Terry Jarvis
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Terrence Wayne Jarvis (born 29 July 1944) is a New Zealand businessman and former
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 13
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) ...
for New Zealand between 1965 and 1973. With Glenn Turner, Jarvis holds the opening Test partnership record for New Zealand of 387, scored against the West Indies in
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, during the 1971–72 season.


Early career

Terry Jarvis was raised in the Auckland suburb of Remuera and attended
Auckland Grammar School Auckland (pronounced ) ( mi, Tāmaki Makaurau) is a large metropolitan city in the North Island of New Zealand. The most populous urban area in the country and the fifth largest city in Oceania, Auckland has an urban population of about It ...
from 1958 to 1960, where he played in the 1st Eleven, a team that included two future New Zealand Test captains, Mark Burgess and Hedley Howarth, and another future Test player, Ross Morgan. He represented Auckland at both under-20 and under-23 levels in 1962–63. Jarvis made his first-class debut in the 1964–65 season. Opening the batting in his first match, he scored 88 in Auckland's innings victory over Northern Districts. In seven matches he scored 353 runs at an average of 32.09, and was selected for the tour of India, Pakistan and England in 1965.


International career

Jarvis made his Test debut in the First Test against India in
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in February 1965. In the first innings, opening with
Graham Dowling Graham Thorne Dowling (born 4 March 1937) is a former New Zealand cricketer who played 39 Test matches and captained New Zealand in 19 of them. He led New Zealand to its first victory in a Test series, against Pakistan in November 1969. He wa ...
, he batted more than two hours in making nine runs; in the second he made 40 not out.
Bevan Congdon Bevan Ernest Congdon (11 February 1938 – 10 February 2018) was a New Zealand cricket all-rounder who played 61 Test matches and 11 One Day Internationals from 1965 to 1978, which included a spell as captain. Captaincy He was captain of the ...
replaced him as opener in the Second and Third Tests, but Jarvis returned for the Fourth Test and made 34 and 77, New Zealand's top score in the second innings. He played the three Tests that followed against Pakistan with only moderate success. When the team went on to England he was twice hospitalised owing to an illness he contracted in India, and he was never able to strike form, and did not play in any of the Tests. He played one Test against England in 1965–66, then all four representative matches (not Tests) against the touring Australian team in 1966-67, when he was New Zealand's second-highest scorer after Dowling, with 225 runs at an average of 32.14. He then played no more Tests until he toured the West Indies in 1971-72. In 1968–69, in his 48th first-class match, he scored his first
century A century is a period of 100 years. Centuries are numbered ordinally in English and many other languages. The word ''century'' comes from the Latin ''centum'', meaning ''one hundred''. ''Century'' is sometimes abbreviated as c. A centennial or ...
in the Plunket Shield match against Wellington. After three low-scoring innings totalling 504 runs, Auckland needed 217 runs to win. Jarvis opened as usual and made 118 not out, and Auckland won by nine wickets. He scored 305 runs at an average of 43.57 in the 1971-72 domestic season, and was selected to tour the West Indies. In the Fourth Test at Georgetown, West Indies batted first and declared at 365 for 7 early on the third of the five days. Glenn Turner and Jarvis then opened for New Zealand and scored 387 together in nine hours, Jarvis making 182 off 555 balls and Turner going on to 259 off 759 balls. The match was drawn after only ten wickets fell in almost five full days of cricket. After the West Indies tour, Jarvis continued playing for Auckland until 1976–77, and played three more Tests, in 1972–73 against Pakistan, when he was not successful, scoring only 46 runs.


Beyond cricket

On leaving school Jarvis began work as a sales representative for the Auckland stock and station company, Alfred Buckland & Sons Ltd., selling textiles such as jute wool bales, which the company imported. He then went into business on his own account, forming Jarvis Trading Company Ltd., importing and manufacturing similar products at premises in
East Tāmaki East Tāmaki is a suburb of Auckland, New Zealand. It is a largely industrial area adjacent to a rapidly growing population. Prior to the 1960s it was largely a dairy farming area. A landmark is Smales Mountain which in 2010 has the remains of ...
, a suburb of Auckland. He also became involved in the development and sale of industrial land in East Tamaki. In 1987 Jarvis was one of the co-founders of Sky TV in New Zealand. He also became involved in the breeding and racing of thoroughbreds, while owning The Oaks stud property near Cambridge, in the Waikato. He owned The Oaks from 1998 to 2002, when he sold it in order to concentrate on racing rather than breeding. He was New Zealand's racehorse owner of the year in 2001. In 2001 his wealth was estimated at NZ$50 million. In 2009 Jarvis bought the adjacent former home of Sir Edmund Hillary in Remuera in order to extend his own property. The house, after being gifted to the nation, was moved to Sir Edmund Hillary Collegiate in the Auckland suburb of Ōtara in 2011. In 2010 Jarvis was the major sponsor of the Terry Jarvis Centre, an indoor sports facility owned by the Remuera Parnell Sports Committee Charitable Trust and managed by the Parnell Cricket Club, his former club, located on Shore Road, close to his childhood home in Portland Road, Remuera.


References


External links


The Terry Jarvis Centre
(Remuera / Parnell Indoor Sports Centre) * {{DEFAULTSORT:Jarvis, Terry 1944 births Living people People educated at Auckland Grammar School New Zealand cricketers New Zealand Test cricketers Auckland cricketers Canterbury cricketers South Island cricketers Cricketers from Auckland