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Bill Woodfull

William Maldon Woodfull OBE (22 August 1897 – 11 August 1965) was an Australian cricketer of the 1920s and 1930s. He captained both Victoria and Australia, and was best known for his dignified and moral conduct during the tumultuous bodyline series in 1932–33. Trained as a schoolteacher, Woodfull was known for his benevolent attitude towards his players, and his patience and defensive technique as an opening batsman. Woodfull was not a flamboyant player, but was known for his calm, unruffled style and his reliability in difficult situations. His opening pairing with fellow Victorian Bill Ponsford for both his state and Australia remains one of the most successful in history. While not known for his tactical skills, Woodfull was widely admired by his players and observers for his sportsmanship and ability to mould a successful and loyal team through the strength of his character.

Bill Woodfull
Woodfull in 1934
Personal information
Full name
William Maldon Woodfull
Born(1897-08-22)22 August 1897
Maldon, Colony of Victoria
Died11 August 1965(1965-08-11) (aged 67)
Tweed Heads, New South Wales, Australia
Nickname
  • The Unbowlable
  • Rock of Gibraltar
  • Wormkiller, Old Steadfast
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
BattingRight-handed
RoleOpening batsman
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 123)12 June 1926 v England
Last Test22 August 1934 v England
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1922–1934Victoria
Career statistics
Competition Test FC
Matches 35 174
Runs scored 2, 300 13, 388
Batting average 46. 00 64. 99
100s/50s 7/13 49/58
Top score 161 284
Balls bowled 0 26
Wickets 1
Bowling average 24. 00
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 1/12
Catches/stumpings 7/0 78/0
Source: CricketArchive, 29 February 2008

Woodfull started playing cricket from a young age without distinction. He made his professional debut in Melbourne's district competition staying until the age of 19. He made his first-class debut for Victoria at the age of 24 late in 1921–22. After scoring a century in his second match, Woodfull was promoted to open the following season, and he opened for the rest of his career. After scoring three centuries, including a 236, in 1925–26, he was selected for the 1926 tour of England. Regarded as one of the last players selected, Woodfull scored a double century and century in his first two innings in England to earn his debut in the first Test. Woodfull made eight centuries during the tour and topped the Australian averages and was named one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year.

Upon returning to Australia, Woodfull established his partnership with Ponsford, and in 1926–27 Shield season, they put on a record-breaking 375-run opening stand, setting up a world record first-class team score of 1107. Woodfull was appointed as vice-captain to Jack Ryder for the 1928–29 home Ashes series following a spate of retirements. He carried his bat in a record-breaking first Test defeat. Although England easily won 4–1, Woodfull scored three centuries, and added his best first-class score for 275 not out. Woodfull reluctantly became captain in 1930 when Ryder was dropped, and his team was derided as the worst Australian squad to tour England. It was the youngest squad to leave Australia, prompting commentators to label the team "Woodfull's kindegarten".[1] After losing the first Test, Woodfull scored a century as Australia levelled the series and they won the fifth Test to regain the Ashes. Woodfull ended the tour with six first-class centuries. In 1931–32 Woodfull had his most successful Test series in his career, against South Africa, scoring 421 runs at 70.17, including his Test highest score of 161.

In 1932–33, great controversy erupted during England's tour of Australia. The visitors used bodyline tactics—persistently aiming at the upper bodies and heads of the Australian batsmen in the hope of stifling the hosts' strong batting line-up. The Australian public and cricket community abhorred the tactic, but Woodfull refused to retaliate or complain publicly. The controversy peaked during the third Test at the Adelaide Oval. Woodfull was felled by a blow to the heart, almost provoking a riot. After Woodfull was dismissed, English manager Plum Warner came to privately express his sympathy, to which Woodfull famously replied "I do not want to see you, Mr Warner. There are two teams out there. One is playing cricket and the other is not."[2][3][4][5] England completed a convincing 4–1 victory, but Woodfull was much praised for his stoic public behaviour.

In 1934, Woodfull led the Australians back to England for a tour that was to mend relations after assurances had been given that bodyline would not be repeated. The Australians won 2–1, and Woodfull remains the only captain to regain the Ashes twice. Woodfull retired after the tour; his family claimed that the bodyline controversy had sapped his passion for cricket. A mathematics teacher, Woodfull went on to become headmaster at his alma mater, Melbourne High School.

Style edit

 
Woodfull's batting stance

Woodfull batted in a manner which had little aesthetic pleasure or grace, with Wisden describing stating that "at first sight, he gave the impression of being clumsy".[6] Affected by a bout of rheumatic fever in childhood, he had stiff-jointed style, and played with little noticeable backlift. This gave the impression of a laboured playing style. Despite this, he scored consistently through good placement and powerful drives generated by his strong forearms.[6] Despite his leaden appearance, he often advanced down the pitch to spin bowling.[7] He was known for playing with a straight bat and a close watch on the ball, which were the core features of a strong defensive ability. He typically took block on leg stump and shuffled across to cover his stumps. His defensive prowess yielded names such as "the unbowlable" (a reference to the fact that he was rarely bowled as a result of missing the ball) and "wormkiller".[2] The latter epithet was given to him by English bowlers who said that his backlift was so small that it was only enough to decapitate worms that had raised their heads above ground level.[7] He was also known for his reliability in crisis match situations, leading to epithets such as "The Rock" and "Old Steadfast".[2][8] Woodfull formed an opening partnership with Bill Ponsford at state and international level which yielded 18 century opening stands. Dubbed "Mutt and Jeff" by teammates after the famous comic strip duo,[2] as well as "Willy Wo and Willy Po",[1] they were regarded as one of the finest opening partnerships in Test history.[2] Their Victorian teammates had such faith in the pair that if they were batting, the wicket-keeper and bowlers who batted low in the order would leave the ground to go to work.[9]

As a captain, Woodfull was known for his courage and high moral principles in the face of the bodyline series. Fellow player Stan McCabe described him as "the greatest man I ever met",[2][8][10] while wicket-keeper Bert Oldfield said that he had never met a more exemplary character. Oldfield said that Woodfull was a psychologist and humanitarian in addition to a captain.[8] Bradman attributed Woodfull's success to his ability to command the intense loyalty of his players and convert it into team spirit.[8] Bill O'Reilly said that Woodfull's men "all held imperishable memories of his personal touch and his courage".[8] Ray Robinson said that "nobody thought Bill Woodfull the cat's whiskers as a strokeplayer but his many qualities made him a pre-eminent leader of men".[11] He added that "Woodfull's unrivalled selflessness won fidelity bordering on devotion".[12] Australian cricket writer Jack Pollard said that "Woodfull had the habit of being where things were tough, and he brought rare dignity to the Australian captaincy".[10] Pollard compared the respect he commanded from his players to that of Ian Chappell.[10] The English writer RC Robertson-Glasgow said of Woodfull:

The most calm-browed cricketer I have seen. He reminded me of a master who gets the whole school to and from a picnic without losing his reason or a boy. Of all the protagonists in that fiercest controversy [bodyline], I should say that he alone came out of it with reputation heightened and personal friendships increased. He neither concealed nor exaggerated a difficulty.[8]

