Keith Johnson (basketball)
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Keith Johnson (basketball)
Keith Johnson may refer to: *Keith Johnson (cricket administrator) (1894–1972), Australian cricket administrator *Keith Johnson (Australian politician) (1929–1995), Australian politician *Keith Johnson (baseball) (born 1971), former professional baseball player *Keith Johnson (cricketer) (born 1935), South African cricketer *Keith Johnson (actor) (born 1953), African-American actor *Keith Johnson (author) (born 1938), writer and software developer *Keith Johnson (soccer) (born 1980), American Paralympic soccer player *Keith Johnson (sailor) (1897-1960), Singaporean Olympic sailor *Keith Johnson (applied linguist) (born 1944), British linguist *Keith Johnson (phonetician), American linguist *Keith Johnson (neurologist), American radiologist *Keith Johnson (trade unionist), Canadian-American trade union leader *Keith "Wonderboy" Johnson (born 1972), American gospel musician *Keith Johnson (Idaho politician), Idaho state controller, 2002–2007 *Keith Johnson (trumpeter), trump ...
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Keith Johnson (cricket Administrator)
Keith Ormond Edley Johnson (28 December 1894 – 19 October 1972), was an Australian cricket administrator. He was the manager of the Australian Services cricket team in England, India and Australia immediately after World War II, and of the Australian cricket team in England in 1948, Australian team that toured England in 1948. The 1948 Australian cricket team earned the sobriquet ''The Invincibles'' by being the first side to complete a tour of England without losing a single match. Johnson joined the Cricket Australia, Australian Board of Control for International Cricket in 1935 as a delegate for New South Wales and served in the Royal Australian Air Force during World War II, performing public relations work in London. With the VE Day, allied victory in Europe, first-class cricket resumed and Johnson was appointed to manage the Australian Services team, which played England in a series of celebratory matches known as the Victory Tests to usher in the post-war era. Th ...
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