Bob Crisp

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Bob Crisp
Crisp in 1935
Personal information
Full name
Robert James Crisp
Born(1911-05-28)28 May 1911
Calcutta, Bengal, British India
Died3 March 1994(1994-03-03) (aged 82)
Colchester, Essex, England
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast
RoleBowler
International information
National side
Test debut15 June 1935 v England
Last Test28 February 1936 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1929–1931Rhodesia
1931–1936Western Province
1938Worcestershire
Career statistics
Competition Test FC
Matches 9 62
Runs scored 123 888
Batting average 10.25 13.05
100s/50s 0/0 0/0
Top score 35 45
Balls bowled 1,429 10,968
Wickets 20 276
Bowling average 37.35 19.88
5 wickets in innings 1 21
10 wickets in match 0 4
Best bowling 5/99 9/64
Catches/stumpings 3/– 27/–
Source: Cricket Archive, 21 December 2009

Robert James Crisp DSO, MC (28 May 1911 – 3 March 1994) was a South African cricketer who played in nine Test matches between 1935 and 1936. He appeared for Rhodesia, Western Province, Worcestershire and South Africa. Though his Test bowling average lay over 37.00, Crisp had a successful first-class cricket career, with 276 wickets at 19.88.[1] He is the only bowler in first-class cricket to have taken four wickets in four balls more than once.[2][3]

He went on to a career in journalism and writing, publishing several accounts of his career in World War II and earning a reputation as an adventurer.

Cricket career[edit]

Domestic debut[edit]

Crisp was born in Calcutta, Bengal in British India. He made sporadic appearances for Rhodesia between 1929 and 1931, taking only seven wickets before moving to Western Province for the 1931–32 season.[4] He took 33 wickets that season at 14.93, including an eight-wicket haul against Griqualand West.[4][2] He took three more five-wicket hauls in his 26 wicket-haul during the 1932–33 season, and scalped 27 more batsman in the 1933–34 season, including a career best 9/64 for Western Province.[2][4]

England tour[edit]

Crisp toured England in 1935, taking 107 wickets in all at 19.58. He took 5/99 at Old Trafford for South Africa, to help earn his team their first victory in England.[2] This was one of eight five-wicket hauls on the tour.[4] Thirteen of those wickets came in his five Test matches, at 34.15.[5] He returned to South Africa to take nine expensive wickets at 45.33 – seven of these in four Test matches against Australia before returning to England once more and taking a four-wicket haul in a first-class match that summer.[4][5] He toured Ceylon and Malaya with Sir Julien Cahn's XI in the 1936–37 season, taking six wickets in the first-class match against Ceylon, before returning to England once more in 1938 to take 44 wickets for Worcestershire including a spell of 5/0.[2][4]

World War II and later life[edit]

Crisp served during World War II in the 3rd Royal Tank Regiment, later writing two books documenting his experiences: The Gods Were Neutral and Brazen Chariots, the latter of which is considered one of the classic memoirs of tank warfare. These books covered his combat during the early part of the war. The Gods Were Neutral describes the British retreat in Greece in the spring of 1941. Brazen Chariots covers the period from the summer of 1941 through Crisp's participation in Operation Crusader, up to his wounding. He was decorated for his bravery during the North African campaign and after being wounded there, nearly died several times from shrapnel in his skull as well as subsequent infection.[2] Bernard Montgomery, commanding, intervened to restrict Crisp's decorations given the latter's disrespect for authority.[citation needed] Crisp ended the war with a Military Cross, Distinguished Service Order, and four "Mentioned in Dispatches".[6]

Crisp was also noted for his womanising, "crooning in the nightclubs" of Alexandria and his wide-ranging travel – including climbing Mount Kilimanjaro (he is the only Test cricketer to have climbed it twice) and swimming Loch Lomond.[7] He went on to a career as a journalist, writing for Wisden and several newspapers.[2] He helped found Drum for black South Africans, sailed Greece, farmed minks in England and wrote for the East Anglian Daily Times.[6]

During the 1970s, Crisp was diagnosed with cancer and responded by walking around Crete for a year, supporting himself by selling his account to the Sunday Express.[6] He remained outspoken on apartheid, advocating "a federation of semi-autonomous states, black and white" and arguing that "nothing else is feasible". The end of segregation "startled" him. He lived to see South Africa reintegrated into the international Test scene before dying in 1994.[2]

Books[edit]

Crisp wrote a number of books, including:

  • The Gods Were Neutral: A British Tank Officer's Very Personal Account of the Ill-Fated Greek Campaign in WWII, 1959 OCLC 5926883
  • Brazen Chariots: An Account of Tank Warfare in the Western Desert, November–December 1941, 1959, ISBN 978-0-393-32712-0
  • The Outlanders: The Men Who Made Johannesburg, 1964, OCLC 829366181
  • Zen and the Art of Donkey Maintenance, 2015, Bloomsbury ISBN 978-1-4482-1523-2 compiled from his travel journalism serialised in the Daily Express in the 1960s and 1970s.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Player Profile: Bob Crisp". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 19 December 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Firth, David (December 2009). "Survival of the fastest". Wisden Cricketer. 7 (4). Wisden: 14.
  3. ^ "Vijay Cricket's darkest day". ESPN Cricinfo. 3 March 2006. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "First-class Bowling in Each Season by Bob Crisp". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  5. ^ a b "Test Bowling in Each Season by Bob Crisp". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  6. ^ a b c "Player Profile: Bob Crisp". CricInfo. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  7. ^ Frindall, Bill (2009). Ask Bearders. BBC Books. p. 135. ISBN 978-1-84607-880-4.

External links[edit]