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[VIDEOS] Scott Boland - The second man with Indigenous Australian heritage to play Test cricket for Australia

James

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I would first like to say that I am really pleased for the guy and it’s brilliant to see him making his Test debut, at the MCG on Boxing Day as well which I’m sure is a dream come true for him personally. At the age of 32 he will be pinching himself, & I’m sure he will just be enjoying this unique experience.

It has got me thinking however about Indigenous Australians and potentially limited opportunities, and whilst in some ways this is a great story for Scott Boland personally and for inclusion more widely, it could also be viewed as slightly jarring that the only Australian with Aboriginal heritage to play for Australia before this was Jason Gillespie.

Dizzy was the first man, Scott Boland is the second, but who will be the third? And the fourth? And when?

I am interested in any further insight / thoughts / discussion on this point — why is this the case, is Indigenous participation low, is this likely to change, and is anything being done within the system (and by who) to look into this?

:)
 
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Australian aboriginals dont play a lot of cricket, their main sport is Aussie rules where they are over represented. NZ Maori are the same and dont see many playing cricket as they prefer rugby.
 
Who is the first aboriginal to play for Aussies?? Stuart Clark???
I know one woman player Ashley Gardener, but not sure about her too.
 
I would first like to say that I am really pleased for the guy and it’s brilliant to see him making his Test debut, at the MCG on Boxing Day as well which I’m sure is a dream come true for him personally. At the age of 32 he will be pinching himself, & I’m sure he will just be enjoying this unique experience.

It has got me thinking however about Indigenous Australians and potentially limited opportunities, and whilst in some ways this is a great story for Scott Boland personally and for inclusion more widely, it could also be viewed as slightly jarring that the only Australian with Aboriginal heritage to play for Australia before this was Jason Gillespie.

Dizzy was the first man, Scott Boland is the second, but who will be the third? And the fourth? And when?

I am interested in any further insight / thoughts / discussion on this point — why is this the case, is Indigenous participation low, is this likely to change, and is anything being done within the system (and by who) to look into this?

:)

Eddie Gilbert should have played in the thirties - he was supposedly even quicker than Larwood - but Bradman didn’t like him.
 
Eddie Gilbert should have played in the thirties - he was supposedly even quicker than Larwood - but Bradman didn’t like him.

Never heard the story that Bradman didn't like him, can you tell us more about that.

Eddie did dismiss Bradman for a duck and was famous for that and in his first class career took 87 wickets @ 29.
 
<b>Ashes: Australia-England - Scott Boland debut in Melbourne 'huge' for hosts - Pat Cummins</b>

<I>by Geoff Lawson for the BBC.</I>

Australian Test captain Patrick Cummins arrived at his Christmas Day media appearance with a bolt from the blue, announcing that Victorian fast bowler Scott Boland would come into the team for the third Test against England at his home ground in Melbourne.

Boland will be only the second player with Indigenous Australian heritage to play for the men's Test team, after Jason Gillespie.

Faith Thomas and Ashleigh Gardner have played women's Tests for Australia, while Daniel Christian, D'Arcy Short and Hannah Darlington have played limited-overs formats. That's the entire rollcall from 144 years of national teams.

"It's huge," said Cummins. "Dizzy (Gillespie) was the first. That's huge. In Australia we have a rich history of 50,000 or 60,000 years, and it's great that's started to be reflected in our team.

"He's really excited obviously, he's dreamed to wear the baggy green, but also a packed MCG (Melbourne Cricket Ground), Boxing Day, it doesn't get any better."

Cummins will himself return after sitting out of the Adelaide Test thanks to Covid-19 restrictions, meaning that Michael Neser and Jhye Richardson will drop back to the bench. Both are being monitored by Australia's fitness staff given the quick turnaround between all five Ashes matches.

That must have been an especially tough decision to take for Richardson, who took 5-42 in the final innings to win the match for Australia.

"Jhye is pretty sore," said Cummins. "He's got a small leg injury which is nothing major, but we thought rather than risking him we'd give him a week off."

Boland, though, was already being considered before the series as an MCG specialist, given his endurance on flatter pitches of the like that Australia's two biggest cities can serve up.

