Australian cricket team in England in 1956

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Australian cricket team in England in 1956
Date7 June 1956 – 28 August 1956
LocationEngland
ResultEngland won the 5-Test series 2–1
Teams
Flag of England.svg  England Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia
Captains
PBH May IWG Johnson
Most runs
PBH May (453)
PE Richardson (364)
JW Burke (271)
CC McDonald (243)
Most wickets
JC Laker (46)
GAR Lock (15)
KR Miller (21)
RG Archer (18)

The Australian cricket team toured England in the 1956 season to play a five-match Test series against England for The Ashes.

Contents

England won the series 2–1 with 2 matches drawn and therefore retained The Ashes.

The series is most notable for off-spinner Jim Laker's 46 wickets (a record for a 5-Test series) at an average of 9.60, [1] including all ten wickets in the second innings of the fourth Test at Old Trafford, the first time this had been achieved in Test cricket. In that Test, known as Laker's Match , Laker took 19 wickets for 90 runs, still the best match bowling analysis achieved in both Test and all first-class cricket. The cartoonist Roy Ullyett summed up the summer with the picture of a dazed kangaroo in Australian strip and the ditty: Here lie the Ashes of '56, skittled by Laker for next to nix. Never forgotten, sorry you thought our wicket rotten, signed "Love from the groundstaff". [2] The second line refers to the Australian complaints that the grass had been shaved off the Old Trafford wicket to help the England spinners. [3] Earlier in the summer, Laker had also taken ten wickets in an innings against the Australians in a tour match, playing for Surrey. [4]

Test series

1st Test

712 June 1956
scorecard
v
217/8 (dec) (103.4 overs)
PE Richardson 81
PBH May 73

KR Miller 4/69
148 (83.1 overs)
RN Harvey 64
JC Laker 4/58
188/3 (dec) (61 overs)
MC Cowdrey 81
PE Richardson 73

KR Miller 2/58
120/3 (86 overs)
JW Burke 58
JC Laker 2/29
Match drawn
Trent Bridge
Umpires: TS Bartley (ENG) and JS Buller (ENG)

2nd Test

2126 June 1956
scorecard
v
285 (146.1 overs)
CC McDonald 78
JW Burke 65

JC Laker 3/47
171 (82 overs)
PBH May 63
KR Miller 5/72
257 (92.5 overs)
R Benaud 97
FS Trueman 5/90
186 (99.2 overs)
PBH May 53
KR Miller 5/80
RG Archer 4/71
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia won by 185 runs
Lord's Cricket Ground
Umpires: DE Davies (ENG) and FS Lee (ENG)

3rd Test

1217 July 1956
scorecard
v
325 (167.4 overs)
PBH May 101
C Washbrook 98

RR Lindwall 3/67
RG Archer 3/68
R Benaud 3/89
143 (71.1 overs)
JW Burke 41
KR Miller 41

JC Laker 5/58
GAR Lock 4/41
140 (follow-on) (99.3 overs)
RN Harvey 69
JC Laker 6/55
GAR Lock 3/40
Flag of England.svg  England won by an innings and 42 runs
Headingley
Umpires: JS Buller (ENG) and DE Davies (ENG)

4th Test

2631 July 1956
scorecard
v
459 (158.3 overs)
DS Sheppard 113
PE Richardson 104
MC Cowdrey 80

IW Johnson 4/151
84 (40.4 overs)
CC McDonald 32
JC Laker 9/37
205 (follow-on) (150.2 overs)
CC McDonald 89
JC Laker 10/53
Flag of England.svg  England won by an innings and 170 runs
Old Trafford
Umpires: DE Davies (ENG) and FS Lee (ENG)

5th Test

2328 August 1956
scorecard
v
247 (109.2 overs)
DCS Compton 94
PBH May 83

RG Archer 5/53
KR Miller 4/91
202 (92 overs)
KR Miller 61
JC Laker 4/80
182/3 (dec) (61 overs)
DS Sheppard 62
RR Lindwall 1/29
27/5 (38.1 overs)
IWG Johnson 10
JC Laker 3/8
Match drawn
The Oval
Umpires: TJ Bartley (ENG) and DE Davies (ENG)

