John Brian Bolus (31 January 1934 – 7 May 2020)
was an English
cricket
Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played between two teams of eleven players on a field at the centre of which is a pitch with a wicket at each end, each comprising two bails balanced on three stumps. The batting side scores runs by striki ...
er who played in seven
Test matches Test match in some sports refers to a sporting contest between national representative teams and may refer to:
* Test cricket
* Test match (indoor cricket)
* Test match (rugby union)
* Test match (rugby league)
* Test match (association football)
...
from 1963 to 1964. Cricket commentator Colin Bateman stated, "Bolus was essentially an accumulator, dependably totting up 25,000 runs over 20 summers".
Life and career
Bolus was born in
Whitkirk,
Leeds,
Yorkshire. He learned his cricket with Whitkirk before moving to Leeds in 1953, and then to Bradford.
He began his first-class career in his native
Yorkshire in 1956, playing for seven years. His first-class debut was Yorkshire versus
M.C.C., at
Lords
Lords may refer to:
* The plural of Lord
Places
*Lords Creek, a stream in New Hanover County, North Carolina
* Lord's, English Cricket Ground and home of Marylebone Cricket Club and Middlesex County Cricket Club
People
*Traci Lords (born 1 ...
, in 1956. He played 107 matches for Yorkshire, with a highest score of 146 not out against
Hampshire at Portsmouth in 1960. His best bowling figures were 4 for 40 against
Pakistan at
Park Avenue in 1962.
He moved on to
Nottinghamshire in 1963, after Yorkshire opted for a relative unknown,
Geoffrey Boycott, who was six years younger.
For Nottinghamshire he played 269 matches, with a highest score of 202 not out against
Glamorgan
, HQ = Cardiff
, Government = Glamorgan County Council (1889–1974)
, Origin=
, Code = GLA
, CodeName = Chapman code
, Replace =
* West Glamorgan
* Mid Glamorgan
* South Glamorgan
, Motto ...
at
Trent Bridge in 1963, and best bowling figures of 2 for 24 against the
West Indies, also at Trent Bridge in 1966. In his debut
List A cricket match for Nottinghamshire against Yorkshire in 1963, he scored 100 not out in his team's total of only 159: the lowest all-out total to include a century in
List A cricket's history. He was made
county captain in 1972.
Bolus became the third player to be capped by three counties, and the first to captain two different county sides in successive seasons, when he moved to
Derbyshire in 1973. He played 64 matches for Derbyshire, with a highest score of 151 against
Oxford University at the
Bass Worthington Ground
The Bass Worthington Ground was a cricket ground located along Derby Road in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire. The ground was bordered to the east and north by the Pirelli tyre factory.
History
Originally named for the Worthington Brewery base ...
in
Burton upon Trent in 1975.
He twice scored more than one thousand runs in a season whilst playing for Yorkshire, as well as ten times for Nottinghamshire and twice for Derbyshire.
A solid county performer, particularly strong off his pads, his Test batting average of 41.33 is higher than his overall first-class average of 34.03. He was unlucky not to play more Tests, particularly after a strong tour of India in 1963/64. He hit the first ball he faced in Test cricket, bowled by
Wes Hall, back over the bowler's head for four. He was unable to convert any of his four Test fifties to three figures, and found himself overtaken in the international reckoning by
Geoff Boycott and
John Edrich.
Bolus does hold two unusual Test match records - the most Tests in a complete career without ever recording a single figure score (seven), and the most Test Match innings in a complete career without ever recording a single figure score (twelve).
In May 1975, Bolus asked to be relieved of the Derbyshire captaincy, and was replaced by
Bob Taylor. Bolus effectively retired at the end of the 1975 season, with over 25,500 first-class runs to his name. However, he then appeared twice in the B and H cup at the start of the 1976 season. He became an England Test selector in the 1990s.
After his first-class career he took an appointment with
Gedling Council in
Nottingham in 1976, while also playing for Bradford. Later he played for Cleckheaton, Brighouse and Farsley, leading the team to a
Priestley Cup
The Priestley Cup is a cricket cup competition contested by clubs in the Bradford Premier League
The Bradford Premier League (currently known as the Gordon Rigg Bradford Premier League for sponsorship reasons) is an amateur cricket competiti ...
win in 1983. He was an Honorary Life Member of Whitkirk Cricket Club.
He is one of the small band of captains to send off one of his own players, dismissing the Derbyshire and England paceman
Alan Ward from the
Queen's Park, Chesterfield
Queen's Park is a county cricket ground located in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England and lies within a park in the centre of the town established for Queen Victoria's golden jubilee in 1887. It has a small pavilion and is surrounded by mature ...
, ground in 1973 after Ward had declined to resume bowling.
The sending-off of an England quick
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In his later after dinner speech career, Bolus opened with the line, "For those of you who saw me bat... let me apologise".
References
External links
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bolus, Brian
1934 births
2020 deaths
England Test cricketers
English cricketers
Yorkshire cricketers
Nottinghamshire cricketers
Nottinghamshire cricket captains
Derbyshire cricket captains
International Cavaliers cricketers
People from Whitkirk
Marylebone Cricket Club cricketers
Sportspeople from Yorkshire
A. E. R. Gilligan's XI cricketers
T. N. Pearce's XI cricketers
Derbyshire cricketers