Woodfull was known for his gentlemanly nature and his adherence to the spirit of the game. Aside from refusing to retaliate against bodyline, Woodfull refused to exploit loopholes to dismiss batsmen. On one occasion, Jack Fingleton was run out after wandering out of the crease to inspect the crease, without intending to run. A teammate broke the wicket and the umpire upheld the appeal, but Woodfull called Fingleton back.[9] He led his team in an understated way, preferring to give broad objectives to his players and trusting them to choose their own methods to fulfil the task at hand.[12] However, he was known to organise his team tightly on tour to ensure that things proceeded smoothly.[1]

Although Woodfull was a devout Methodist, he would show a deep concern in the personal welfare of all players, which extended to finding the location of the nearest Catholic Church for those teammates who followed the religion.[12] At the time, Australian society at large was divided along Catholic-Protestant lines,[13][14] and while O'Reilly and McCabe were full of praise for Woodfull,[8] they were later accused of leading a Catholic revolt against the leadership of the Protestant Bradman during a divisive period in the late-1930s.[14][15] While Woodfull himself never touched alcohol due to his strict adherence to his religious principles,[1] he did not impose his beliefs on his team. He would buy drinks for his players,[1] and ask administrators to provide more alcohol for his teammates when they were exhausted.[3] At the time, cricketers widely regarded beer as a highly effective means of rehydration,[16] and on one occasion Woodfull threatened to halt play when administrators refused his players more ale on the grounds that they had already consumed their quota.[17]

Early years edit

Born in the central Victorian town of Maldon, Woodfull was the third of four sons of Gertrude Lilian (Abey) Woodfull (1872–1941) and Reverend Thomas Staines Brittingham Woodfull (1863–1941), a Methodist preacher. The Woodfulls moved to Melbourne when Thomas was given a transfer to Collingwood Methodist Mission, in an inner city suburb.[11] The religious traditionalism stayed with the younger Woodfull throughout his life. He once refused to play an interstate match that was scheduled for Christmas Day.[10] Woodfull's father installed a net in the backyard and taught him the emphasis on defensive technique and patience that were to become his hallmark.[11][18] Woodfull attended Melbourne High School and his early career was unremarkable. He made his district cricket debut in 1916 for Essendon, at the age of 19, but did not distinguish himself. He played no further cricket at the level before he gained his qualification as a schoolteacher in 1919.[6] Because of a bout of rheumatic fever in childhood, Woodfull had stiff muscles and as a result was rejected when he tried to join the First Australian Imperial Force to fight in World War I.[10] He was posted to Maryborough High School, and it was in the rural cricket competition that he began to gain attention. In 1920 and 1921, he accumulated 1,335 runs at average of 225.83 in the local competition.[6]

When the England cricket team toured Australia in 1920–21, Woodfull played for a Ballarat XV, and scored 50 and 1. A teaching transfer in 1921 saw him return to Melbourne, where the Victorian selectors trialled him in Second XI fixtures during the 1921–22 season. In two matches against South Australia and New South Wales, he registered unbeaten scores of 186 and 227 respectively.[6][11][19][20] At the time, Victoria had so much depth that their Second XI was of comparable strength to the first-choice teams from other states.[20]

In early 1922, he made his Sheffield Shield debut against South Australia at the Adelaide Oval. He batted at No. 8 and made an unbeaten 22.[11] Batting at No. 7 in his second match against Western Australia, Woodfull registered his maiden first-class century with 153.[2][6] He was run out in his second and final innings of his debut first-class season, so he was yet to be dismissed by a bowler. Both matches were won by an innings,[19] part of a dominant summer for the Victorians.[20] During this time, he also studied for an arts degree at night in addition to his post at Williamstown High School.[18]

The following season, Woodfull was promoted to open and his consistent performances in all conditions meant that he was to play there for the rest of his career.[11] Between 1922 and 1926, he accumulated over 3,000 first-class runs at an average of 67.[2][6]

In the first match of the 1922–23 season, Woodfull scored 74 run out and four not out as Victoria scraped past the Marylebone Cricket Club by two wickets.[19] The next match against New South Wales was Woodfull's first against Victoria's arch-rivals.[19][21] Woodfull made 47 in the first innings before being dismissed by Test leg spinner Arthur Mailey. After exactly 300 first-class runs, a bowler had dismissed him for the first time. He then made an unbeaten 84 to steer his team to a seven-wicket victory.[19] He showed a liking for the South Australian bowlers, scoring 0, 115, 123 and 94 not out as Victoria won both of their matches against the aforementioned team.[19] He ended his first full season with 598 runs at 74.75.[19] Despite this, Victoria lost the Sheffield Shield to New South Wales on scoring difference; both teams had finished equal on points.[22]

He played in each match for the Victorian Sheffield Shield team in the 1923–24 season, when he scored 300 runs at 37.50,[19] including a 117 against New South Wales. Victoria won all five of their matches and took the title.[19][23]

In a match against New South Wales in 1924–25, he compiled 81 and 120 not out as Victoria managed to take a seven-wicket win after their opponents had accumulated 614 in the first innings.[2][6] He scored fifties in each of the four other matches, three of which were won. Woodfull ended the Australian season with 494 runs at 61.75.[19] Woodfull was nevertheless omitted for selection in the Tests against the touring England team.[19][24] As a reward for winning the Sheffield Shield,[25] Victoria embarked on a tour of New Zealand at the end of the season. Woodfull scored 212 not out against Canterbury, before scoring 110, 50 and 150 against New Zealand without being dismissed at all.[19] The unbeaten 150 was achieved on a sticky wicket.[25] He ended the tour with 706 runs at 176.50.[19] In one two-year period, Woodfull's defence was so solid that he was never bowled.[7]

During the 1925–26 season, players were vying for selection for the 1926 Ashes tour. The selectors were interested in Woodfull and selected him for an Australian XI to play the Rest of Australia in a Test trial. He made 11 and 42 as The Rest upset the Australian XI.[19][26] After three matches without passing 53, Woodfull added 97 and 236 in a match against South Australia. He scored 126 in the next match, but was unable to stop an innings defeat to New South Wales for the second time in the season.[19]

As a result of consistent performances for Victoria, Woodfull was selected for Herbie Collins' Test team for the 1926 Ashes tour.[2] He scored 148 and 64 as the Australians defeated Tasmania by an innings in consecutive matches before sailing for England.[19] He ended the Australian season with 890 runs at 63.57.[19]

Test debut edit

Despite being regarded as the last man picked for the tour,[10] Woodfull headed the batting averages in the first-class matches and was third in the Tests.[6]

In his first two first-class innings on tour, Woodfull struck a 201 against Essex at Leyton and a 118 against Surrey at The Oval. Both were made on damp pitches, with the double century coming in only four hours of batting.[7] Woodfull's effort was the only double century by an Australian during the tour.[27] They were the first of eight centuries during the tour, in which he compiled 1809 runs at 58.35.[2][6][28]

After making a duck against the Marylebone Cricket Club, which was a dress rehearsal for the Tests as the MCC fielded a virtual England team,[19] Woodfull scored an unbeaten 98 against Cambridge University before running out of partners. He added 69 against the South of England and 100 against Middlesex and entered the Tests with 653 runs on tour at an average of 59.36.[19]

