Wilfred Rhodes

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Rhodes continued to play for Yorkshire until 1930, but averaged under 30 with the bat in each season and only scored one more hundred, in 1928. He failed to reach 1,000 runs in a season again, [18] but as a bowler he took 85 wickets in 1927, 115 in 1928 and 100 in 1929. [17] In 1927 the Yorkshire committee opened a public testimonial for Rhodes, donating £250 themselves; it eventually raised £1,821, [167] During the 1927 season, he played his 1,000th first-class match when Yorkshire played Nottinghamshire on 23 July, becoming the first and, as of 2015, only cricketer to play so many first-class matches. [168] During a 10 May 1929 match against Oxford University, he became the first, and so far only, man to take 4,000 first-class wickets. [169] [170] [171]

By 1927, Yorkshire wished to appoint a more competent and permanent captain, instead of continuing the succession of ineffective amateurs, and planned to ask Herbert Sutcliffe, a professional, to take the post. Frederick Toone encouraged Rhodes to offer his resignation as senior professional, possibly with a view to installing a new regime, but Rhodes declined. [172] Meanwhile, the proposed appointment of Sutcliffe caused controversy; some members of the county believed Rhodes should be appointed. Rhodes pointed out he had not been offered the captaincy, nor had his views been sought. He felt unappreciated when he was not offered first refusal of the captaincy. A poll of Yorkshire members showed a marked preference for Rhodes over Sutcliffe as captain; the disagreements led Sutcliffe to decline the offer, and another amateur was appointed. [173]

In 1929–30, Rhodes was selected in a MCC team, containing several veteran players, to tour West Indies; he described it as an "old crocks" team. Given a heavy workload with the ball, [167] he took 39 first-class wickets, averaging 24.28, [17] and scored 129 runs at an average of 25.80 with a top score 36. [18] In the four Test matches Rhodes took ten wickets at an average of 45.30. [43] On 12 April 1930, the last day of the final Test, Rhodes was aged 52 years and 165 days, making him the oldest-ever Test cricketer. [174]

Retirement and coaching

During the 1930 season, Rhodes announced his intention to retire from cricket at the end of the summer. He was finding it harder to take wickets, and the workload placed on him in the West Indies had decreased his enthusiasm for the game. Hedley Verity and Bill Bowes had by this time emerged to strengthen the Yorkshire bowling. Through an ex-captain of Yorkshire, Harrow School offered Rhodes the post of professional cricket coach, which he accepted. [175] Rhodes missed several matches towards the end of the 1930 season, before ending his career at the Scarborough Festival. His last match was for H. D. G. Leveson Gower's XI against the Australians, where his figures were five for 93; [176] he took a wicket with his last ball in first-class cricket. [177] Rhodes's figures for his final season were 73 wickets at an average of 19.10, and 478 runs at an average of 22.76. [17] [18]

Over his career Rhodes appeared in 1,110 first-class matches, which remains a world record. [178] In these games he scored 39,969 runs, the 17th-highest career total of any batsman. [179] He took 4,204 wickets, a record total in first-class cricket. [170] In his 58 Tests Rhodes scored 2,325 runs (average 30.19) and took 127 wickets (average 26.96). [180] He was the first player in the world to accumulate 2,000 runs and 100 wickets in Tests. [181]

Rhodes coached at Harrow School until 1936. Cricket was very important to the school, which was following the lead of Eton College which had appointed George Hirst as its own coach. However, Rhodes's personality and generally critical nature did not communicate well to privileged schoolboys who were accustomed to getting their own way, and he was eventually replaced with the more genial and sympathetic Middlesex professional Patsy Hendren. [182] [183] This was in contrast to the success Hirst enjoyed at Eton. [184] According to Bowes, Rhodes had vast technical knowledge, but unlike Hirst did not know how to get the best out of people. "[He] could not relate to beginners. But if you were a Test match player looking to get advice, Wilfred was superb." [185]

Style and personality

Rhodes bowling, photographed by George Beldam in 1906 Rhodes bowling side.jpg
Rhodes bowling, photographed by George Beldam in 1906

As a bowler, Rhodes was recognised by critics as one of the greatest slow bowlers of all time. Very effective at dismissing batsmen on difficult pitches, it was difficult to score runs from his bowling even on a good batting surface. He could make the ball turn if the pitch offered the slightest assistance, particularly if it had been affected by rain. [186] Cricket writer E. W. Swanton described how Rhodes had "a beautifully controlled, economical and rhythmical action which ensured supreme accuracy of length and direction. He was a master of the stock left-hander's spin and could vary it with the ball that came on with the arm." [187] In his early years as a bowler, Rhodes was able to spin the ball very sharply, [26] and while this ability decreased in later years, he became expert at working out a batsman's weaknesses. [182] Critics considered him expert at flighting the ball; Neville Cardus wrote that "Flight was his secret. Flight and the curving line, now higher, now lower, tempting, inimical; every ball like every other ball, yet somehow unlike; each over in collusion with the others, part of a plot ..." [2] In the early part of his career, his bowling partnership with Hirst – who like Rhodes had been born in Kirkheaton – was particularly effective and established a formidable reputation. [188] As time passed, his accuracy increased to the extent that it seemed every ball landed in exactly the same place. [189] In his first five seasons, he was top of the national bowling averages twice and in second place three times, while in the first six seasons after the war, he was first four times and second once. In his whole career, he only fell outside the top 20 in the bowling averages in four seasons. [66]

