Full Name

Joseph Vine

Born

May 15, 1875, Willingdon, Sussex

Died

April 25, 1946, Aldrington, Hove, Sussex, (aged 70y 345d)

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Bowling Style

Legbreak

Other

Coach

Wisden obituary
Joseph Vine, one of the best and most popular among many Sussex professionals possessing similar characteristics, died on April 25, aged 70. Below medium height and strongly built, he could bat for long hours, field in the deep with rare speed and certainty, and bowl slow leg-breaks without tiring. His aggregate of 25,169 runs, average 29.92, and 683 wickets at 29.99, give an idea of the work he got through from 1896 to 1922; and seldom can anyone have equalled his appearance in 421 consecutive matches for Sussex, a number extended to 503 with only one absence from a match against Oxford.

Joe Vine might have been more prominent in representative cricket but for the role he usually undertook of subduing himself to the needs of a steady batsman as partner to C. B. Fry and the still more brilliant K. S. Ranjitsinhji. How well he and Fry succeeded as an opening pair is proved conclusively by their putting up three figures thirty-three times. In 1901 Vine scored 1,190 runs and took 113 wickets, the first double done for Sussex.

Born on May 15, 1875, he ripened as a cricketer rather slowly, and though good in every sense from his start in first-class cricket at 21, he did not earn the highest honours until 1911, when he toured Australia with the team, captained by J. W. H. T. Douglas, which won four of the Test matches. Vine played in two of these, and in the fifth contest at Sydney he and Frank Woolley set up a seventh wicket record for England against Australia by making 143. Vine, number 8 in the batting order, claimed only a modest 36; Woolley, who went in number 7, took out his bat for 133, his first century against Australia.

Originally a forcing batsman, Vine curbed his natural instincts while in company with brilliant hitters, but as late as 1920 he gave evidence of hitting powers in his biggest innings by scoring 202 in five hours against Northamptonshire at Hastings. This, compared with 55 not out and 57 for which he batted over seven hours in 1901 at Hove, conveys a correct idea of his versatility. Perhaps his best bowling performance was in that same season of his special all-round ability when, at Trent Bridge, he opened the attack and took fifteen wickets for 161 runs.

Soon after retiring from county cricket Joe Vine became coach at Brighton College, an office he held for many years.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

Joseph Vine Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100s50s4s6sCtSt
Tests232463646.0021621.29005000
FC547920792517120229.92--34142--2400

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests2------------
FC547-39309195326858/68-28.512.9857.3-273
Joseph Vine

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Test

Debut/Last Matches of Joseph Vine

Recent Matches of Joseph Vine

MatchBatBowlDateGroundFormat
Sussex vs Australians8 & 1--31-Aug-1921HoveFC
Sussex vs Derbyshire136 & 20/1110-Jul-1913DerbyFC
England vs Australia36 & 6*--23-Feb-1912SydneyTest # 120
England vs Australia4*--09-Feb-1912MelbourneTest # 119
Sussex vs Notts77 & 54--18-May-1911HoveFC