Cec Abrahams
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Cecil John Abrahams (8 March 1932 – 15 August 2007) was a
South African __NOTOC__ South African may relate to: * The nation of South Africa * South African Airways * South African English * South African people * Languages of South Africa * Southern Africa Southern Africa is the southernmost subregion of the Afric ...
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 for Western Province in first-class cricket briefly in 1974–75,Cricket Archive
/ref> during a coaching tour, following an invitation from the Western Province Cricket Board. His father was Isaac John Abrahams, in his time dubbed the Prince of Batsmen, and his mother was Lillian May ( Schroeder) Abrahams. He joined the Lancashire League in 1960. He was trained as a dental technician but the apartheid regime required dental technicians, as people of colour, to work for a white dentist. He resisted this and opened his own private dental lab in Kent Road in Salt River, operating under the radar. In 1960 he was invited to England following the offer of a contract with Milnrow, arranged by
Basil D'Oliviera Basil Lewis D'Oliveira CBE OIS (4 October 1931 – 19 November 2011) was an England international cricketer of South African Cape Coloured background, whose potential selection by England for the scheduled 1968–69 tour of apartheid-era South ...
. In Mogamad Allie's cricket history book, ''More than a game'', Allie wrote, ''"... Abrahams displayed a massive appetite for the game in his new environment, playing for 15 seasons in the Central Lancashire League - first for Milnrow, and later for Radcliffe and Oldham. And although the highpoints were too many to count, his best season was in 1970, when he took 89 wickets at a cost of 10,25 runs per wicket - the best bowling effort in the league that year by a professional"''. His family joined him in England in 1962, his wife Cynthia, and children John, Jean, Basil, Peter, Noreen and Lynn. Carole, the youngest, would be born in England. His eldest son, John Abrahams, captained the Lancashire county cricket team. His two sons Peter and Basil, regularly played cricket at weekends. He encouraged a number of other Western Province Cricket Board players to join the Lancashire League.


References

* Mogamad Allie (2000). ''More than a game: History of the Western Province Cricket Board 1959-1991''. The Western Province Cricket Association, Newlands, Cape Town, South Africa


External links


player profile
1932 births 2007 deaths Cricketers from Cape Town South African cricketers {{SouthAfrica-cricket-bio-stub