Full Name

Frederick Sewards Trueman

Born

February 06, 1931, Stainton, Yorkshire

Died

July 01, 2006, Airedale General Hospital, Keighley, Yorkshire, (aged 75y 145d)

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Bowling Style

Right arm Fast

Playing Role

Bowler

Other

Commentator, Journalist, Author

A classical easy action, a mop of unruly jet-black hair and a menacing scowl were the trademarks of Freddie Trueman, the Yorkshire fast bowler who was the first man from any country to take 300 Test wickets, a landmark he reached at The Oval in 1964. Since then many have gone past his overall figure of 307, but few have matched his average (21.57) and strike rate (a wicket every 49 balls). Trueman's tally might have been nearer 400 if he hadn't missed numerous matches and tours because of various disciplinary breaches, some true, some imagined - he was once hauled before the Yorkshire committee for some misdemeanour, and escaped punishment by pointing out that he was 200 miles away playing for England at the time. But on his day Trueman was fast and frightening: in his first Test series, in 1952, he helped reduce India to 0 for 4 on his debut, and took 8 for 31 - the best Test bowling figures by a genuinely fast bowler at the time - in the third match. In the second half of the '50s he formed an incisive new-ball pairing with Brian Statham, the legendarily accurate loose-limbed Lancastrian, who raced him neck-and-neck to the 250-wicket mark. By then "Fiery Fred" had great control of swing, and had some claim to being, as he only half-jokingly suggested to John Arlott as the title of his planned biography, "T'Greatest Fast Bowler Who Ever Drew Breath". Trueman relished Yorkshire's dominance in the 1960s, and retired after their sixth title in the decade, in 1968, a season he also led them to victory over the touring Australians. He tried a one-day comeback with Derbyshire, which was not a great success. A natural raconteur whose stories grew taller with every telling, he was a radio summariser for the BBC's Test Match Special commentary team for many years. His catchphrase became "I just don't know what's going off out there", and eventually his role as the curmudgeonly Tyke (he once observed that Ian Botham "couldn't bowl a hoop downhill") began to pall and he found himself - to his disgust - dropped once again.
Steven Lynch

Fred Trueman Career Stats

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests671271517866253078/3112/11921.572.6149.419173
FC603-997014215423048/28-18.292.5343.2-12625
List A18-986507286/156/1518.103.0835.2110

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAve100s50s6sCtSt
Tests67851498139*13.810025640
FC603713120923110415.56326-4390
List A181421562813.0000-50
Frederick Sewards Trueman

Explore Statsguru Analysis

Test

Debut/Last Matches of Fred Trueman

FC Matches

Span
1949 - 1969

List A Matches

Span
1963 - 1972

Recent Matches of Fred Trueman

MatchBatBowlDateGroundFormat
Yorkshire vs M.C.C.00/33 & 0/611-Sep-1968ScarboroughFC
England XI vs 91/55 & 0/2407-Sep-1968ScarboroughFC
England XI vs ROW XI2*3/52 & 2/2304-Sep-1968ScarboroughFC
Yorkshire vs Australians133/32 & 3/5129-Jun-1968SheffieldFC
Yorkshire vs M.C.C.--2/5827-Apr-1968Lord'sFC

Photos of Fred Trueman

Veronica Trueman and Dickie Bird during the launch of the Copper Dragon's Trueman Ale
Flowers are placed on the grave of Fred Trueman at Bolton Abbey
The England team line up for a minute's silence for Fred Trueman
The England team line up for a minute's silence for Fred Trueman
Cover of 'As It Was: The Memoirs of Fred Trueman'
Former Yorkshire players Ray Illingworth, Brian Close, Fred Trueman and Geoff Boycott unveil the plaque for the new east stand at Headingley