Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full name | William Stephen Farrer | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | King William's Town, Cape Province, South Africa | 8 December 1936|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Batting | Right-handed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Right-arm off-spin | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Relations | Stephen Farrer (father) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
International information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
National side | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Test debut | 1 January 1962 v New Zealand | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last Test | 13 March 1964 v New Zealand | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career statistics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Source: Cricinfo, 29 March 2016 |
William Stephen "Buster" Farrer (born 8 December 1936) is a former South African cricketer who played in six Test matches between 1962 and 1964. He also played tennis and hockey at international level.
Farrer has been known as "Buster" since early childhood. [1] His parents excelled at sport: his father captained the Border cricket team, and his mother won the South African under-18 singles tennis championship. [2]
He attended Dale College, near the family home in King William's Town, excelling in sport and captaining the school cricket team in his final year, 1954. [3] He made his first-class cricket debut for Border in the Currie Cup in the 1954–55 season a few days after his 18th birthday. Playing against North-Eastern Transvaal, he scored 77 in his only innings. [4] He began studying at Rhodes University in Grahamstown for a BA in Physical Education in 1955.
After seven more matches for Border in 1954–55 and 1955–56 without reaching 50, Farrer decided to concentrate on his tennis career. [5]
Farrer represented South African Universities at tennis. [6] In 1956 he was offered a trip to England with a group of young South African tennis players. He accepted, and abandoned his university studies. [7]
After several minor tournaments in England, Farrer played in the singles, men's doubles and mixed doubles at the 1956 Wimbledon Championships. [8] In the singles he beat Dick Potter (Australia) in the first round, 6–4, 6–1, 6–4, but lost to Staffan Stockenberg (Sweden) in the second round, 6–4, 6–2, 12–10. [9] He and Ivor Phillips of South Africa won the first round of the men's doubles against the Egyptian pair Mohamed Badr-el-din and Kamel Moubarek, 6–4, 6–1, 6–4, but lost in the second round to Stockenberg and Ulf Schmidt (Sweden), 6–2, 6–2, 11–9. [10] In the mixed doubles he partnered Estelle van Tonder of South Africa to the third round, where they lost to the British pair Gerry Oakley and Pat Hird, 8–6, 6–2. [11] Phillips and van Tonder were members of Farrer's touring group.
It was Farrer's only Wimbledon, simply because he couldn't afford regular long trips away playing amateur tennis. On his return he took a job in a sporting goods store in Johannesburg run by the former Yugoslavian tennis player Franjo Kukuljević. [12] He improved his tennis in the Johannesburg club competition but was unable to reach the South African Davis Cup team. After he returned to King William's Town to help his father with his growing sporting goods store, he gave up regular tennis because the local standard was so low, and concentrated on cricket. [13]
Although he was right-handed at batting and bowling at cricket, he played tennis and squash left-handed.
Farrer married Maureen Fullarton in Grahamstown in August 1960. [14]
He returned to first-class cricket in 1960–61, scoring 499 runs in six matches for Border at an average of 55.44, with five 50s. The next season, he was appointed captain of Border, and after one match he was selected for South Africa in the Third Test against New Zealand in Cape Town. Batting at number three he made only 11 and 20, but two weeks later, captaining a South African Colts XI against the New Zealanders on his home ground of East London, he hit 147 not out in the first innings, his first first-class century. He kept his place in the Test side and made 40 in the Fourth Test, and 7 and 10 in the Fifth.
Farrer scored prolifically in 1962–63, 888 runs at 63.42; in two matches against Orange Free State he hit 91 and 100 not out at Welkom and 107 not out at East London. He was selected to tour Australasia in 1963–64, and acted as one of the team selectors on tour. [15] He scored only 185 runs at 20.55 in the first five matches, and despite a score of 107 against the Tasmania Combined XI in Hobart he was unable to make the Test team on the Australian leg of the tour. On several occasions, when a batting spot in the Test team was open, he voted against his own inclusion in favour of others. [16] His form improved when the team arrived in New Zealand, where he scored 144 and 52 in the two two-day matches before the First Test. He played in all three Tests in New Zealand, scoring 30 and 38 not out in Wellington, 39 in Dunedin, and 21 and 5 not out in Auckland.
He scored 66 and 10 when he led Border against MCC in 1964–65, but was not selected for any trial matches or Tests, or for the tour to England that followed in 1965. In 1965–66 he set the record for the highest score for Border with 207 (in 272 minutes out of a team total of 361) against Orange Free State. [17] He scored 95 and 50 for Border against the Australians in 1966–67.
He relinquished the Border captaincy in 1967–68 because owing to work and family commitments he could not spare the time for most matches away from home. But he continued to score prolifically: 459 runs at 57.37 in 1967–68, 521 at 65.12 in 1968–69 (when he broke his own record by scoring 211 against Eastern Province, out of a team total of 355), and 539 at 67.37 in his last season, 1969–70. Against the touring Australian team in 1969–70 he hit 154 and 42. Wisden said his 154 (in a team total of 299) "was only slightly inferior to the masterly Test centuries by Graeme Pollock and Richards at Durban a few days previously [in the Second Test] but ironically the nearest selector was hundreds of miles away". [18] He retired at the end of the season, so it turned out to be his last first-class match.
