Notable Bowling Feats In Canadian Cricket
C.A. Forbes returned figures of 10 wickets for 4 runs while playing for
Trinity College against Upper Canada College during the 1940 season.
L.A. (Bert) Rowe returned figures of 10 wickets for 7 runs while playing
for the Waterloo Cricket Club against the Galt Cricket Club during the
summer of 1959.
E. (Eric) Wilkins returned figures of 10 wickets for 7 runs while playing
for the Hamilton Cricket Club against the Fairfeld Cricket Club during the
1960 season.
A.S. (Bill) Hendy returned figures of 10 wickets for 12 runs while playing
for the Rowing Club C.C. against the Vancouver Cricket Club during the
summer of 1945.
H.C. (Hussein) Nakhooda returned figures of 10 wickets for 14 runs while
playing for the West St. Catharines Cricket Club against the Oakville
Cricket Club during the 1950 season.
During a Canadian armed services cricket match between the 9th Brigade
of the Canadian Expeditionary Forces and the Canadian ASC at St. Omer,
France in the summer of 1917, J. Leake returned the outstanding bowling
analysis of 10 wickets for 0 runs.
The first recorded occasion of a bowler taking all the wickets in an innings
in a Canadian cricket match occurred in 1848 when slow under-arm bowler
H.J. (Harry) Maddock captured 10 wickets for the Toronto Cricket Club
against the Rifle Brigade. Maddock returned figures of 10 for 16 and old
reports indicate that all ten batsmen were clean bowled.
In the summer of 1905, T.W. Dyson captured 20 wickets for 46 runs for the
Mimico Asylum Cricket Club against the Gordon Mackay Cricket Club
during a 12-a-side match at Toronto. His figures were 9 wickets in the
first innings and all 11 wickets in the second innings during which he
performed the hat-trick.
During the season of 1894, E. Attewell captured 190 wickets for the East
Toronto Cricket Club at a cost of 615 runs for an average of 3.39 runs.
This is believed to be the highest total of wickets taken during a Canadian
season.
The record of most wickets taken with consecutive balls in Canadian
cricket appears to be held by F.M. Pellatt who bagged six wickets in six
deliveries while playing in a match at Trinity College, Port Hope, Ontario
during the summer of 1890. Fred Pellatt was the brother of the famous
financier Sir Henry M. Pellatt the builder of Casa Loma in Toronto.
The first recorded hat-trick by a Canadian bowler in international play
occurred at Toronto in September 1895 when paceman J.M. (Jack) Laing
clean bowled J.W. Sharp, S. Goodman and L.K. Mallinkdrodt of the
United States with successive deliveries at the Rosedale Cricket Club.
Contributed by Kevin E. Boller
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