"We earmarked him as a chance for here and the (fourth Test at the) SCG (Sydney Cricket Ground) in particular. We think he's really well suited. His record speaks for itself here in domestic cricket.

"Having someone fresh like him who can come in and perform straight away, were the big factors.

"The first thing you've got to wrap your head around playing at the MCG is that you're going to have to bowl a lot of overs more often than not. He does that really well. The Shield match out here they won against New South Wales I think he bowled 50 overs for the game.

"Pace stays up, he's always at you, he bowls really well to left-handers.

"He's not a huge swing bowler, there's not a lot of swing at the MCG, but he asks a lot of questions around that fourth stump, off stump, knee roll, little bit of nibble each way, heavy ball. I think he's just really well suited here."

In contrast to England's agonising about which bowling attack to field, Cummins said there was no concern in Australia's camp about the changes that had been made, or the relative experience of the players.

"Although Nes made his debut last game, Jhye was in after a few years," he said.

"Scotty's making his debut this game. We felt really confident with how much domestic cricket they've played over the last few years that they could come in and be Test ready. There was a little bit of worry going into Adelaide, but we saw how well Jhye and Nes bowled."

Boland's gain may have come thanks to the loss of a Victorian team-mate, James Pattinson, who recently retired from national duties aged only 31 after waiting in the wings during Australia's last Test summer without getting a game.

A swing bowler with serious pace, Pattinson is still a talent prodigious enough to have deserved more than his 21 Tests. Instead he is playing Big Bash cricket while his former team-mates push towards an Ashes win. But Cummins said that Pattinson was content.

"I think he knew that in a five-Test Ashes he was just about next cab off the rank. We always thought there would be an opportunity for him. But he knew all that. He weighed up his decision and he made the right one for him. He's happy."
 
His first wicket today:

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Was Dan Christian aboriginal as well?
 
Yes he is Aboriginal too, but only 2 players have played test cricket.
 
Dizzy was a absolute gun. Had it all, genuine pace, skill set, and control, just had no luck with injuries.
 
Never heard the story that Bradman didn't like him, can you tell us more about that.

Eddie did dismiss Bradman for a duck and was famous for that and in his first class career took 87 wickets @ 29.

Didn’t Bradman say Gilbert was a chucker? Not quite the same as dislike I guess.

Also against him was the law that as an indigenous man he needed papers to leave Qld.
 
Dizzy was a absolute gun. Had it all, genuine pace, skill set, and control, just had no luck with injuries.

I saw Gillespie’s stats recently and was very surprised that he had played relatively few Tests in his career compared with some of his peers.
 
I saw Gillespie’s stats recently and was very surprised that he had played relatively few Tests in his career compared with some of his peers.

What are you talking about, only 3-4 fast bowlers have played more tests than Gillespie for Australia.
 
What are you talking about, only 3-4 fast bowlers have played more tests than Gillespie for Australia.

With the amount of Test cricket that gets played, I don’t view 71 as a huge number of Tests. Also, his peers aren’t just other Australians.
 
With the amount of Test cricket that gets played, I don’t view 71 as a huge number of Tests. Also, his peers aren’t just other Australians.

Still don't get it. What bowlers are you talking about, in Gillespie's career only four bowlers in the world played more tests than him.

Which players are you talking about?.
 
Boland, who hails from the Gulidjan tribe in western Victoria state, is the first Indigenous man to play for Australia since Jason Gillespie, who won 71 caps and played his last Test 15 years ago.

Four Indigenous players have won Test caps for Australia -- Boland, Gillespie, Faith Thomas and Ashleigh Gardner.
 
I saw Gillespie’s stats recently and was very surprised that he had played relatively few Tests in his career compared with some of his peers.

He was injury prone though. Remember him as a club pro in our League around the Millennium, was a great sight in full flow, on that occasion it was a ding dong battle against kiwis Nathan Astle.
 
He looked quite ordinary but given his track record at the ground I can understand why Australia picked him.

I hope he gets a few in the second innings because its probably his last test match.
 