Woodfull made his debut in the first Test at Trent Bridge, but it was an anti-climax; Australia did not bat in a washed-out match as England reached 0/32 when rain ended play.[19][27][29][30] He failed to make an impression in the second Test at Lord's, scoring 13 and a duck in another drawn match.[19][29] It capped off an unhappy June for Woodfull; he had scored only 120 runs at 13.33 for the month, with rain interruptions being frequent.[19]

Woodfull then regained his form, striking 102 not out in an innings win over Nottinghamshire.[19] He then established himself as a Test opener in the third Test at Headingley, where Australia were sent in to bat on a sticky wicket with erratic bounce. After opening partner Warren Bardsley was dismissed without scoring from the first ball,[31][32] Woodfull put on a second wicket partnership of 235 with Charlie Macartney to register his maiden Test century of 141. Macartney launched a vicious counterattack and became the second Australian to score a Test century before lunch on the opening day; this bold play helped Woodfull to settle in and the Australians to seize the initiative on a bowler-friendly surface.[31][33] The tourists made 494 on the sticky wicket and forced England to follow on, but were unable to finish them off.[19][30]

After scoring 65 against Lancashire, Woodfull made it back-to-back Test centuries in the fourth Test at Old Trafford with 117, the highest score of the innings.[2][6][28][33] It was another rain-affected draw in a wet summer,[33] Woodfull followed this with 156 in another weather-curtailed match against Surrey.[19]

The first four Tests were drawn, so the fate of the Ashes depended on the fifth Test,[30] which would be timeless.[33] Woodfull could manage only 35 and a duck as Australia lost the Test by 289 runs and thus the Ashes.[29] His 306 runs at 51.00 in the Tests placed him third behind Bardsley and Macartney.[34] In the closing stages of the tour, Woodfull compiled his eighth and final century of the campaign, an unbeaten 116 against an England XI in a drawn match.[19]

Upon his return to Australia, he established his partnership with Bill Ponsford, and in the 1926–27 Shield season, they put on a 375-run opening stand in less than four hours,[35] which laid the foundation for the world record first-class score of 1107 against New South Wales.[2][6][36] The stand eclipsed the Sheffield shield record of 298 for the first wicket by Victor Trumper and Reg Duff in 1902–03.[35] Woodfull made 133 and the Victorians won by an innings and 656 runs.[19] He ended the season by scoring 140 and 29 not out as the Australian XI defeated The Rest by seven wickets.[19] He scored two further fifties and ended the season with 483 runs at 69.00 in five matches.[19] He then toured Malaya and Singapore with Bert Oldfield's team during the off-season, scoring three centuries; none of the matches were first-class.[19]

In 1927–28 Australian season, Woodfull played in five matches and was highly productive in the last three. He scored 99 and 191 not out in a victory over New South Wales, before adding 106 in an innings triumph over South Australia. He rounded off the season with 94 and 81 not out in a draw in the return match against New South Wales.[19] He ended the Australian campaign with 645 runs at 129.00.[19] With Ponsford amassing 1217 runs at 152.12, Victoria usually got off to a strong start with the bat, and won the Shield easily.[37]

Woodfull recorded his career best score of 284, compiled in five and a half hours of batting,[7] during a brief tour to New Zealand as part of an Australian XI at the end of the season.[2] He added 184 for the first wicket with Ponsford and 218 for the fourth with Karl Schneider.[38] He scored centuries in the first two matches before adding fifties in the next two. He ended the first-class matches with 781 runs at 130.16.[19]

Woodfull was appointed as vice-captain to Jack Ryder for the 1928–29 home Ashes series.[39] The Australian board had spent a great deal of time arguing over whether Woodfull or Victor Richardson should be Ryder's deputy, before realising that he selectors had omitted the latter.[40] With six members of the team that played in the last Test in 1926 having retired, Australia would field and young and inexperienced team.[40] Woodfull prepared for the Tests with an unbeaten 67 for Victoria in a drawn tour match against Percy Chapman's touring Englishmen.[19]

Woodfull played his first Test on Australian soil in the first Test at Brisbane. He made a duck in the first innings as Australia fell for 122 to concede a 411-run first innings lead.[19][29] before Australia were forced to chase 742 for victory. Woodfull carried his bat to make an unbeaten 30 as Australia were skittled for 66 on a sticky wicket in Brisbane in the first Test to lose by a record 675 runs.[2][19][28][41][42] Woodfull then made 68 to top-score in the first innings of the second Test in Sydney. Australia conceded another mammoth first innings lead, 383.[19] Woodfull then scored his first Test century in Australia, with 111 in the second innings to force the tourists to bat again. Despite this, England scored 2/16 to win the match.[19][42]

The third Test was Woodfull's first at his home ground in Melbourne, and despite scoring 107 in the second innings, the tourists won by three wickets in front of Test world record crowd.[2][30][43] Woodfull made only one and 30 as Australia fell short by 12 runs in the fourth Test in Adelaide, but ended the season on a high.[19]

In a tour match against the Englishmen, Woodfull made 275 not out for Victoria, his highest score for his state.[2][28][41] During the match, Woodfull was captain and had agreed with English captain Chapman to vary rules that had been laid by the Australian Board of Control. The two men agreed to cover the pitch throughout the match and to bowl overs of six balls instead of eight. The Australian Board of Control reacted by reprimanding the Victorian Cricket Association.[44] The match was a high-scoring draw.[19]

The teams returned to Melbourne for the fifth Test, where Woodfull scored 102 and 35 in front of his home crowd as Australia won by five wickets. It was the first time that Woodfull had played in a winning Test, after ten matches.[29][30] He hit three centuries in the series, with 491 runs at 54.56 despite which Australia lost the Ashes 4–1.[41] Woodfull ended the entire season with 854 runs at 85.40.[19][45]

Woodfull started the 1929–30 Australian season by scoring an unbeaten 100 against the touring MCC, overseeing a successful run-chase.[19] However, his season was cut short in the third match when he suffered a broken hand after being hit by a short ball from Hugh Thurlow in a match against Queensland.[2][28][41] Woodfull was forced to retired hurt and recovered just in time for the warm-up matches against Tasmania before the national team headed to England.[19] He had scored 231 runs at 77.00 in five matches during the season.[19]

Captaincy edit

 
Heavy rain on the third day of the third England-Australia Test at Headingley delayed the match. The team captains Chapman and Woodfull (right) are inspecting the field on 14 July 1930.
 
