Full Name

Frederick John Durston

Born

July 11, 1893, Clophill, Bedfordshire

Died

April 08, 1965, Norwood Green, Southall, Middlesex, (aged 71y 271d)

Also Known As

Long Jack

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Other

Coach

Frederick John Durston, the former Middlesex and England fast bowler, died in hospital at Southall on April 8, aged 71. Born on July 11, 1893, at Clophill, Bedfordshirewith whose village club he learned the game-he went to Lord's as a groundboy in 1914. After serving with the Royal Engineers, he returned to Lord's in 1919 and, on the recommendation of E. G. Wynyard, the old Hampshire cricketer, made his debut for Middlesex in four matches. In his first full season-1920-he played a material part in helping Middlesex win the championship, taking 113 wickets in all matches, the first of six occasions on which he was to take 100 wickets in a season. In three other years he took over ninety.

Standing well over six feet and magnificently built, he was a right-arm opening bowler - perhaps fast-medium rather than fast-with fine powers of endurance and consistent accuracy of length. He achieved his highest aggregate (136 wickets) in 1921, when Middlesex again won the championship and when he played for England against Australia at Lord's-his only Test: his five wickets in the match included C. G. Macartney in each innings and Warwick Armstrong for a duck. Shortly afterwards he took eight wickets for the Players against the Gentlemen at Lord's, but though he represented the Players on six other occasions he never again appeared in the Lord's fixture. He performed hattricks against both Universities-at Fenner's in 1922 and in the Parks the following year. Some success He toured Jamaica with Mr Julien Cahn's side early in 1929, and when his first-class career was over he visited the Argentine with Sir Theodore Brinckman's team in 1937-38. He retired from first-class cricket in 1933, having changed with some success to slow off-spin bowling in his last two years. Altogether in first-class matches he took 1,329 wickets for 29,279 runs (av. 22.03). In addition he was a powerful right-hand hitter, scoring nearly 4,000 runs, his highest innings being 92 not out against Northamptonshire at Lord's in 1930. At Leyton in 1927 he assisted Hendren establish the present Middlesex ninth-wicket record-an unbroken 160, scored in only 80 minutes.

From 1924 until 1958 he ran an indoor cricket school at Acton, and in his younger days also played professional football as a goalkeeper for Brentford and other teams. Rather strangely, for over thirty years he has had his initials recorded wrongly in the "Births and Deaths" section of Wisden, and his correct date of birth has never been shown there. Affectionately known as " Long Jack," he was a firm friend of the young professional, to whom his encouragement and advice always meant much.
The Cricketer

Jack Durston Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAve100s50s4s6sCtSt
Tests12186*8.00001000
FC386473144391892*11.9006--2570

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests1220213654/1025/13627.204.0340.4100
FC386-721242927913298/27-22.032.4354.2-7211

Umpire & Referee

FormatMatUmpire
FC11
Jack Durston portrait

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Test

Debut/Last Matches of Jack Durston

FC Matches

Span
1919 - 1933

Recent Matches of Jack Durston

MatchBatBowlDateGroundFormat
Middlesex vs Somerset302/57 & 2/1514-Jun-1933Lord'sFC
Middlesex vs Cambridge U35 & 23*3/56 & 5/7420-May-1933CambridgeFC
Middlesex vs Lancashire200/17 & 2/1615-Jun-1929Lord'sFC
Middlesex vs Australians3*2/76 & 0/3729-May-1926Lord'sFC
Middlesex vs Notts2*4/46 & 1/7620-Jun-1925NottinghamFC

Photos of Jack Durston

Former England players watch the fifth Test at The Oval
Jack Durston
The Middlesex side that won the 1921 Championship