Didn’t Bradman say Gilbert was a chucker? Not quite the same as dislike I guess.

Also against him was the law that as an indigenous man he needed papers to leave Qld.

Bradman killed Gilbert's career with that talk because Gilbert made him look silly.

The Don was human and had faults. Australia at the time had a big anglo protestant v irish catholic split and the catholic players also felt Don was often prejudiced against them (NSW cricket didn't employ a single catholic until 1979!). He was not universally popular as captain. I can't imagine Don being impressed an aboriginal fast bowler kept getting him out/knocking the bat from his hand as the legend goes.
 
Bradman killed Gilbert's career with that talk because Gilbert made him look silly.

The Don was human and had faults. Australia at the time had a big anglo protestant v irish catholic split and the catholic players also felt Don was often prejudiced against them (NSW cricket didn't employ a single catholic until 1979!). He was not universally popular as captain. I can't imagine Don being impressed an aboriginal fast bowler kept getting him out/knocking the bat from his hand as the legend goes.

You do know that Bradman scored 233 the next time he played Gilbert, I think you are making things up a bit.

You say Bradman wasn't impressed by Gilbert but Bradman said he was the fastest bowler he ever faced including Larwood.
 
You do know that Bradman scored 233 the next time he played Gilbert, I think you are making things up a bit.

You say Bradman wasn't impressed by Gilbert but Bradman said he was the fastest bowler he ever faced including Larwood.

And yet the NSW team complained to authorities right after the match where Gilbert made Don look silly (knocked his bat out, knocked him over with a bouncer, dismissed him) and tried to have him banned. Don being the big wheel in the team by that time, it would never have happened if Don didn't want it to.

There followed a period where Gilbert slowed down & was forced to try and change his action. Maybe that's when Don scored big.

By 1936 when Gilber played his last Shield games he was bowling quick again with his old action & saw off the Don for 31, while taking one of a few fifers that season.
 
Token gesture for a mediocre cricketer

Debuts with very, very similar stats to another mature debutant this summer (Neser) but one of them is a token selection? Do tell...

Both good state level bowlers. Might have a good test or 2 in them. But yeah, clearly not frontliners.
 
Lol what a joke.

Most of these Australian "Aboriginals" are just white people trying to claims the smallest drop of Aboriginal blood that maybe in their DNA lol. This guy is just white, nothing more.
 
Lol what a joke.

Most of these Australian "Aboriginals" are just white people trying to claims the smallest drop of Aboriginal blood that maybe in their DNA lol. This guy is just white, nothing more.

You get to decide who is indigenous and who isn't now?

Is there a specific shade or tone where someone becomes aboriginal enough for you?
 
Lol what a joke.

Most of these Australian "Aboriginals" are just white people trying to claims the smallest drop of Aboriginal blood that maybe in their DNA lol. This guy is just white, nothing more.

Scott Boland’s grandfather is/was an Aboriginal Australian, and in many definitions a grandparent would be a close relative.
 
Bradman killed Gilbert's career with that talk because Gilbert made him look silly.

The Don was human and had faults. Australia at the time had a big anglo protestant v irish catholic split and the catholic players also felt Don was often prejudiced against them (NSW cricket didn't employ a single catholic until 1979!). He was not universally popular as captain. I can't imagine Don being impressed an aboriginal fast bowler kept getting him out/knocking the bat from his hand as the legend goes.

Yet there was at least three Catholics who Captained NSW during Bradman's career
 
Boland batted quite competently this evening I thought. Another chance for him to cause some problems with the ball tomorrow.
 
Big wicket of Hameed before the close to expose the nightwatchman and then knocks over Leach! — well done to him.
 
Just shows how strong the aussie domestic setup is even their run of the mill domestic journeymen are very good or the England batting is just so woeful
 
Update for you. Mediocre cricketer now 2 wickets for zero runs 2nd innings.

Rubbish cricketer that will get eaten alive by better batsmen soon enough.

Taking wickets against a capitulated team says nothing about hsi 130kph pies
 
Rubbish cricketer that will get eaten alive by better batsmen soon enough.