Woodfull's Test career batting performance. The red bars indicate the runs that he scored in an innings, with the blue line indicating the batting average in his last ten innings. The blue dots indicate an innings where he remained not out.[29]

After the heavy 4–1 defeat in the previous Ashes series, captain and fellow Victorian Jack Ryder was omitted altogether from the 1930 Ashes tour, and Woodfull appointed captain. Ryder was one of the three selectors and advocated his own retention, but his two colleagues had voted him off.[46] At first, Woodfull was reluctant to accept the job, feeling that it rightfully belonged to Ryder. When he was informed that Ryder was not even touring, Woodfull only agreed after a ballot was organised.[41] He was unanimously selected by the board.[47] Woodfull had limited leadership experience and in his brief captaincy duties had been the first captain to declare his team's second innings in Shield history.[7]

After winning the vote, Woodfull led the youngest fifteen-man squad to ever tour England, with eleven never having played on English soil.[47] Commentators expected Australia to be easily defeated, being described as "the weakest squad ever to come to these shores".[41] In some quarters, the team was dubbed "Woodfull's kindergarten".[1]

The tour started with a match against Worcestershire, with Woodfull scoring a century and Don Bradman making 236* in 275 minutes.[41] Woodfull's first game in command ended with a resounding innings victory.[19] He added 54 in a win over Essex and scored 121 a drawn match against Yorkshire, the dominant county of the era with many leading Test players.[19][48] Woodfull then added consecutive fifties in draws against the MCC and Surrey. After consecutive innings wins of Oxford University and Hampshire, Woodfull completed his Test preparation by striking 216 in an innings win over Cambridge University.[19] Heading into the Tests, Woodfull had amassed 662 runs at 66.20.[19] However, concerns over the Australian bowling attack prompted Woodfull and the senior players to ask the board to send another spinner. This was refused.[49]

However, Woodfull's Test captaincy started poorly in the first Test at Trent Bridge; he scored two and four as Australia fell to a 93-run defeat,[29][30][41] after losing their last seven wickets for 104.[49] Immediately after, he scored 141 against Surrey.[19]

He set the tone with an opening stand of 162 with fellow Victorian Ponsford in the second Test at Lord's. Ponsford was dismissed immediately after the teams had an audience with King George V.[50] Woodfull then made a 231-run stand with Bradman (254) in only two and a half hours and reached 155.[41][50] Australia put themselves in control with 6/729 declared. Woodfull was unbeaten on 26 in the second innings as Australia reached 72 to complete a seven-wicket triumph.[19] Woodfull then won the toss for the first time and contributed 50 to a stand of 192 with Bradman in the third Test at Headingley (the match in which Bradman scored 309 in a day).[30][41] Australia reached 566 but rain helped England to a draw after being forced to follow on.[29][41] Woodfull scored 54 as the fourth Test was rained out before the second innings.[29][51] With the series tied at 1–1 the fifth Test at The Oval was a timeless match. Woodfull won the toss and after England made 405, he scored 54 as Australia amassed 695 to win by an innings and regain the Ashes 2–1.[19][29][30] During the Tests, Woodfull had contributed 345 runs at 57.50, second only to Bradman.[41] In all first-class matches, he compiled 1,435 runs at 57.36 including six centuries. Woodfull and his fellow Victorian Ponsford played a significant part by making three century opening stands—162 at Lord's, 159 at The Oval and 106 at Old Trafford to help Australia take the initiative in three Tests.[2][28] The Times commented that "No praise is too high for Woodfull" and commended the Australian captain's encouragement of his young team.[52]

Upon returning to Australia, Woodfull was elected as Victoria's delegate on the five-man national selection panel, replacing Ryder.[53] However, he resigned from the role before the next international series, thereby never participating in the selection of a Test team.[54]

This was followed by home series against the West Indies in 1930–31, the first Test tour of Australia by the Caribbean side.[30] Ahead of the Tests, Victoria defeated the tourists by an innings and 254, but Woodfull was unable to score any runs against his Test opponents, making a duck.[19]

In the Tests, Woodfull unselfishly broke up his opening combination with Ponsford by dropping down to No. 6 to accommodate the prodigiously talented young batsman Archie Jackson. Woodfull was uncomfortable batting out of position,[41] scoring six, 58 and 17 in the first three Tests.[30] Woodfull batted only once in each Test, as Australia easily won the first Test by ten wickets, and the next two by an innings.[30] Woodfull was restored to the top of the order for the fourth Test in Melbourne after Jackson's illness became too much, forcing the young batsman to withdraw from competition. Woodfull struck 83 run out as Australia took a third consecutive innings victory.[19][30] He then scored his first century for the season, making 177 and 27 not out in a state match against South Australia.[19]

However, Australia's winning run came to an end with a 30-run loss in the fifth Test, with Woodfull scoring 22 and 18.[29][30] He ended the series with a modest 204 runs at 34.00 as Australia won 4–1.[41][55] He ended the summer with 477 runs at 47.70.[19]

The following season saw a tour to Australia by the South Africans for the first time in two decades.[30] Woodfull started the season by scoring 121 and leading his state to an 88-run win over the tourists ahead of the Tests.[19] It was a signal of what was to follow in the Tests.[56] He then managed only 32 and nine as Victoria narrowly lost to South Australia by 21 runs.[19]

Woodfull scored 74 and 58 as Australia took innings victories in the first two Tests over the South Africans in Brisbane and Sydney.[29][30] He then scored 147 to script a three-wicket win over arch-rivals New South Wales, after Victoria had been forced to chase 434 for victory.[19]

In the third Test in Melbourne, Australia found themselves on the back foot for the first time in the series. Woodfull scored only seven in the first innings, as Australia made only 198 and South Africa took a 160-run lead. He then compiled his Test best of 161 in the second innings,[29] adding 274 in partnership with Bradman in only three hours,[57][58] to help Australia make 554 and set up a 169-run win.[19] It was the second successive Test season in which Woodfull had saved his highest Test score of the series for his home crowd.[29][30] He continued his run with 82 and 37 not out in the fourth Test, which was won by ten wickets.[19]

Woodfull had an opportunity to inflict more blows on the tourists as Victoria played them for the second time ahead of the final Test. While his state was unable to force a result, Woodfull continued his strong form with 44 and 73 not out.[19] The Australian captain finished the season with a duck from the opening ball of the fifth Test, bowled after failing to offer a shot,[59] but Australia won by an innings and 72 runs in the equivalent of a single day's play on a sticky wicket.[29][30][59]

Woodfull opened for the entire series, and returned his best ever series figures of 421 at 70.17, second only to Bradman.[2][28][41] The 5–0 result remains the only time that Australia has clean-swept South Africa over five Tests.[30] He ended the season with 849 runs at 65.31.[19]

Bodyline edit

In 1932–33, the English team led by Douglas Jardine toured Australia and won the Ashes in a very acrimonious series.[2] It has been described as the most controversial period in Australian cricket history,[60] and voted the most important Australian moment by a panel of Australian cricket identities.[61]

England's bodyline tactics, which involved bowling at speeds of around 150 km/h at the heads and torsoes of the Australian batsmen—including Woodfull—and employing a close leg-side cordon to catch balls fended away from the upper body, caused great controversy and ill-feeling among Australian players and crowds.[2][60] England devised the tactics in an attempt to curb Donald Bradman, Australia's star batsman, whose average hovered around 100, around twice that of all other world-class batsman.[62][63] However, they also hoped to restrict the other batsmen, Woodfull among them, through such means.[64]

During the season, Woodfull's physical courage, stoic and dignified leadership won him many admirers. He refused to employ retaliatory tactics and did not publicly complain even though he and his men were repeatedly hit—[2][60] according to Ken Piesse, 34 times in all.[65] Once the issue was resolved, and practice stopped, Woodfull refused to discuss the matter, fearing that it would disturb the peace.[10]

Woodfull started the season strongly, scoring 74 and 83 in a loss to New South Wales in the second match of the summer,[19] but was soon confronted by Jardine's Englishmen. He made five and 25 as England crushed Victoria by an innings.[19] Although England did aim at the batsmen's body, they did not enforce the second half of the Bodyline structure, by not packing the leg side.[64] This changed in the next match, when Woodfull led an Australian XI against the tourists in Melbourne, in what was effectively a Test rehearsal. With Jardine rested from the match, his deputy Bob Wyatt used the full Bodyline tactics for the first time.[64][66] The match was drawn and Woodfull struggled, making 18 and a duck.[19] Utilising his hopping technique and attempting to play unorthodox shots resembling overhead tennis smashes, Bradman failed to make an impact, and England were buoyed ahead of the Tests.[19]

