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・ Wilfred E. Griggs
・ Wilfred E. Mansur
・ Wilfred Eade Agar
・ Wilfred Edun
・ Wilfred Edwards
・ Wilfred Ellershaw
・ Wilfred Elrington
・ Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones
・ Wilfred Emory Cutshaw
・ Wilfred Ernest Young
・ Wilfred Fairclough
・ Wilfred Feinberg
・ Wilfred Fell
・ Wilfred Ferguson
・ Wilfred Fienburgh
Wilfred Flowers
・ Wilfred Fortune
・ Wilfred French
・ Wilfred Fullagar
・ Wilfred Fuller (bishop)
・ Wilfred G. Lambert
・ Wilfred George Brown
・ Wilfred Gibson
・ Wilfred Gilbert Thesiger
・ Wilfred Gordon Bigelow
・ Wilfred Graves, Jr.
・ Wilfred Greatorex
・ Wilfred Green
・ Wilfred Green (aviator)
・ Wilfred Greene, 1st Baron Greene


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Wilfred Flowers : ウィキペディア英語版
Wilfred Flowers

Wilfred Flowers (1856–1926) was a professional cricketer who played for Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club between 1877 and 1896.
==Cricket career==
born 7 December 1856 in Calverton, Nottinghamshire, England, Flowers was a slow bowler, who bowled offbreaks and a strong batsman who was one of the leading all-rounders of his day. He first played for Nottinghamshire in 1877, and established himself slowly in a very strong side despite being known to be unplayable on a sticky wicket. In 1881, however, a players’ strike devastated Nottinghamshire〔(Nottinghamshire strike )〕 and Flowers, seen as a player with less resolve than Alfred Shaw, Fred Morley, Arthur Shrewsbury, and John Selby, was approached by county officials and took advantage of the opportunity to become much more important in the redevelopment of the county.〔 Flowers took such advantage of this that in 1882 he took one hundred wickets for the first time. His batting, which had been not outstanding but valuable in an era of very low scoring, developed greatly the following year, in which Flowers became the first professional to do the double of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets. Playing for the MCC against Derbyshire, Flowers had the outstanding record of an innings of 131 and eleven wickets for eighty-seven runs.
He bettered this for the same club against Cambridge the following year, scoring 122 and taking fourteen wickets for 160 runs, and despite not doing quite so well with either bat or ball was still good enough to tour Australia with Alfred Shaw's teams in 1884–85. However, not physically strong enough for the hotter climate and drier wickets of Australia, Flowers only rarely, as when taking five for 46 in the Third Test and eight for 31 in the first match on a rain-damaged wicket, lived up to his English form. He did maintain his form well enough to tour again in 1886–87, but this time Flowers did very little worthy of his reputation. Even at county level, Flowers was increasingly overshadowed, especially in dry weather, by the physically hardier William Attewell. Nor did his batting advance during a succession of wet summers, but in the dry season of 1893 Flowers reached a four-figure run aggregate for only the second time. In the process he played an innings of 130 against the touring Australians including Charles Turner, George Giffen and Hugh Trumble, and was thus unsuccessfully picked for his last Test at Lord's, where he made 35 but was omitted in favour of Johnny Briggs who was bowling immensely better at county level.
Flowers still bowled well in 1894, but in the dry weather of 1895 his bowling lost him: in his final season of 1896 he was put on for only twenty overs.〔Note that an over the consisted of ''five balls'' rather than six〕 He did achieve the notable feat of scoring a century in his last match against Sussex.
Flowers was awarded a benefit match in 1899, but the match between Middlesex and Somerset at Lords turned out to be a financial disaster. The match was finished in just over 3 hours, making it the shortest first-class match ever played.〔Brodribb, Gerald, "Next Man In", Souvenir Press, London, 1995〕

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「Wilfred Flowers」の詳細全文を読む



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