Rhodes claimed that he preferred batting to bowling. [190] A right-handed batsman with a good defensive technique, Rhodes was a strong driver of the ball who scored more quickly in the earlier part of his career. Analysts maintained that Rhodes had only two or three effective shots, though his technique was good. [186] [189] Cricket writer E. W. Swanton described Rhodes as a "craftsman rather than an artist". [190] Neville Cardus, in his obituary of Rhodes, said that the Yorkshireman "made himself into a batsman by practice and hard thinking", and that while often "dour and parsimonious", he was capable of hitting out. [19] After changing to the two-eyed stance more of his runs came on the leg-side; [190] in later years, Rhodes often used his pads rather than play a shot, a tactic generally regarded as negative. [189] A feature of his batting career was his successful opening partnership with Hobbs, particularly their enterprise in running between the wickets. [190] [191] In his career, he scored over 190 in an innings five times and twice scored centuries in each innings of a match. [66] Although Rhodes's primary function varied between bowler and batsman, he recorded 16 doubles to establish a record for any cricketer. [192]

When Rhodes was involved in matches, Cardus believed that "he was not a man given to affability", showing annoyance on the field and being critical of the performances of others. [19] According to historian Anthony Woodhouse, Rhodes was a "dour, methodical and calculating cricketer". [186] Not popular in the way that a player like Hirst was popular, Rhodes "commanded respect rather than plaudits" in the words of Bowes. [193] An introvert, he did not always get along with the more extrovert Hirst, possibly owing to mutual jealousy and some of Hirst's jocular comments, and was rarely pictured smiling. [66] However, Rhodes became more relaxed and approachable in later life, particularly after his eyesight failed. [186] Cardus was surprised, after meeting him in 1950, at how much more readily Rhodes engaged in conversation, commenting that "history comes from his mouth in rivers". [189] Rhodes's obituary in The Times concluded: "Gruff or mellow, he was all of a piece, a fighting Yorkshireman, superbly gifted." [194]

Personal life

In October 1899, Rhodes, aged 22, married Sarah Elizabeth Stancliffe, who lived in Kirkheaton and was two years his senior. They lived in a farmhouse, shared with other people, at Bog Hall near Kirkheaton. [195] On 25 August 1902 his wife gave birth to a daughter, their only child. [196] Rhodes found Yorkshire's dealings with money to be ungenerous; [197] following his benefit in 1911 Yorkshire, as was their custom, paid only one-third of the money to Rhodes and kept back the rest to invest on his behalf, only paying out the interest. Rhodes considered this to be unfair; however, he was able to use the money to build a stone house at Marsh, Huddersfield, which his family moved into in the autumn of 1912. He lived there until 1956. [198]

From around 1936 Rhodes's sight began to fail, and on the outbreak of war in 1939 he was unable to take up a wartime job. [199] Eventually a specialist diagnosed glaucoma, but at that stage nothing could be done. [200] Rhodes was still able to see well enough to watch cricket and play golf, although by 1946 he was unable to read a newspaper. Another specialist was consulted in 1951 and an operation performed, but by 1952 Rhodes was completely blind. The build-up of pain led to the removal of his left eyeball in 1958. [201] In 1950, Sarah Rhodes suffered a heart attack, which limited the help she could give to her husband; she died in 1954, at age 79. Rhodes then sold his house at Marsh and moved in with his daughter and her husband, with whom he later moved to Bournemouth. [202] He continued to attend cricket matches where he was able to follow the play despite his blindness, [19] and was frequently sought out by cricketers and asked for his advice or opinion. Rhodes was given honorary life membership of Yorkshire in 1946, and of the MCC in 1949. [203] When given membership of the MCC, along with other old professionals, Rhodes reacted characteristically; rather than showing pleasure, he responded, "I don't rightly know what it means yet." [189] He died in 1973, aged 95. [1] [19]

In 2009, Rhodes was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame. [204]

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Bibliography

Wilfred Rhodes
Rhodes bowling front 3.jpg
Wilfred Rhodes bowling in 1906
Personal information
Born(1877-10-29)29 October 1877
Kirkheaton, Yorkshire, England
Died8 July 1973(1973-07-08) (aged 95)
Poole, Dorset, England
BattingRight-handed
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Role All-rounder
International information
National side
Test debut(cap  121)1 June 1899 v  Australia
Last Test3 April 1930 v  West Indies
Domestic team information
YearsTeam