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Information About

Charles Turner (cricketer)




  Nationality Australian
  Country Australia
  Country Abbrev AUS
  Name Charles Turner
  Picture Cricket_no_picpng
  Batting Style Right-hand bat
  Bowling Style Right-arm fast-medium
  Tests 17
  Test Runs 323
  Test Bat Avg 1153
  Test 100s/50s 0/0
  Test Top Score 29
  Test Balls 5,179
  Test Wickets 101
  Test Bowl Avg 1653
  Test 5s 11
  Test 10s 2
  Test Best Bowling 7/43
  Test Catches/stumpings 8/0
  FCs 155
  FC Runs 3,856
  FC Bat Avg 1554
  FC 100s/50s 2/11
  FC Top Score 103
  FC Balls 41,808
  FC Wickets 993
  FC Bowl Avg 1425
  FC 5s 102
  FC 10s 35
  FC Best Bowling 9/15
  FC Catches/stumpings 85/0
  Debut Date January 28
  Debut Year 1887
  Last Date February 4
  Last Year 1895


Charles Turner ('''Charles Thomas Biass Turner'''; born November 16 , 1862 , Bathurst , Australia ; died January 1 , 1944 , Manly, New South Wales , Australia) was a Bowler who is regarded as one of the finest ever produced by Australia.

Many batsmen who played against him considered Turner without peer, a belief supported by his first-class record - even considering the fact that he played during a period of completely uncovered pitches and containing numerous unusually wet summers both at home and in England. He bowled right-hand medium pace with a relatively long and rhythmic run-up and a beautiful delivery that never aimed to exploit even his rather limited height of five feet nine inches (175 centimetres). He could vary his pace a great deal, and combined this with a perfect length and a vicious off-break that made him unplayable after rain. This unplayability on treacherous pitches earned him the nickname "Terror" Turner.

Among the most amazing feats Turner accomplished were:


Turner's early adventures in first-class cricket were unsuccessful, but in 1886/1887, when he moved from Bathurst to Sydney to become a Banker , his skill developed to a remarkable degree with seventy first-class wickets at an amazing 7.68 runs each from just seven matches. In two games against Victoria he too eighteen wickets for 184 runs, but it was his excellence against Alfred Shaw's touring side that brought Turner fame amongst all English cricketers. In the first Test, after England were put in on a really sticky pitch, Turner was so unplayable he too six for fifteen, and in the second his combined figures were nine for 93.

The following year, Turner, with the Australian pitches already notorious for being difficult after rain, carried all before him in the wet weather of a La Niña summer, his best performances outside the Test including:


In the appalling English summer of 1888, along with . He even showed ability as a batsman, scoring a maiden century at The Oval in the first game of the tour.

After three astonishing seasons, Turner's career could only go downwards. With El Niño holding sway, the wickets in Australia in 1888/1889 were unresponsive and Turner took only 29 wickets in six games in 1888/1889, and even fewer the following season. However, still regarded as the best bowler available for English conditions, Turner did not disappoint the selectors in 1890, taking a slightly-less-imposing but still superb 179 first-class wickets (215 in all games) but being unable to break England's dominance of Test cricket at the time.

In the following few Australian seasons, Turner continued to do well even if too little cricket was played for him to equal his records of the late 1880s. In the relatively dry English summer of 1893, Turner still was Australia's leading bowler with 148 wickets at 13.63, but the absence of Ferris and business commitments were slowly taking their toll on him. When England next toured in 1894/1895, Turner took his 100th wicket and had the unique (in Test cricket) distinction of getting no less a player than Bobby Peel stumped for a pair on a sticky wicket in Sydney. His record in this Test series was, actually, his best since 1888, but two years later his banking business required him to move to Queensland , where he was not able then to continue playing cricket apart from one match for his benefit ''as late as the 1909/1910'' season - when he was 47 - that was not successful.

However, Turner continued to do service to the game in Australia as an administrator right through the early twentieth century. He commented, notably, on how greatly the game in Australia changed after the era in which he played due to a drier Climate and improved pitch preparation (and also covering of pitches in Shield matches from the 1930s), which made Australian pitches almost impossible for bowlers of his type and led to reliance on Leg Spin .


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