Taking wickets against a capitulated team says nothing about hsi 130kph pies

Don't think so, he probably won't get another test. He was bought in to do exactly what he did.
 
Scott Boland absolutely running riot over England. With the wicket of Root, he's got 4 wickets and conceded 5 runs in the 16 balls he's bowled in the 2nd innings.
 
Rubbish cricketer that will get eaten alive by better batsmen soon enough.

Taking wickets against a capitulated team says nothing about hsi 130kph pies

Lol.

Salty chips there bro?

4 wickets for 5...

Maybe you're just a really bad judge of a cricketer.
 
Just shows how strong the aussie domestic setup is even their run of the mill domestic journeymen are very good or the England batting is just so woeful

England are bad.

But Boland is just doing what he has done on this ground every single home domestic match since they relaid the pitch... He knows what he's doing.
 
6 for 5! More wickets than runs!!!!

He's gone from someone probably playing just a single one off Test picked for home ground knowledge & a good couple of seasons... to now he'll probably make the next touring party & has put him self neck & neck with RIchardson as next quick picked.

He's 32 so there's more future for Richardson but congratulations Boland. Fine performance- one that is the very definition of NOT mediocre.
 
4 overs. 1 maiden. 6 wickets. 5 runs.

Single-handedly authored the most humiliating session in Test cricket for England in a long time, while simultaneously delivering the Ashes for his country, all on his debut on home soil. This will be remembered for a long while.
 
Phenomenal spell. Reminds me of the great Ryan Harris with his action release
 
He is a trundler without skills.I have seen him before in ODIs he averages 45 with economy rate of 6.
He is not good enough.England just made him look unplayable.
 
He is a trundler without skills.I have seen him before in ODIs he averages 45 with economy rate of 6.
He is not good enough.England just made him look unplayable.

He would get into the test XI for most countries as a 3rd seamer.
 
He is a trundler without skills.I have seen him before in ODIs he averages 45 with economy rate of 6.
He is not good enough.England just made him look unplayable.

Mohammad SIraj wasn't exactly good in the LOI when he started. Many test bowlers like Anderson sucked in one dayers. Broad smashed for six sixes. How can you correlate that with Test performance?
 
Mohammad SIraj wasn't exactly good in the LOI when he started. Many test bowlers like Anderson sucked in one dayers. Broad smashed for six sixes. How can you correlate that with Test performance?

His last 7 ODI he has 11 wickets, avg 31 at econ 5.5 across WI, Asia & SA, no matches in Oz- is decent. That does require a decent range of skills.
 
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Truly a remarkable spell of fast-bowling from him in the second innings.

I hate playing the 'he reminds me of' game but in this case I feel like its almost impossible to look past the similarities to Peter Siddle and Ryan Harris. Besides purely from an aesthetic view-point, he seems to have many of the same qualities that made those guys successful.

I know it will be tough for him to get many games unless one of the main three front-line seamers are injured, but I really hope he gets to play more test cricket for Australia.
 
After a nasty fall Boland has been cleared of any injury and is available to bowl for the Australians
 
More excellent Test-class bowling in the morning session today from Scotty Boland. Good to hear that he is not badly injured after his fall as well.
 
Today, his bowling figures again… by far the best on the team.

England need to figure out a way of how they are going to play Scotty Boland!!
 
<b>Fox Sports Cricket: ‘Is he now the bowling attack leader?’: The crazy numbers behind Boland’s brilliance.</b>

Scott Boland has officially had one of the best statistical starts to Test cricket in the history of the game - and proven he’s no flash in the pan.

Australia’s cult hero has picked up at the SCG where left off at the MCG and once again terrorised England’s batsmen.

Boland took 6-7 in the second innings of the Boxing Day Test, finishing with match figures of 7-55 on debut, and in Sydney he’s returned 4-36 from England’s first dig.

It means in the three innings of Test cricket Boland has bowled in, he’s taken 11 wickets at a staggering 8.27 from 31.1 overs.

No bowler in Test history has taken more wickets at a better average.

In his first 70 balls of Test cricket, Boland went 0-38. In his past 111 deliveries he’s taken 11-51.