Farrer represented Border at hockey from the early 1960s, and played three matches for South Africa in 1971, against Rhodesia and Australia. [19]
He took up squash after he gave up tennis, and in the 1960s and 1970s he was Border champion several times, and represented Border. Able to play with either hand, when the rules allowed it he sometimes played with a racquet in each hand. In the 1980s he represented South Africa in masters tournaments. [20]
Farrer took up golf more seriously when he gave up cricket, and represented Border in 1977 and 1978. [21] When he was 75 he "beat his age", shooting a gross score of 74 at the East London Golf Club. [22]
Farrer represented Border and South Africa in seniors bowls in the 2000s. [23] He also finished 502nd out of 1229 in the Two Oceans Marathon in 1979, as well as completing the Comrades Marathon the same year. In 1993, 1995 and 1996 he competed in the Argus cycle tour, finishing in the first third of the field each time. [24]
Buster and Maureen Farrer have a daughter and two sons. Buster ran the family's sporting goods shop in King William's Town for many years before handing it over to his son Colin. [25]
Timothy Henry Henman is a British former professional tennis player. Henman played a serve-and-volley style of tennis. He was the first British man to reach the singles semifinals of Wimbledon since Roger Taylor in the 1970s. Henman reached six major semifinals and won 15 career ATP Tour titles, including the 2003 Paris Masters. He also earned a 40–14 win-loss record with the Great Britain Davis Cup team.
Kepler Christoffel Wessels is a South African-Australian cricket commentator and former cricketer who captained South Africa after playing 24 Tests for Australia. Since retiring he has been a lawn bowls competitor.
Michael John Procter is a South African former cricketer. A fast bowler and hard hitting batsman, he proved himself a colossal competitor in English first class cricket. He was denied the international stage by South Africa's banishment from world cricket in the 1970s and 1980s. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1970 and South African cricketer of the year in 1967.
Robert Neil Harvey is an Australian former cricketer who was a member of the Australian cricket team between 1948 and 1963, playing in 79 Test matches. He was the vice-captain of the team from 1957 until his retirement. An attacking left-handed batsman, sharp fielder and occasional off-spin bowler, Harvey was the senior batsman in the Australian team for much of the 1950s and was regarded by Wisden as the finest fielder of his era. Upon his retirement, Harvey was the second-most prolific Test run-scorer and century-maker for Australia.
Cotah Ramaswami – sometimes written as Cota or Cotar – was a double sports international who represented India in cricket and tennis.
Maxwell "Max" Woosnam was a British sportsman who is sometimes referred to as the 'Greatest British sportsman' in recognition of his achievements.
Kevin Ullyett is a former professional tennis player from Zimbabwe. His primary success on the tour was in men's doubles.
Gary Alex Bartlett is a former New Zealand cricketer. He played 10 Test matches for New Zealand in the 1960s as a fast bowler.
The New Zealand national cricket team toured South Africa from October 1961 to February 1962 and played a five-match Test series against the South Africa national cricket team. The series was drawn 2–2, with New Zealand's victory in the third Test the team's first Test match win outside their home country. New Zealand captain John Reid scored a total of 1,915 runs during the tour, setting a record for the most runs scored in South Africa by a touring batsman. The tour was the second to South Africa by a team from New Zealand, the previous tour having taken place in 1953–54.
The South Africa national cricket team toured Australia in the 1993–94 season to play three test matches against Australia in Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide. These were played from 26 December 1993 to 1 February 1994. The tour was the first made by the South Africa cricket team to Australia in 30 years and was undertaken as the apartheid system was being dismantled in South Africa and the country transitioned to democratic government. Kepler Wessels captained the South Africans in the first two tests. After a hand injury, Hansie Cronje replaced him for the third test. Allan Border was Australia's captain for the series.
John Robert Isner is an American former professional tennis player. He was ranked as high as world No. 8 in singles and No. 14 in doubles by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
Colin Fleming is a British retired professional tennis player who specialised in doubles.
Grega Žemlja is a retired Slovenian tennis player. He has won five singles titles and one doubles title on the ATP Challenger Tour. In 2012, he reached the third round of the US Open, the first Slovenian male player ever to reach that stage in a Grand Slam tournament. He is also the first Slovenian ATP player who in 2013 reached third round at Wimbledon. He reached his highest ATP ranking of world No. 43 in singles in May 2013, becoming the first Slovene ATP player to reach the top 50. Žemlja also became the first Slovene player earning over 1 million US dollars in prize money, and he was the highest-paid Slovene player in history until he was passed by Blaž Kavčič. He represented his country as a member of Slovenia Davis Cup team.
John Arnold Einem Hickson was an English first-class cricketer and who umpired one Test match in South Africa in 1889.
Frederik Løchte Nielsen is a former professional tennis player. He was the top ranked player from Denmark in the ATP doubles world rankings. A former Wimbledon men's doubles champion, he peaked at no. 17 in the rankings in April 2013. Nielsen has reached five other doubles finals on tour, winning on two occasions.
Jack Sock is an American pickleball player and former professional tennis player. He won four career singles titles and 17 doubles titles on the ATP Tour, and had career-high tennis rankings of world No. 8 in singles and world No. 2 in doubles.
The South Africa national cricket team toured New Zealand in February and March 1964 and played a three-match Test series against the New Zealand national cricket team. All three matches were drawn. The South Africans had just played a five-Test series in Australia.
Raymond Watson-Smith is a former South African cricketer. Playing for Border in 1969–70, he scored a not-out century in each of his first two first-class matches, and reached 310 runs before being dismissed.
Stephen Eric Penfold "Cocky" Farrer was a South African cricketer who played five first-class cricket matches for Border: three in 1929–30 and two, as captain, in 1947–48.
Ivor Leroy Phillips is a South African former cricketer and tennis player.