Australia lost heavily by ten wickets in the first Test at Sydney, when the bodyline spearhead, Harold Larwood, took ten wickets,[10] while Woodfull managed only seven and a duck.[29] Before the second Test in Melbourne, Woodfull had to wait until minutes before the game before he was confirmed as captain by the selectors.[67] This caused the toss to be delayed and fomented speculation that the Australian Board of Control were considering the possibility of removing Woodfull because of his absolute refusal to allow his bowlers to use retaliatory tactics.[68][69] His deputy Victor Richardson had advocated retaliation along with several other players.[70] Richardson recalled Woodfull's private response:

There is no way I will be influenced to adopt such tactics which bring such discredit to the game. I know Tim could do it but I am not going to participate in actions that can only hurt the game.[70]

Although Woodfull led Australia to a dramatic victory by 111 runs, his form was a problem as he managed only 10 and 26;[28][29][30] he was also hit by the bowling.[71] The bodyline controversy reached its peak during the second day of the third Test. An all-time record Adelaide Oval crowd of 50,962[4][72] watched Australia finish off England's first innings for 341. Then, Woodfull opened Australia's batting with Jack Fingleton, who was dismissed straight away for a duck. Minutes later Larwood, bowling to a conventional field setting, struck Woodfull an agonising blow under his heart with a short, lifting delivery.[4][73][74] As Woodfull bent down over his bat in pain for several minutes, an image that became one of the defining symbols of the series, the huge crowd began jeering, hooting and verbally abusing the English team,[4] something that was almost unheard of for the social standards of the era. Jardine reacted by saying "Well bowled, Harold".[4][74]

When play resumed, England's Gubby Allen bowled an entire over to Bradman.[75] As Larwood prepared to bowl his next over to Woodfull, Jardine changed to the Bodyline field setting. The capacity Saturday afternoon crowd viewed this as hitting a man when he was down.[4][5] Journalist-cricketer Dick Whitington, wrote that Jardine's actions were seen as "an unforgivable crime in Australian eyes and certainly no part of cricket".[76] Mass hooting and jeering occurred after almost every ball.[4][76] Whitington noted that "[Umpire] Hele believes that had what followed occurred in Melbourne the crowd would have leapt the fence and belaboured the English captain; Larwood, and possibly the entire side".[76] Some English players later expressed fears that a large-scale riot and that the police would not be able to stop the irate home crowd, who were worried that Woodfull or Bradman could be killed, from attacking them.[4][77] When Larwood immigrated to Australia two decades later, he remained fearful for his safety.[78]

During the over, another rising Larwood delivery knocked the bat out of Woodfull's hands. He battled it out for 89 minutes, collecting more bruises before Allen bowled him for 22.[79] Later in the day, the English team manager Pelham Warner visited the Australian dressing room to express his sympathies to Woodfull. Woodfull had remained calm in public, refusing to complain about Jardine's tactics.[4][5] Woodfull's abrupt response was meant to be private, but it was leaked to the press and became the most famous quotation of this tumultuous period in cricket history:[2]

I do not want to see you, Mr Warner. There are two teams out there. One is playing cricket and the other is not.[2][3][4][5]

Woodfull reportedly added "This game is too good to be spoilt. It's time some people got out of it",[3][4][5] hinting that he might withdraw his team from competition in protest.[80] Australia's Leo O'Brien later reported that Warner was close to tears following Woodfull's rebuke.[5] Australian singer Paul Kelly reflected on Woodfull's character in this incident in his song "Bradman":

Now Bill Woodfull was as fine a man as ever went to wicket
And the bruises on his body that day showed that he could stick it
But to this day he's still quoted and only he could wear it
'There are two sides out there today and only one of them's playing cricket'[81]

 
Woodfull (left) walks out to open the batting with Vic Richardson in the final Bodyline Test.

In the meantime, the second innings in Adelaide saw England set Australia a near-impossible 532 for victory; even today,[19] the highest successful Test run chase is 418.[82] Australia lost its first wicket at three when Jack Fingleton was bowled by Larwood. Woodfull was joined by Bradman, who played in an unorthodox counterattacking method, before being dismissed for 66. Woodfull continued on to score an unbeaten 73, carrying his bat as his teammates capitulated around him. Australia was eventually all out for 193, with Oldfield unable to bat due to his fractured skull.[19][80]

Woodfull made scores of 67, 19, 14 and 67 in the final two Tests, which Australia lost by six and eight wickets respectively.[29][30][83] In the fifth Test in Sydney, Larwood broke a bone in his foot, but Jardine made him complete the over, even though the laws of cricket permit a captain to switch bowlers mid-over in the case of injury. Larwood stood stationary at the wicket and bowled without a run-up, but Woodfull refused to take advantage of the injured bowler. He blocked the five remaining deliveries back down the wicket towards Larwood and refused to take a run.[84]

England reclaimed the Ashes 4–1.[2] Overall, Woodfull had scored 305 runs at a moderate 33.89 average—it was the slowest scoring rate for his career, but significantly, he had defied the English bowling for over twenty hours in total, more than any other Australian.[3][80] Amid the high drama of the season, Woodfull's struggles spread beyond the Test arena; he scored only 297 runs at 33.00 in matches outside the Tests.[19]

In 1933–34 cricket returned to normality with the departure of Jardine's men. Woodfull scored 118 in a one-off match between his XI and Richardson's XI, which ended in a draw. He then scored 129 in the run-chase as The Rest of Australia narrowly defeated New South Wales by two wickets.[19] Woodfull scored fifties in both interstate matches against New South Wales and added consecutive centuries for the national team against Tasmania before departing for his final tour of England.[19] He ended the season with 818 runs at 62.92, returning to form after the tumult of the previous summer.[19]

International farewell edit

In 1934, having been reappointed to a position on the selection panel,[85] Woodfull led Australia back to England on a tour that had been under a cloud after the tempestuous cricket diplomacy of the previous bodyline series. After agreements were put in place so that bodyline would not be used, the tour went ahead.[86][87][88] However, there were occasions when the Australians felt that their hosts had crossed the mark with tactics resembling bodyline.[86]

Woodfull started his final English campaign slowly. In his first eight innings, he scored only 161 runs at 20.12 with one half-century.[19] Other players sensed that Woodfull had become less cheerful following the bodyline series and he offered to drop himself following his run of poor form, but fellow selectors Bradman and Alan Kippax disagreed.[88] In the traditional Test rehearsal against the MCC, Australia reduced the hosts to be eight down in their second innings, still in arrears when the match ended in a draw.[19] In his final innings before the Tests, Woodfull struck form with 172 not out against Lancashire.[19]

In the first Test at Trent Bridge, Woodfull struck 26 and two. Australia led by 106 on the first innings and although Woodfull was so concerned with batting England out of the match that he declared with less than five hours remaining on the final day,[89] his men went on to win by 238 runs,[19] albeit with only ten minutes of play remaining.[89] England struck back in the second Test at Lord's. Woodfull made 22 as Australia replied to England's 440 with 284. The hosts enforced the follow on as rain breathed life into the pitch, and Woodfull made 43 as Australia were all out for 118 in an innings defeat.[19][30][90][91]

