Full Name

Thomas Emmett

Born

September 03, 1841, Halifax, Yorkshire

Died

June 30, 1904, Leicester, (aged 62y 301d)

Batting Style

Left hand Bat

Bowling Style

Left arm Fast

RELATIONS

(son)

When Tom Emmett gained a place in the Yorkshire side it was as a left-arm fast bowler. He was 25 at the time, made rapid progress to the top of his field, and was considered one of the most dangerous bowlers of his type in England. Bowling very fast with a near round-arm action, he could break the ball back so that pitching on leg the ball would take off-stump - a ball that for reasons known only to himself he called his "sostenuter". As age took its toll, he lost the pace that made him so effective, and completely changed his method to bowl slow-medium, pitching on or outside off stump, and inviting the drive against the turning ball. He used flight, spin and changes of pace, and the batsmen found it hard to settle against this seemingly endless variety. Emmett was an excellent bat, with a sound defence and strong straight drives, and a fine fielder. He toured Australia three times, taking part in the first-ever Test in 1877, and playing seven Tests in all. Tom was a character, and few professionals were more popular with the crowd, or his fellow players; his constant enthusiasm for the game and good spirits were infectious. HS Altham said of him: "Never was there a man of higher vitality, of more inexhaustible good humour than Tom Emmett"
Dave Liverman

Wisden obituary
TOM EMMETT died suddenly on June 30th, in his 63rd year. He had long ago dropped out of the public gaze, his connection with the Yorkshire eleven ending in 1888, but he had assuredly not been forgotten. There was never a more popular professional, his cheery nature, and the inexhaustible energy with which he played the game, making him a prime favourite wherever he went. His closing days were, unhappily, rather clouded, but on this point there is no need to dwell. He was, perhaps, the only instance of a great fast bowler who was skilful enough to remain effective after he had lost his pace. Those who only saw him bowl in the latter part of his career, when his main object was to get catches on the off side, can have no idea of what he was like when he first won fame in the cricket field. His speed for five or six years was tremendous, and every now and then he would send down an unplayable ball that pitched on the leg stump and broke back nearly the width of the wicket. Born in September, 1841, he was rather late in coming forward, being a man of nearly twenty-five when he first found a place in the Yorkshire team. Once discovered, however, he jumped almost immediately to the top of the tree, playing for England against Surrey and Sussex in Tom Lockyer"s benefit match at the Oval, in 1867-his second season. A still greater bowler-the late George Freeman-was getting to his best at the same time, and from 1867 to 1871 inclusive, the two men did wonderful things together. How they would have fared on the more carefully prepared wickets of these days is a question difficult to answer. The important point is that under the conditions prevailing in their own time they were irresistible. It is quite safe to say that a more deadly pair of purely fast bowlers never played on the same side. After 1871 business took Freeman away from first-class cricket, but Emmett found another excellent Colleague in Allen Hill, and in later years he shared Yorkshire"s bowling with Ulyett, Bates, Peate, and Peel. As time went on his pace left him, and he became the clever, dodgy bowler-full of devices and untiring in effort-whom men still young well remember. The charm of Emmett as a cricketer lay in his keen and obvious enjoyment of the game. No day was too long for him, and up to the end he played with the eagerness of a schoolboy. He was full of humour, and numberless good stories are told about him. He went to Australia three times, and was the mainstay in bowling for Lord Harris"s team in 1878-79. During the first of his three visits he took part at Melbourne, in March, 1877, in the first match in which the Australians ever met an English eleven on even terms. Charles Bannerman scored 165, and the Australians won by 45 runs. No one in this country had any idea in those days of what Australian cricket would become, but Emmett, on his return home, spoke very highly of the Colonial bowling.

SOME OF EMMETT"S MOST NOTABLE BOWLING FEATS WERE:

Wkts.Runs
6for7 Yorkshire v. Surrey, at Sheffield 1867
8"22
6"13 Yorkshire v. Lancashire, at Holbeck 1868
9"34 Yorkshire v. Notts., at Dewsbury 1868
7"15
9"23 Yorkshire v. Cambridgeshire, at Hunslet 1869
8"31 Yorkshire v. Notts., at Sheffield 1871
4"8North v. South, at Huddersfield 1875
8"54North v. South, at Hull 1875
6"14 England v. 22 of South Australia, at Adelaide 1876-77
6"11
8"46 Yorkshire v. Gloucestershire, at Clifton 1877
8"16 Yorkshire v. M. C. C. and Ground, at Scarboro" 1877
5"3 Yorkshire v. Gents" of Scotland, at Edinboro" 1878
8"24
6"12 Yorkshire v. Derbyshire, at Sheffield 1878
7"9 Yorkshire v. Sussex, at Brighton 1878
8"51 England v. Gloucestershire, at the Oval 1878
9"45 England v. 18 of South Australia, at Adelaide 1878-79
8"47 England v. New South Wales, at Sydney 1878-79
6"21
4"9 Yorkshire v. Surrey, at Hull 1879
7"7
14"36 England v. 22 of Canada, at Toronto 1879
8"22 Yorkshire v. Surrey, at the Oval 1881
5"10 Yorkshire v. Australians, at Bradford 1882
8"52 Yorkshire v. M. C. C. and Ground, at Scarboro" 1882
8"39Mr. C. I. Thornton"s XI. v. Cambridge University, at Cambridge 1884
8"32 Yorkshire v. Sussex, at Huddersfield 1884
7"20 Yorkshire v. Derbyshire, at Derby 1884

In the match between Yorkshire and Surrey, at the Oval, in 1881, Emmett, at one time in the second innings of Surrey, took five wickets in three overs without a run being made from him.

In July, 1868, Emmett and the late George Freeman, playing for Yorkshire, at Holbeck, dismissed Lancashire for totals of 30 and 34. Emmett"s analyses were 2 for 11 and 6 for 13; Freeman"s 8 for 11 and 4 for 12.

Emmett bowled in 22 matches for the Players against the Gentlemen, delivering 2,399 balls for 1,128 runs and 38 wickets, average 29.68.

In all matches for Yorkshire he obtained 1,269 wickets at a cost of 12.68 runs apiece.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

Tom Emmett Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAve100s50s6sCtSt
Tests71311604813.3300190
FC42670090905310414.84124-2760

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests7972828497/687/6831.551.5680.8010
FC426-601352131415729/23-13.552.1238.2-12229

Umpire & Referee

FormatMatUmpire
FC11
Tom Emmett portrait

Explore Statsguru Analysis

Test

Debut/Last Matches of Tom Emmett

Recent Matches of Tom Emmett

MatchBatBowlDateGroundFormat
Yorkshire vs Australians0 & 250/20 & 1/1419-Jun-1882SheffieldFC
Yorkshire vs Australians181/17 & 1/1005-Jun-1882BradfordFC
England vs Australia270/2210-Mar-1882MelbourneTest # 8
England vs Australia4 & 20/3703-Mar-1882SydneyTest # 7
England vs Australia10 & 90/24 & 0/1717-Feb-1882SydneyTest # 6

Photos of Tom Emmett

The England cricket team in 1880
The 1876-77 squad which played the first Test against Australia