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Schofield Haigh

England

Player profile

Full name Schofield Haigh
Born March 19, 1871, Berry Brow, Huddersfield, Yorkshire
Died February 27, 1921, Taylor Hill, Huddersfield, Yorkshire (aged 49 years 345 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Other Umpire, Coach

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 11 18 3 113 25 7.53 0 0 0 8 0
First-class 561 747 119 11713 159 18.65 4 47 299 0

Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 11 16 1294 622 24 6/11 9/99 25.91 2.88 53.9 1 1 0
First-class 561 78817 32091 2012 9/25 15.94 2.44 39.1 135 30

Career statistics
Test debut South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Feb 14-16, 1899 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at Manchester, Jul 29-31, 1912 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1895 - 1913

 Profile

Schofield Haigh was a right-arm offbreak bowler whose pace varied from medium to fast but who was always able to make the ball turn and who on sticky wickets was considered virtually unplayable. He varied his pace well, and his yorker was devastating but sparingly used. He formed a lethal partnership with George Hirst and Wilfred Rhodes which won Yorkshire four Championships in five seasons (1989-1902) and eight throughout his career. Although his batting was not rated, he was good enough to score a hundred before lunch against Nottinghamshire in 1901. In 1904 he scored 1000 runs, completing the double, and passed 100 wickets in eight other seasons. He made his Test debut in South Africa in 1898-99 as part of Lord Hawke's side, bowling unchanged in the second innings of the second Test at Cape Town to take 6 for 11 as South Africa were bowled out for 35 in 114 balls. He did not play again until two Tests against Australia in 1905, and that was followed by another tour of South Africa in 1905-06. He played against Australia once in 1909 and 1912. Well-liked by colleagues - he was dubbed "the sunshine of the Yorkshire XI" - he coached at Winchester for seven years until his premature death in 1921.
Martin Williamson

He had been in failing health for some time, but to the great body of cricketers the news of his premature death came as quite a shock. After retiring from first-class cricket he took up an appointment as coach at Winchester, and seemed to have a very pleasant time before him. A thorough sportsman, who obviously loved the game, Haigh will live in cricket history as one of the most valued members of Lord Hawke's famous Yorkshire eleven. In two of the three years--1900-02-in which Yorkshire carried off the Championship and put up such wonderful records, he was at his very best. In 1900 he divided the bowling honours with Rhodes, taking in county championship matches 145 wickets for little more than 14 runs apiece, and after a set-back in 1901 he was again at the top of his form in 1902, taking 123 wickets in purely county fixtures, and beating Rhodes in the averages. It was in 1901, when Haigh proved comparatively ineffective, that George Hirst discovered his swerve, and became the deadliest bowler of the season.

Haigh began to play cricket as a schoolboy, and when 18 joined the club at Armitage Bridge. Before long he came under the notice of Louis Hall, who at that time was in the habit at the close of each season of taking teams up to Scotland. On Hall's recommendation Haigh was engaged by the Aberdeen club, and after three years with that body he went to Perth. A little later came the turning-point of his career. He met with great success for a Scotch team against Lancashire, and the Yorkshire authorities realised that he might be a first-rate county bowler. He settled down at Leeds, and after a brilliant trial against Durham at Barnsley in 1896 he was given his first opportunity in big cricket, playing for Yorkshire against Australia at Bradford. Yorkshire lost the match by 140 runs, but in the Australians' second innings Haigh took eight wickets--five of them bowled down--and his position was established. Thenceforward till his career ended Haigh, as everyone knows, was one of Yorkshire's mainstays. A right-handed bowler, medium pace to fast, he had a good variety of speed in combination with an off-break that on sticky wickets often made him practically unplayable.

In his early days he took a great deal out of himself, finishing his delivery with a tremendous plunge, but as time went on he modified his style and economised his strength. When the conditions helped him he was beyond question one of the most difficult bowlers of his generation, but on hard, true wickets he did not rank with Hirst and Rhodes. He was first and last a county cricketer, all his best work being done for Yorkshire. He played four times for England against Australia--at Lord's and Leeds in 1905, at Lord's in 1909, and at Manchester in 1912--but these matches did not add to his reputation. Indeed, at Lord's in 1905, he proved ineffective on a wicket that was expected to suit him to a nicety. Apart from his special gifts as a bowler Haigh was a thorough cricketer--keen to a degree in the field and quite capable of making runs when they were wanted. If he had been less of a bowler he might easily have made a name for batting. In a memorable match against Surrey at Bradford in 1898 he went in tenth and scored 83, he and Hirst putting on 155 runs together. Haigh retired from the Yorkshire XI after the season of 1913.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

 Notes
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1901
"There is no nicer professional cricketer." - Pelham Warner

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Schofield Haigh
Schofield Haigh
© The Cricketer International

Jun 16, 1905

The second day of the 1905 Lord's Test
The second day of the 1905 Lord's Test
© The Lord Price Collection

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