He then scored 73 run out, his only fifty in the Tests, as Australia made 491 and ceded a 136-run lead in the third Test at Old Trafford. However, they held on for a draw. Woodfull made a duck in the fourth Test at Headingley,[19] but another Bradman triple century put them in control before rain shortened the match; England still needed 155 runs to make Australia bat again with only four wickets in hand when the match ended.[19] The draw meant that the series was at 1–1 heading into the final Test at The Oval, which would be timeless.[19][92]

In the lead-up to the decider, Woodfull ran into form. In consecutive innings, he scored 131 and 228 not out against Gloucestershire and Glamorgan respectively.[19] However controversy followed in a match against Nottinghamshire. In the first innings, Woodfull scored 81 as Australia batted first and made 237.[19] Bill Voce, one of the bodyline practitioners of 1932–33, employed it with the wicket-keeper standing to the leg side and took 8/66.[88][90] In the second innings, Voce repeated the tactic late in the day, in fading light against Woodfull and Bill Brown. Of his 12 balls, 11 were no lower than head height.[90]

Woodfull told the Nottinghamshire administrators that, if Voce's leg side bowling was repeated, his men would leave the field and return to London. He further said that Australia would not return to the county in future. The following day, Voce was absent, ostensibly due to a leg injury.[41][88][90][93] Already angered by the absence of Larwood, the Nottinghamshire faithful heckled the Australians all day.[88] Australia had previously and privately complained that some pacemen had strayed past the agreement in the Tests.[90]

When the teams took to the field for the deciding Test, Woodfull won the toss and elected to bat.[30] He scored 49 as Australia amassed 701 in the timeless match. England replied with 321, and Woodfull made 13 in his final Test innings. The tourists made 327 and set England a target of 708 for victory. His bowlers then dismissed the hosts for 145 to seal a decisive win by 562 runs, and the series 2–1.[19][30] On 22 August, for the second time in four years, Australia had won the Ashes on Woodfull's birthday.[92]

The victory made Woodfull the only captain to regain the Ashes twice.[2] He scored 1,268 runs at 52.83 during the tour with three centuries.[19] His tally of 25 Tests as captain was a world record and remained unsurpassed for a quarter of a century.[8]

Woodfull performed poorly in the Tests, with 228 runs at 28.50, but it was sufficient for an Australian triumph as Bradman and Ponsford each averaged over 90 and Clarrie Grimmett and Bill O'Reilly each took over 25 wickets. Woodfull was criticised by Robinson for his relatively defensive captaincy, tending to bat opponents out of the match instead of going directly for victory from the off.[41] Woodfull relied on O'Reilly and Grimmett, using only three specialist bowlers as he sought to reinforce the batting line-up.[41] However, he was effective in curtailing leading English batsmen Wally Hammond. When Woodfull was captaining Australia, Hammond only averaged half as much as he did when another player was captaining Australia.[89]

He retired immediately after the tour and was awarded a joint testimonial with Ponsford on his return to Victoria.[2] The match raised a total of 2,084 Australian pounds.[8] In this match between Woodfull's XI and Richardson's XI, he scored 111 in his final innings, as his men made 316 in reply to 196. Woodfull then took his only wicket at first-class level in the second innings and his team reached the target of 280 with seven wickets in hand without him having to bat.[19]

In early 1935, Woodfull lost his position as the Victorian delegate on the national selection panel after being defeated by William Johnson in a vote.[94]

Retirement edit

 
Life-size bronze statue of Bill Woodfull outside Melbourne High School, by Linda Klarfeld

Outside cricket, Woodfull spent several years as headmaster at Box Hill High School then had a successful career as a mathematics teacher at Melbourne High School, and was headmaster for six years.[2][8] He was known for his stern discipline throughout his career.[10] One of his students was future Australian Test all rounder and Australian Cricket Hall of Fame inductee Keith Miller, whom he taught in year nine.[95] Miller was a mediocre student, as he did little study and focused his energy on sport.[96] This disappointed Woodfull, a disciplined man who invoked the school motto, which meant Honour the Work and exhorted his students to work hard as Australia was attempting to emerge from the depths of the Great Depression.[96] Miller scored zero in his final exam for Woodfull's geometry class,[97] and was forced to repeat the year.[98] Despite his credentials, Woodfull refused to involve himself in coaching the school's cricket teams, feeling that it would intrude on the responsibilities of the sports teachers. Despite this, Woodfull watched the students at cricket training and quickly noticed Miller's skills,[99] writing in the school magazine that "Miller has Test possibilities".[100] Other notable students included Doug Ring, a leg spinner who was a member of Bradman's Invincibles, left arm orthodox spinner Jack Wilson and world record breaking Olympic distance runner Ron Clarke.[8] The school oval was later named the Miller-Woodfull Oval.

The rejuvenated Maldon Oval in his home town was renamed the Bill Woodfull Recreation Reserve, and when the Great Southern Stand was constructed at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in 1992, one of the entrances was named the Bill Woodfull Gate.[2]

Woodfull married Gwen King, whom he met while singing in the choir at his father's church in Albert Park, and they married after Woodfull's return from the England tour in 1926. They had three children.[41] His two sons Jack and Bill Jr, played for Melbourne University Cricket Club and became successful dentists.[8]

In November 1934, the Governor-General informed him that the King had offered him a knighthood,[92] "for services to cricket",[101] The citation made a veiled reference to Woodfull's actions during the bodyline episode. Woodfull always considered his contributions to education more important than anything he ever did on the cricket field, and declined the honour.[101] In later life he said "Had I been awarded it for being an educationalist, then I would have accepted it. But under no circumstances would I accept it for playing cricket."[101] In 1963, he was invested as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to education.[2] In 1965, while on holiday with his wife and daughter Jill,[8] he collapsed and died while playing golf in Tweed Heads, New South Wales.[28] His family remained adamant that the bruising bodyline attack had permanently damaged his health and curtailed his life.[102][103] Woodfull was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2001, one of the first 15 inductees.[28]

Test match performance edit

  Batting[104] Bowling[105]
Opposition Matches Runs Average High Score 100 / 50 Runs Wickets Average Best (Inns)
  England 25 1675 44.07 155 6/8
  South Africa 5 421 70.16 161 1/3
  West Indies 5 204 34.00 83 0/2
Overall 35 2300 46.00 161 7/13