The 32-year-old who toiled away in Sheffield Shield for over a decade before getting his chance now has more wickets this series than any of the Englishmen.

“It sends a message to every medium pacer around Australia,” Kerry O’Keeffe said on the Fox Cricket commentary.

“If you work to get a command of line and length and accuracy and just a little bit off the seam, you can wear a baggy green, you can play for you country.

“Even know you’re 128kph or 130kph... whatever road blocks are in front of you, disregard them because you could be Scotty Boland.

“Because he was seen as an average Sheffield Shield player who just worked hard and beavered away on flat decks and did nothing remarkable.

“And then suddenly he got his opportunity at the MCG, his home deck, took 6-7 and people said maybe he’s just an MCG guy. Here he’s come to the SCG and been offered a graveyard because of the slowness of the pitch, he’s taken 4-36 and when he was off the field yesterday the attack lacked sting.

“Is he now the (bowling) attack leader at 131kph?”

Co-Commentator Mark Howard then asked O’Keeffe if Boland should be picked for Australia’s tour of Pakistan in March, with injured fast bowler Josh Hazlewood expected to be fit by then.

“I think he goes anywhere given his command of the basics,” O’Keeffe said.

“You don’t want bowlers who give batsmen angles to work with, he gives batsmen no angles, they can’t work him through the gully because he doesn’t give them width, they can’t take him through the leg side because he doesn’t bowl them down there.

“He condemns them to half front foot shots and does a little bit off the string. Australian cricket has produced a lot of these sort of bowlers over the years and they never got an opportunity.

“Luke Feldman played for Queensland, year in year out returned good number but they always thought ‘No you’re not quite the standard’. Scotty Boland represents that breed of fast bowler that if they’d been given a chance they may have cut it at this level.

“Because he’s been given the opportunity, seized it and made people aware that you might look pedestrian in certain circumstances but when you get on a pitch that helps you, you can make a difference and Scott Boland has.”

Boland’s performance has sent the Sydney crowd into raptures and set social media alight.

— — —
 
Fleming talking about Boland's release point:

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Its unfortunate that he plays his domestic on a flat australian wicket. He is incredibly accurate and a fair bit quicker than the likes of abbas/philander and a fair bit taller as well.

These kinda bowlers should be selected for helpful surfaces, England Ashes etc. where they can wreak havoc.
 
Its unfortunate that he plays his domestic on a flat australian wicket. He is incredibly accurate and a fair bit quicker than the likes of abbas/philander and a fair bit taller as well.

These kinda bowlers should be selected for helpful surfaces, England Ashes etc. where they can wreak havoc.

I think what got him selected was he proved he can bowl long, accurate, tight spells on any wicket.

But the last 3 seasons or so when MCG went to the new, lively style drop in he just became a wicket taking machine on the grassy, green version of the MCG.

Agree he is the type of bowler who usually does well in England. He's almost identical in pace & height to Angus Fraser, who is also similar enough to Robinson, Tremlett etc etc. Stephen Finn was another but sometimes a yard quicker.
 
Its unfortunate that he plays his domestic on a flat australian wicket. He is incredibly accurate and a fair bit quicker than the likes of abbas/philander and a fair bit taller as well.

These kinda bowlers should be selected for helpful surfaces, England Ashes etc. where they can wreak havoc.

If he does go to Pakistan I think that will decide if he's going to be a regular or a squad kind of player.
 
Even if Scott Boland never again sets foot on a Test arena – a scenario that would seem unthinkable given his stunning introduction to this summer's Ashes contest – he is guaranteed a permanent place on the game's all-time honour board.

Boland finished the Vodafone Series with 18 wickets at an average of 9.55, Australia's third-most potent bowler of the campaign despite not playing the first two Tests and with more scalps than any rival in the England line-up.

In the process, Boland repeatedly rewrote 145 years of Test history, most conspicuously by becoming just the second men's player in that time to complete three Tests with 18 wickets or more and an average in single digits.

However, as Australia continued celebrating their Ashes triumph, captain Pay Cummins offered no immediate guarantee the 32-year-old would figure in Australia's upcoming Test campaigns to Pakistan (February-March) and Sri Lanka (June).

