Matt Poore
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Batting style | Right-hand bat | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling style | Right-arm offbreak | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Cricinfo |
Matt Beresford Poore (born 1 June 1930) is a former international cricketer who played Tests for New Zealand in the 1950s. He was born in Christchurch.
A right-handed middle order batsman and handy off-spin bowler, Poore made his Test debut in March 1953 against South Africa at Auckland. He made 170 runs in the five-Test series in South Africa in 1953-54. He also toured Pakistan and India in 1955-56, playing in seven of the eight Tests, but scoring only 131 runs at 11.90 and taking 4 wickets at 64.25.[1]
His best Test performances came in his first Test, when he made 45 and 8 not out and took 2 for 28 and 2 for 43.[2] Although he failed to make a Test half-century in his 14 matches – and in fact holds the record for the longest Test career without a half-century or a three-wicket haul – he made two hundreds in first-class cricket.[3]
He played for Canterbury from 1950-51 to 1957-58, then returned for three matches in 1961-62. His highest score was 142 opening the batting against Central Districts in 1954-55, a match in which the next highest score was 55.[4] His other century was 103, opening the batting against Auckland in 1956-57 after taking 4 for 72 (figures of 47.2-22-72-4) in the first innings.[5] His best bowling was 5 for 27 against Indian Universities in the final match of the 1955-56 tour.[6]
Like most of the New Zealand team, Poore suffered from illness during the tour of Pakistan and India. During one game, affected by his gastric medication, he went to sleep standing up in the field. In Bangalore he was bitten by a stray dog that he was removing from the field, and had to have antibiotic injections in his stomach for the next two weeks, most of them administered by his team-mates in the absence of medical assistance.[7]
Commenting on Poore's innings of 70 in his second match for Canterbury in 1950-51, Dick Brittenden wrote: "His graceful driving and easy footwork marked him out as a future New Zealand batsman, and he became one, only to disappoint his admirers regularly, by looking the best batsman in the country and getting out for small scores inexplicably and far too frequently."[8]
Notes
- ↑ Wisden 1957, pp. 814-15.
- ↑ New Zealand v South Africa, Auckland 1952-53
- ↑ Basevi, Travis; George Binoy (14 October 2009). "Fifty-three ODIs without a fifty or a three-for". CricInfo. Retrieved 2009-10-14.
- ↑ Canterbury v Central Districts 1954-55
- ↑ Auckland v Canterbury 1956-57
- ↑ Indian Universities v New Zealanders 1955-56
- ↑ Richard Boock, The Last Everyday Hero, Longacre, Auckland, 2012, pp. 132-33.
- ↑ R.T. Brittenden, Great Days in New Zealand Cricket, A.H. & A.W. Reed, Wellington, 1958, p. 139.