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South Africa players and officials - select an initial letter:
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Reggie Schwarz

South Africa

Player profile

Full name Reginald Oscar Schwarz
Born May 4, 1875, Lee, London, England
Died November 18, 1918, Etaples, France (aged 43 years 198 days)
Major teams South Africa, Middlesex, Transvaal
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak
Education St Paul's School; Cambridge University

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 6s Ct St
Tests 20 35 8 374 61 13.85 0 1 1 18 0
First-class 125 192 24 3798 102 22.60 1 20 107 0

Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 20 31 2639 1417 55 6/47 7/89 25.76 3.22 47.9 4 2 0
First-class 125 13553 7000 398 8/55 17.58 3.09 34.0 25 3

Career statistics
Test debut South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Jan 2-4, 1906 scorecard
Last Test Australia v South Africa at Lord's, Jul 15-17, 1912 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span 1901 - 1914

 Profile

Reggie Schwarz was one of the men who helped to put South African cricket on the world map. Educated at St Paul's School in London, he was an ordinary cricketer who played a few times for Middlesex before emigrating to South Africa. He returned with the 1904 South African side, and learned the art of bowling the googly from BJT Bosanquet, passing the knowledge on to his team-mates. While others embraced the googly into their repertoire, Schwarz used it as his stock delivery, relying on the ball picking up speed off the pitch and lifting sharply, often to packed leg-side fields. In 1904 he headed the bowling averages with 65 wickets at 18.26, and did so again in 1907 with 137 wickets at 11.70. he also enjoyed success in Australia in 1910-11, with 59 wickets at 25.00, including 5 for 102 and 6 for 47 in the first and fifth Tests at Sydney. Before emigrating to South Africa he played three times for England at rugby as a half-back, and won a Blue at Cambridge in 1893. A quiet man, he died of Spanish Influenza on the Western Front seven days after the Armistice in 1918.
Martin Williamson

Wisden obituary
Major Schwarz, as every one knows, was famous as a slow bowler. Few men did so much to establish the reputation of South African cricket. He learnt the game in England and played for Middlesex before going to South Africa. In those early days, however, he did not make any great mark. His fame began when he returned to this country with the South African team of 1904. Studying very carefully the method of B. J. T. Bosanquet, he acquired, and afterwards carried to a high standard, the art of bowling off-breaks with, to all appearance, a leg-break action. He did very well in 1904, but his success that year was only a foretaste of far greater things to come. In the brilliant tour of 1907 he and Vogler and G. A. Faulkner raised South African cricket to the highest pitch it has ever reached. He was less successful than his two comrades in the Test Matches against England, but for the whole tour he was easily first in bowling, taking 143 wickets at a cost of 11½ runs each. He proved rather disappointing in Australia, and in the Triangular Tournament in this country in 1912 he failed. Before going to South Africa Schwarz was an International half-back at Rugby football, playing against Scotland in 1899 and against Wales and Ireland two seasons later. He also played for Cambridge against Oxford in 1893. He was born on May 4, 1875, and was educated at St. Paul's School. Inasmuch as he always made the ball turn from the off and had no leg-break Schwarz was not in the strict sense of the word a googly bowler, and was in this respect inferior to his colleagues Vogler and Faulkner. Still, when at his best, he was a truly formidable opponent, his accuracy of length in the season of 1907, in combination with such a big break, being extraordinary.

The writer of the obituary notice in the Times said: Personally `Reggie' Schwarz was a man of exceptional charm, and his untimely death will bring real sorrow to his hosts of friends in many parts of the world. He had the great gift of absolute modesty and self-effacement. No one meeting him casually would ever have guessed the renown he had won in the world of sport. Quiet, almost retiring, in manner; without the least trace of side; and with a peculiarly attractive voice and way of speaking, Schwarz impelled and commanded the affection even of acquaintances. During his years in South Africa he was secretary to Sir Abe Bailey -- a post which his social gifts enabled him to fill with remarkable success. Before coming to Europe for service in France, he had won distinction in the campaign in German South-West Africa. All who knew him knew that at the first possible opportunity he would be in the field in France, quietly and unostentatiously devoting all his gifts -- gifts that were bound to ensure his success as an officer -- to the service of his country. He had been wounded twice.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

 Notes
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1908

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Reggie Schwarz
Reggie Schwarz
© The Cricketer International

Reggie Schwarz
Reggie Schwarz
© The Cricketer International

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