While COVID-19 protocols dictate teams travel with larger-than-usual squads to ensure ready availability of like-for-like substitutes, the even stricter nature of Australia's security 'bubble' for their first Pakistan visit in almost 25 years should ensure they keep squad numbers as lean as possible.

The recent form of pace-bowling allrounders Cameron Green and Mitchell Marsh is also likely to squeeze the number of genuine quicks on those tours, with Australia's most recent Test campaigns on the subcontinent (India and Bangladesh in 2017) each featuring just three genuine quicks.

As cricket.com.au reported earlier this month, pitches in Pakistan are unlikely to resemble the spin-friendly tracks in India and Bangladesh, or even those in the UAE where Australia took four specialist fast bowlers for their 2018 series against Pakistan.

But with Josh Hazlewood certain to return to the reckoning alongside Cummins and Mitchell Starc after missing the last four Ashes Tests with a side strain, Boland will be vying with fellow seamers Jhye Richardson and Michael Neser if selectors decide four or more pace bowlers are required.

"It's still a bit of water to go under the bridge," Cummins said in the aftermath of Australia's fifth Test win in Hobart about selection calls ahead.

"Joshy Hazlewood is one of the best bowlers in the world, so it's going to be pretty hard for him not to have a place in our starting eleven.

"But international cricket is hard work, you need to build a squad of fast bowlers and I feel like we've got that between Jhye, Scott and Michael Neser as well.

"We're really well-suited ... I'm lucky as captain, plenty of options."

With the best strike rate of any Australia bowler in their first three Tests (minimum 10 wickets), Boland's record of a breakthrough every 27 deliveries suggests he adapted to the elite format as seamlessly as his unruffled on-field demeanour would suggest.

But the Victoria veteran has revealed the step-up to five-day cricket has taken a toll, and it wasn't only his domination of England's best batters – he dismissed rival skipper Joe Root four times in six innings – that surprised him.

"I thought it was obviously going to be (physically) harder than Shield cricket, especially with the extra day but I found it mentally really hard," he said prior to the final Ashes Test starting in Hobart.

"I've been getting to the end of the game and I've been just drained.

"I don't feel like I've been able to switch off as well as I've been able to in Shield cricket, whereas when we're batting in a Shield game, I can sort of relax.

"But I just haven't been able to relax at all during the games, I've been pretty much nervous the whole time.

"I'm not sure if it's shown but I very much have been, and I definitely didn't expect to take wickets the way I have so far."

Regardless of whether Boland adds to the three unforgettable Test appearances that will surely define his career, one fact remains glaringly apparent.

If the humble, quietly spoken 32-year-old known to most of his teammates as 'Barrel' is to sit comfortably alongside the cohort of cricket luminaries with whom he already shares an exalted place, he's going to need a more flamboyant nickname.

That's because, among the roll-call of honours earned by Boland – a descendant of the Gulidjan nation in western Victoria – is recognition as the second player of Indigenous heritage to represent Australia's men's Test team after Kamilaroi man Jason 'Dizzy' Gillespie.

It's unlikely he will emulate Gillespie by also becoming just the second Australia nightwatchman to post a Test double-hundred, although he has already slipped into that role despite his belief the team's usual batter shield, Nathan Lyon, would be reluctant to surrender the unsought-after job.

"It got raised on day one of (my) first Test, when Nathan asked me," Boland recalled of the Melbourne Test where England were bowled out late on day one, and before he was unexpectedly asked to replace Lyon in the role on the second night at Hobart.

"I was like 'yeah, I can do it if you like' but then he said 'no, you can put your feet up ... I'll go and do it'.

"I don't think (he'd give it up).

"I think he's given it up for New South Wales, but I think he's at home going out there in the Test matches."

Having received his Baggy Green Cap from Hazlewood on Boxing Day at the MCG, Boland became (at age 32 years 259 days) the oldest fast bowler to debut for Australia in Tests since 34-year-old Colin 'Funky' Miller.