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Peter May captained the English cricket team in Australia in 1958–59, playing as England in the 1958–59 Ashes series against the Australians and as the MCC in their other matches on the tour. It was widely regarded as one of the strongest teams to depart English shores, comparable with the great teams of Johnny Douglas in 1911-12 and Percy Chapman in 1928-29. It had no obvious weaknesses, and yet it was beaten – and beaten badly. By the First Test the top batsmen had made runs, the Surrey trio of Loader, Laker and Lock had taken wickets, as had Lancashire's Brian Statham. South Australia, Victoria and an Australian XI had all been beaten – the last by the crushing margin of 345 runs – and all seemed rosy for Peter May's touring team. But in the Brisbane Test they lost by 8 wickets and the rest of the series failed to offer any hope of reversing their fortunes. The reasons for their failure were manifold; the captain was too defensive; injuries affected their best players; others were too young and inexperienced such as Arthur Milton, Raman Subba Row, Ted Dexter, Roy Swetman and John Mortimore, or at the end of their career; Godfrey Evans, Trevor Bailey, Jim Laker, Willie Watson and Frank Tyson. Their morale was further bruised when faced with bowlers of dubious legality and unsympathetic umpires. Peter May was criticised for seeing his fiancée Virginia Gilligan, who was travelling with her uncle the Test Match commentator Arthur Gilligan. The press blamed the poor performance on the team's heavy drinking, bad behaviour and lack of pride – a foretaste the treatment losing teams would receive in the 1980s. It was not a happy tour by any means and it would take 12 years to recover The Ashes. As E.W. Swanton noted

It was a tour which saw all sorts of perverse happenings – from an injury list that never stopped, to the dis-satisfaction with umpiring and bowlers' actions that so undermined morale. From various causes England gave below their best...

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The South African cricket team toured England in the 1955 season to play a five-match Test series against England. England won the series 3–2 with no matches drawn.

The 1958-59 Australians defeated the touring England team 4-0 in the 1958–59 Ashes series. They were seen by the English press as having little chance of winning the series against the powerful England touring team. They had only one recognised great player, Neil Harvey and had lost the fast bowling combination of Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller and the other veterans of Don Bradman's Invincible 1948 team. There were, however, signs of recovery to those who would see them and E.W. Swanton believed that on their home ground Australia would be a shade better than England. The best indication of the forthcoming series was the M.C.C. and Australian tours of South Africa in 1956-57 and 1957-58. South Africa had a strong team in the 1950s, stunning the cricketing world by drawing 2-2 in Australia in 1953-54, losing 3-2 in the closely fought 1955 series in England and fighting back from a 2-0 deficit to draw 2-2 with Peter May's England in 1956-57. In 1957-58 Ian Craig led a team labelled as the weakest to leave Australia to a 3-0 victory over the Springboks with Richie Benaud, Alan Davidson, Wally Grout, Ken Mackay, Colin McDonald, Jim Burke and Lindsay Kline all in fine form. Norm O'Neill was not taken on tour, but struck innings of 175 in three hours and 233 in four hours in successive games against Victoria and was regarded as the "New Bradman".

The 1954–55 Australians lost 3–1 to the touring England team in the 1954–55 Ashes series. The Australian teams of the 1940s and early 1950s were strong even after the retirement of Don Bradman as many of his great 1948 side remained. Australia had lost only one series since 1932–33, when they lost he Ashes to Len Hutton in the exceptionally close fought 1953 Ashes series, but had played no Test cricket since. They had thrashed John Goddard's West Indian team 4–1 in 1951–52 after his triumphant 3–1 win in England, but had surprisingly been held to a 2–2 series draw against Jack Cheetham's South Africans in 1952–53. The general opinion in Australia was that they would win the return series, especially after the great victory in the First Test. "Although Australian batting was unsound by the old standards the presence of more all-rounders gave them the slightly better chance" wrote E.W. Swanton "all-rounders are said to hold the key to Test matches. Australia had four or five to England's one..."

References

  1. Test Bowling Figures for England, 1956 Ashes
  2. Peter Arnold, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of World Cricket, p75, W.H. Smith, 1986
  3. E.W. Swanton (ed), The Barclays World of Cricket, p296, Collins, 1986
  4. "The IPL's can of worms". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 18 May 2022.

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