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Robinson, p. 160.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Cashman et al., pp. 322–323.
  3. ^ a b c d e Robinson, p. 163.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Haigh and Frith, p. 73.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Piesse, p. 127.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Wisden 1927 – Bill Woodfull". Wisden. 1927. Retrieved 24 May 2007.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Robinson, p. 159.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Robinson, p. 166.
  9. ^ a b Robinson, p. 162.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Pollard, Jack (1988). Australian Cricket:The Game and the Players. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. pp. 1131–1132. ISBN 0-207-15269-1.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Robinson, p. 158.
  12. ^ a b c Robinson, p. 161.
  13. ^ Armstrong, Geoff (2002). ESPN Legends of Cricket. Allen & Unwin. pp. 17–22. ISBN 1-86508-836-6.
  14. ^ a b Haigh and Frith, p.94.
  15. ^ Haigh, p. 256.
  16. ^ Haigh, p. 31.
  17. ^ Whitington and Hele, p. 139.
  18. ^ a b Perry, pp. 146–147.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg "Player Oracle WM Woodfull". CricketArchive. Retrieved 14 May 2009.
  20. ^ a b c Harte and Whimpress, p. 283.
  21. ^ Pollard, pp. 192–194.
  22. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 286.
  23. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 289.
  24. ^ Harte and Whimpress, pp. 293–295.
  25. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 296.
  26. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 298.
  27. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 299.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Haigh, Gideon. "Players and Officials:Bill Woodfull". Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 May 2007.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Statsguru – WM Woodfull – Test matches – All-round analysis". Cricinfo. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Statsguru – Australia – Tests – Results list". Cricinfo. Retrieved 21 December 2007.
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  32. ^ Pollard, p. 112.
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  34. ^ Perry, p. 147.
  35. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 302.
  36. ^ Piesse, p. 104.
  37. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 308.
  38. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 307.
  39. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 56.
  40. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 312.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Perry, pp. 147–148.
  42. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 313.
  43. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 314.
  44. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 57.
  45. ^ Harte and Whimpress, pp. 315–316.
  46. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 58.
  47. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 322.
  48. ^ Armstrong, p. 169.
  49. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 324.
  50. ^ a b Harte and Whimpress, p. 325.
  51. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 326.
  52. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 327.
  53. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 60.
  54. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 62.
  55. ^ Harte and Whimpress, pp. 329–333.
  56. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 335.
  57. ^ Piesse, p. 123.
  58. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 336.
  59. ^ a b Piesse, p. 125.
  60. ^ a b c Colman, p. 171.
  61. ^ Haigh and Frith, foreword.
  62. ^ Piesse, p. 130.
  63. ^ Cashman et al., pp. 32–35.
  64. ^ a b c Haigh and Frith, p. 70.
  65. ^ Piesse, p. 131.
  66. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 344.
  67. ^ O'Reilly, Bill (1985). Tiger – 60 Years of Cricket. Collins. p. 88. ISBN 0-00-217477-4.
  68. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 72.
  69. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 346.
  70. ^ a b Colman, p. 181.
  71. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 345.
  72. ^ Harte, Chris (1993). A History of Australian Cricket. André Deutsch. p. 346. ISBN 0-233-98825-4.
  73. ^ Frith, p. 179.
  74. ^ a b Piesse, p. 126.
  75. ^ Frith, p. 180.
  76. ^ a b c Whitington, Dick (1974). The Book of Australian Test Cricket 1877–1974. Wren Publishing. p. 173. ISBN 0-85885-197-0.
  77. ^ Piesse, pp. 127–128.
  78. ^ Growden, pp. 197–200.
  79. ^ Frith, p. 182.
  80. ^ a b c Perry, pp. 144–146.
  81. ^ Kelly, Paul (1993). Lyrics. Angus & Robertson.
  82. ^ "Records / Test matches / Team records / Highest fourth innings totals". Cricinfo. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
  83. ^ Harte and Whimpress, pp. 347–348.
  84. ^ Robinson, pp. 163–164.
  85. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 80.
  86. ^ a b Haigh and Frith, p. 84.
  87. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 354.
  88. ^ a b c d e Robinson, p. 164.
  89. ^ a b c Robinson, p. 165.
  90. ^ a b c d e Haigh and Frith, p. 85.
  91. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 355.
  92. ^ a b c Harte and Whimpress, p. 357.
  93. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 356.
  94. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 91.
  95. ^ Coleman, Robert (1993). Seasons In the Sun: the Story Of the Victorian Cricket Association. Melbourne: Hargreen Publishing. pp. 473–478. ISBN 0-949905-59-3.
  96. ^ a b Perry (2005), p. 18.
  97. ^ Perry (2005), p. 21.
  98. ^ Perry (2005), p. 22.
  99. ^ Perry (2005), p. 19.
  100. ^ Perry (2005), p. 25.
  101. ^ a b c Harte and Whimpress, p. 358.
  102. ^ Robinson, pp. 165–166.
  103. ^ Harte and Whimpress, p. 501.
  104. ^ "Statsguru – WM Woodfull – Test matches – Batting analysis". Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 April 2008.
  105. ^ "Statsguru – WM Woodfull – Test Bowling – Bowling analysis". Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 April 2008.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

