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Home > W. G. Grace


 

William Gilbert Grace ( July 18 , 1848 - October 23, 1915) was an English cricket player, who by his extraordinary skills made cricket perhaps the first modern spectator sport and developed most of the technique of modern batting.


1 Family

W. G. Grace was born at Downend, near Bristol. He found himself in an atmosphere charged with cricket, his father (Henry Mills Grace) and his uncle (Alfred Pocock) being as enthusiastic over the game as his elder brothers, Henry, Alfred and Edward Mifis; indeed, in E. M. Grace the family name first became famous. A younger brother, George Frederick, also added to the cricket reputation of the family. W. G. witnessed his first great match when he was hardly six years old, the occasion being a game between W. Clarke's All-England Eleven and twenty-two of West Gloucestershire.

He was married in 1873 to Miss Agnes Day. One of his sons (W. G. Grace Junior) played for two years in the Cambridge eleven (and also for Gloucestershire, London County and M.C.C.). He didn't live up to his illustrious name, averaging 15 with the bat and nearly 40 with the ball. Another son (C. B. Grace) played a few matches for London County.

2 Athletic abilities

Grace was endowed by nature with a splendid physique as well as with powers of self-restraint and determination. At the acme of his career he stood full 6 ft 2 in (1.88m), being powerfully proportioned, loose yet strong of limb.

A non-smoker, and very moderate in all matters, he kept himself in condition all year round, shooting, hunting or running with the beagles as soon as the cricket season was over.

He was also a fine runner, 440 yd (400 m) over 20 hurdles being his best distance; and it may be quoted as proof of his stamina that on 30 July 1866 he scored 224 not out for England v. Surrey, and two days later won a race in the National and Olympian Association meeting at the Crystal PalaceA huge iron and glass building, The Crystal Palace was one of the wonders of, if not the world, Britain. A rebuilt and expanded version of the building that originally housed the Great Exhibition of 1851, it stood in Sydenham from 1854 until 1936, and att.

3 First Class career

The title of champion was well earned by one who for thirty-six years ( 18651865 is a common year starting on Sunday. Events January 31 American Civil War: Confederate General Robert E. Lee becomes general-in-chief. February 17 American Civil War: Columbia, South Carolina burns as Confederate forces flee from advancing Union forc- 19001900 is the common year starting on Monday. see link for calendar) For the film, see 1900 (film). Events January January 1 Nigeria becomes British protectorate January 2 John Hay announces the Open Door Policy to promote trade with China. January 2 Chicag inclusive) was actively engaged in first-class cricket. In each of these years Grace was invited to represent the Gentlemen in their matches against the Players , and, when an AustraliaAustralia is the sixth-largest country in the world (geographically), the only one to occupy an entire continent, and the largest in the region of Australasia. Australia includes the island of Tasmania, which is an Australian State. Its neighbouring countn eleven visited England, to play for the mother country. As late as 1899Events January events January 1 End of Spanish rule in Cuba. January 1 Queens and Staten Island merge with New York City. January 3 The first known use of the word " automobile", in an editorial in the New York Times''. January 6 Lord Curzon becomes a vic he played in the first of the five international contests; in 1900 he played against the players at the Oval, scoring 58 and 3.

He averaged 39.45 at first class level, an average undoubtedly dragged down by playing into his late fifties At his peak in the 1870sEvents and Trends Franco-Prussian War ( 1870- 1871) results in the collapse of the Second French Empire and in the formation of both the French Third Republic and the German Empire. Invention of the telephone ( 1876) and phonograph ( 1877). See also the H his first-class season averages were regularly between 60 and 70, at a time where uncovered, poorly-prepared pitches meant that scores were far lower than the modern game.

At fifty-three he scored nearly 1300 runs in first-class cricket, made 100 runs and over on three different occasions and could claim an average of 42 runs. Moreover, his greatest triumphs were achieved when only the very best cricket grounds received serious attention; when, as some consider, bowlingCricket In the sport of cricket, bowling is the action of propelling the ball towards the batsman. A player skilled at bowling is called a bowler''. A single act of bowling the ball towards the batsman is called a ball or a delivery''. There are rules in was maintained at a higher standard and when all hits had to be run out. He, with his two brothers, E. M. and G. F., assisted by some fine amateurs, made Gloucestershire in one season a first-class county; and it was he who first enabled the amateurs of England to meet the paid players on equal terms and to beat them.



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