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Joseph Emile Patrick McMaster (16 March 1861 in Gilford, County Down, Ireland – 7 June 1929 in London) was a cricketer whose Test and first-class career consisted of a single match. Educated at Harrow, McMaster was one of several club cricketers who were selected for an under-strength England team that toured South Africa in 1888-89. He played as a batsman in most of the provincial matches, none of which was first-class, with a highest score of 34 not out against South Western Districts.〔(South Western Districts v R.G. Warton's XI 1888-89 )〕 He was selected for the second and final Test match, in Cape Town, starting on 25 March 1889. England batted first, scoring 292, with McMaster, batting at number nine, making a first-ball duck. He did not bowl in South Africa's two innings of 47 and 43, with Johnny Briggs taking 15 for 28; the match ended on the second day.〔(South Africa v England, Cape Town 1888-89 )〕 Two seasons later he umpired three first-class matches in South Africa.〔(Emile McMaster as umpire )〕 Cricinfo refers to McMaster as Joseph, whereas CricketArchive refers to him as Emile. ==See also== * List of Test cricketers born in non-Test playing nations 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Joseph McMaster」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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