However, while Miller - who rose to Test ranks on Australia's most recent visit to Pakistan in 1998 – did share the new ball with Glenn McGrath in his maiden series, he reverted to bowling off-spin for the bulk of his overs.

There has been no suggestion Boland is considering adding spin to his bowling repertoire in the month before the Pakistan touring party departs, in a bid to further bolster his selection prospects.

Upon claiming his 10th wicket in the second Ashes Test at the SCG (then average 8.72), Boland supplanted Englishmen Charles 'Father' Marriott (8.72) and Fred 'Nutty' Martin (10.07) as bowlers boasting the lowest averages with a minimum double-figure wickets tally.

Like Boland, both those men received Test caps late in their cricket journeys which explains why they played so few matches and therefore finished their bowling days with such low averages.

Marriott was 37 when named for his first Test at The Oval in 1933, having already served on the western front in World War I where he was injured then gassed, and returned to England suffering from shellshock that left him sensitive to exposure to bright light.

Having studied at Cambridge and embarked on a career as a modern languages teacher, Marriott's cricket duties were restricted to school holidays and he played just one Test (taking 11-96) before retiring and then serving as an anti-aircraft gunner in World War II.

Martin was one of eight children born into an ironmongering family on London's outreaches, and his Test call-up came at the comparatively spry age of 29 after a lengthy county cricket apprenticeship with Kent.

The 6-50 and 6-52 he snared in the 1890 Ashes Test at The Oval saw him become the only bowler to capture a pair of five-fors on debut until Bob Massie's Lord's miracle 82 years later, but the only other international match he played after that was an 'unofficial' Test in South Africa in 1892.

That game was retrospectively awarded Test status after Martin's death aged 60 in 1921, causing his bowling average 'blow out' from 8.5 to 10.07.

And the only Test bowler to have captured at least 18 wickets in his first three Tests at a lower average than Boland's current 9.55 is former Australia seamer Charles 'Terror' Turner whose return after a trio of matches was 29 at 8.55.

While there are reported similarities in Boland's easy, rhythmic approach to the crease and his ability to extract sharp movement and subtly change pace, nobody has yet described his action as "poetry" or declared his victims were "skittled by a sonnet" as was written about Turner.

Boland will also be hopeful his Test tenure is not ended in similarly discourteous fashion to the 'Terror' who, after flattening England at the SCG with figures of 3-18 and 4-33 thereby dragging Australia to the brink of an Ashes triumph in 1894-95, was dumped by selectors for the next match.

He never again represented his country.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/sco...akistan-ashes-best-average-england/2022-01-18
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">25 wickets in five Tests, at a touch over 10 apiece. <br><br>Watch how Scott Boland's bowling average has progressed since his debut! &#55357;&#56521; <a href="https://t.co/nrMzHAQB0I">pic.twitter.com/nrMzHAQB0I</a></p>— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) <a href="https://twitter.com/cricketcomau/status/1605730589809774595?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 22, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Very impressed. Looks tailor made for English conditions and the Dukes ball.

He'll not set the pulses racing with his speed but he constantly asks questions of the batsmen with his immacculate control over length.

Should start ahead of Starc in the Ashes.
 
Solid Bowler

this guy alone will take the heap of the wickets against Pakistan this winter
 
Such a clever bowler.

Reminds me of Mohammad Asif the way he uses subtle changes of seam and wrist position.
 
Such a clever bowler.

Reminds me of Mohammad Asif the way he uses subtle changes of seam and wrist position.

Seam positions as he setup Virat Kohli (Twitter source)

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Such a clever bowler.

Reminds me of Mohammad Asif the way he uses subtle changes of seam and wrist position.

Asif's pace was much less in comparison

Boland is a tank, I recon he can clock 147+ in white ball cricket for regular spells. Plus hitting the length with his height gives him much more natural bounce
 
I dread seeing him bowling to Pakistan in the Test series.
 
I dread seeing him bowling to Pakistan in the Test series.

Once Cummins/Starc knock off the top order with their opening spell, Boland will eat up the middle and lower order.
 
Mighty impressive. Great control, judicious use of the crease and an ability to bowl right ball at the right time
 
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