mid-December in his first-class debut,[5] he was injured and unable to play in the following match against Wellington, his place taken by Philip Morris,[7] and Eckhoff did not regain his place in the side. He had previously played age-group and Second XI cricket for the team during the 1972–73 season.[5]

In ten years of A grade cricket in Dunedin, he took 427 wickets at a bowling average of 17.20 runs per wicket. He moved to Australia after accepting an offer from the Sturt Cricket Club in Adelaide and was a member of the Sturt team that won the premiership in 1979. He left Sturt in 1981 to take up a playing coach position at Port Adelaide Cricket Club but returned to Sturt in 1985.

Notes and References

  1. McCarron A (2010) New Zealand Cricketers 1863/64–2010, p. 47. Cardiff: The Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. (Available online at the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 2023-06-05.)
  2. College in command, The Press, volume CX, issue 32450, 10 November 1970, p. 34. (Available online at Papers Past. Retrieved 2023-12-20.)
  3. [Dick Brittenden|Brittenden RT]
  4. https://www.espncricinfo.com/cricketers/lawrence-eckhoff-36961 Lawrence Eckhoff
  5. https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/21/21830/21830.html Larry Eckhoff
  6. [Dick Brittenden|Brittenden RT]
  7. Captain's hand by Bilby, The Press, volume CXV, issue 34036, 27 December 1975, p. 28. (Available online at Papers Past. Retrieved 2023-12-20.)