Barry Knight (cricketer)

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Barry Knight
Personal information
Full name Barry Rolfe Knight
Born (1938-02-18) 18 February 1938 (age 86)
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
International information
National side
Career statistics
Competition Tests First-class
Matches 29 379
Runs scored 812 13336
Batting average 26.19 25.69
100s/50s 2/– 12/66
Top score 127 165
Balls bowled 5377 57813
Wickets 70 1089
Bowling average 31.75 24.06
5 wickets in innings 45
10 wickets in match 8
Best bowling 4/38 8/69
Catches/stumpings 14/– 263/–
Source: [1]

Barry Knight (born Barry Rolfe Knight, 18 February 1938)[1] is a former English cricketer, who played in twenty nine Tests for England from 1961 to 1969.

Cricket correspondent Colin Bateman remarked, "a flamboyant cricketer... [Knight] was an elegant middle-order batsman and a bowler with a sharp turn of speed who never appeared to run out of energy".[1]

Life and career

Born 18 February 1938, Chesterfield, Derbyshire, Knight was a fast bowling all-rounder, doing the cricketer's double (1,000 runs and 100 wickets in a season) four times, including the fastest in modern times, (two and a half months). He won the World Single Wicket Title at Lord's in 1964.

Knight made his county cricket debut with Essex in May 1955, leaving them at the end of the 1966 season for financial reasons to join Leicestershire.[1] He emigrated to Australia at the end of the 1969 season, ending his career whilst still an England cricketer. He took 100 wickets in four seasons, and scored a thousand runs five times. He accomplished the double in each season from 1962 to 1965.[1] In 1959, he missed the honour by a mere five runs. Together with R.A.G. Luckin he jointly holds the record stand for the Essex's sixth wicket, 206, scored against Middlesex at Brentwood in 1962. He also made his highest first-class score, 165, in this match. They share this record with J.W.T. Douglas and J. O'Connor, who achieved the same feat against Gloucestershire in 1923.

His longest run at Test match level was the first six Tests he played in India and Pakistan in 1961/62. He was recalled nine times in a stop-start type of international career, but toured Australia twice in the 1962–63 and 1965-66 Ashes series, where he was a support bowler and lower order batsman.[1] His 240 run, sixth wicket partnership, with Peter Parfitt against New Zealand in 1963, stood for almost forty years, until Graham Thorpe and Andrew Flintoff put the same opposition to the sword, with their partnership of 281 in Christchurch in March 2002.[1][2]

He was the first professional coach in Australia, starting in 1970 at an indoor facility in Sydney.[1] He was also the first coach to use video analysis, which led to his coaching over the past forty years over twenty Test players, including Allan Border, Steve and Mark Waugh, Brett and Shane Lee, Adam Gilchrist, John Dyson, Andrew Hilditch and many New South Wales players and is coaching some upcoming players. He has coached over 20,000 young cricketers since 1970, and is still involved in school holiday programmes, and with Mosman Cricket Club in Sydney. He holds an ACB level 3 coaching certificate, and also an MCC (UK) coaching certificate.

References

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