Preceded by Australian Test cricket captains
1930–1934
Succeeded by

bill, woodfull, william, maldon, woodfull, august, 1897, august, 1965, australian, cricketer, 1920s, 1930s, captained, both, victoria, australia, best, known, dignified, moral, conduct, during, tumultuous, bodyline, series, 1932, trained, schoolteacher, woodfu. William Maldon Woodfull OBE 22 August 1897 11 August 1965 was an Australian cricketer of the 1920s and 1930s He captained both Victoria and Australia and was best known for his dignified and moral conduct during the tumultuous bodyline series in 1932 33 Trained as a schoolteacher Woodfull was known for his benevolent attitude towards his players and his patience and defensive technique as an opening batsman Woodfull was not a flamboyant player but was known for his calm unruffled style and his reliability in difficult situations His opening pairing with fellow Victorian Bill Ponsford for both his state and Australia remains one of the most successful in history While not known for his tactical skills Woodfull was widely admired by his players and observers for his sportsmanship and ability to mould a successful and loyal team through the strength of his character Bill WoodfullWoodfull in 1934Personal informationFull nameWilliam Maldon WoodfullBorn 1897 08 22 22 August 1897Maldon Colony of VictoriaDied11 August 1965 1965 08 11 aged 67 Tweed Heads New South Wales AustraliaNicknameThe Unbowlable Rock of Gibraltar Wormkiller Old SteadfastHeight1 80 m 5 ft 11 in BattingRight handedRoleOpening batsmanInternational informationNational sideAustraliaTest debut cap 123 12 June 1926 v EnglandLast Test22 August 1934 v EnglandDomestic team informationYearsTeam1922 1934VictoriaCareer statisticsCompetition Test FCMatches 35 174Runs scored 2 300 13 388Batting average 46 00 64 99100s 50s 7 13 49 58Top score 161 284Balls bowled 0 26Wickets 1Bowling average 24 005 wickets in innings 010 wickets in match 0Best bowling 1 12Catches stumpings 7 0 78 0Source CricketArchive 29 February 2008Woodfull started playing cricket from a young age without distinction He made his professional debut in Melbourne s district competition staying until the age of 19 He made his first class debut for Victoria at the age of 24 late in 1921 22 After scoring a century in his second match Woodfull was promoted to open the following season and he opened for the rest of his career After scoring three centuries including a 236 in 1925 26 he was selected for the 1926 tour of England Regarded as one of the last players selected Woodfull scored a double century and century in his first two innings in England to earn his debut in the first Test Woodfull made eight centuries during the tour and topped the Australian averages and was named one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year Upon returning to Australia Woodfull established his partnership with Ponsford and in 1926 27 Shield season they put on a record breaking 375 run opening stand setting up a world record first class team score of 1107 Woodfull was appointed as vice captain to Jack Ryder for the 1928 29 home Ashes series following a spate of retirements He carried his bat in a record breaking first Test defeat Although England easily won 4 1 Woodfull scored three centuries and added his best first class score for 275 not out Woodfull reluctantly became captain in 1930 when Ryder was dropped and his team was derided as the worst Australian squad to tour England It was the youngest squad to leave Australia prompting commentators to label the team Woodfull s kindegarten 1 After losing the first Test Woodfull scored a century as Australia levelled the series and they won the fifth Test to regain the Ashes Woodfull ended the tour with six first class centuries In 1931 32 Woodfull had his most successful Test series in his career against South Africa scoring 421 runs at 70 17 including his Test highest score of 161 In 1932 33 great controversy erupted during England s tour of Australia The visitors used bodyline tactics persistently aiming at the upper bodies and heads of the Australian batsmen in the hope of stifling the hosts strong batting line up The Australian public and cricket community abhorred the tactic but Woodfull refused to retaliate or complain publicly The controversy peaked during the third Test at the Adelaide Oval Woodfull was felled by a blow to the heart almost provoking a riot After Woodfull was dismissed English manager Plum Warner came to privately express his sympathy to which Woodfull famously replied I do not want to see you Mr Warner There are two teams out there One is playing cricket and the other is not 2 3 4 5 England completed a convincing 4 1 victory but Woodfull was much praised for his stoic public behaviour In 1934 Woodfull led the Australians back to England for a tour that was to mend relations after assurances had been given that bodyline would not be repeated The Australians won 2 1 and Woodfull remains the only captain to regain the Ashes twice Woodfull retired after the tour his family claimed that the bodyline controversy had sapped his passion for cricket A mathematics teacher Woodfull went on to become headmaster at his alma mater Melbourne High School Contents 1 Style 2 Early years 3 Test debut 4 Captaincy 4 1 Bodyline 4 2 International farewell 5 Retirement 6 Test match performance 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksStyle edit nbsp Woodfull s batting stanceWoodfull batted in a manner which had little aesthetic pleasure or grace with Wisden describing stating that at first sight he gave the impression of being clumsy 6 Affected by a bout of rheumatic fever in childhood he had stiff jointed style and played with little noticeable backlift This gave the impression of a laboured playing style Despite this he scored consistently through good placement and powerful drives generated by his strong forearms 6 Despite his leaden appearance he often advanced down the pitch to spin bowling 7 He was known for playing with a straight bat and a close watch on the ball which were the core features of a strong defensive ability He typically took block on leg stump and shuffled across to cover his stumps His defensive prowess yielded names such as the unbowlable a reference to the fact that he was rarely bowled as a result of missing the ball and wormkiller 2 The latter epithet was given to him by English bowlers who said that his backlift was so small that it was only enough to decapitate worms that had raised their heads above ground level 7 He was also known for his reliability in crisis match situations leading to epithets such as The Rock and Old Steadfast 2 8 Woodfull formed an opening partnership with Bill Ponsford at state and international level which yielded 18 century opening stands Dubbed Mutt and Jeff by teammates after the famous comic strip duo 2 as well as Willy Wo and Willy Po 1 they were regarded as one of the finest opening partnerships in Test history 2 Their Victorian teammates had such faith in the pair that if they were batting the wicket keeper and bowlers who batted low in the order would leave the ground to go to work 9 As a captain Woodfull was known for his courage and high moral principles in the face of the bodyline series Fellow player Stan McCabe described him as the greatest man I ever met 2 8 10 while wicket keeper Bert Oldfield said that he had never met a more exemplary character Oldfield said that Woodfull was a psychologist and humanitarian in addition to a captain 8 Bradman attributed Woodfull s success to his ability to command the intense loyalty of his players and convert it into team spirit 8 Bill O Reilly said that Woodfull s men all held imperishable memories of his personal touch and his courage 8 Ray Robinson said that nobody thought Bill Woodfull the cat s whiskers as a strokeplayer but his many qualities made him a pre eminent leader of men 11 He added that Woodfull s unrivalled selflessness won fidelity bordering on devotion 12 Australian cricket writer Jack Pollard said that Woodfull had the habit of being where things were tough and he brought rare dignity to the Australian captaincy 10 Pollard compared the respect he commanded from his players to that of Ian Chappell 10 The English writer RC Robertson Glasgow said of Woodfull The most calm browed cricketer I have seen He reminded me of a master who gets the whole school to and from a picnic without losing his reason or a boy Of all the protagonists in that fiercest controversy bodyline I should say that he alone came out of it with reputation heightened and personal friendships increased He neither concealed nor exaggerated a difficulty 8 Woodfull was known for his gentlemanly nature and his adherence to the spirit of the game Aside from refusing to retaliate against bodyline Woodfull refused to exploit loopholes to dismiss batsmen On one occasion Jack Fingleton was run out after wandering out of the crease to inspect the crease without intending to run A teammate broke the wicket and the umpire upheld the appeal but Woodfull called Fingleton back 9 He led his team in an understated way preferring to give broad objectives to his players and trusting them to choose their own methods to fulfil the task at hand 12 However he was known to organise his team tightly on tour to ensure that things proceeded smoothly 1 Although Woodfull was a devout Methodist he would show a deep concern in the personal welfare of all players which extended to finding the location of the nearest Catholic Church for those teammates who followed the religion 12 At the time Australian society at large was divided along Catholic Protestant lines 13 14 and while O Reilly and McCabe were full of praise for Woodfull 8 they were later accused of leading a Catholic revolt against the leadership of the Protestant Bradman during a divisive period in the late 1930s 14 15 While Woodfull himself never touched alcohol due to his strict adherence to his religious principles 1 he did not impose his beliefs on his team He would buy drinks for his players 1 and ask administrators to provide more alcohol for his teammates when they were exhausted 3 At the time cricketers widely regarded beer as a highly effective means of rehydration 16 and on one occasion Woodfull threatened to halt play when administrators refused his players more ale on the grounds that they had already consumed their quota 17 Early years editBorn in the central Victorian town of Maldon Woodfull was the third of four sons of Gertrude Lilian Abey Woodfull 1872 1941 and Reverend Thomas Staines Brittingham Woodfull 1863 1941 a Methodist preacher The Woodfulls moved to Melbourne when Thomas was given a transfer to Collingwood Methodist Mission in an inner city suburb 11 The religious traditionalism stayed with the younger Woodfull throughout his life He once refused to play an interstate match that was scheduled for Christmas Day 10 Woodfull s father installed a net in the backyard and taught him the emphasis on defensive technique and patience that were to become his hallmark 11 18 Woodfull attended Melbourne High School and his early career was unremarkable He made his district cricket debut in 1916 for Essendon at the age of 19 but did not distinguish himself He played no further cricket at the level before he gained his qualification as a schoolteacher in 1919 6 Because of a bout of rheumatic fever in childhood Woodfull had stiff muscles and as a result was rejected when he tried to join the First Australian Imperial Force to fight in World War I 10 He was posted to Maryborough High School and it was in the rural cricket competition that he began to gain attention In 1920 and 1921 he accumulated 1 335 runs at average of 225 83 in the local competition 6 When the England cricket team toured Australia in 1920 21 Woodfull played for a Ballarat XV and scored 50 and 1 A teaching transfer in 1921 saw him return to Melbourne where the Victorian selectors trialled him in Second XI fixtures during the 1921 22 season In two matches against South Australia and New South Wales he registered unbeaten scores of 186 and 227 respectively 6 11 19 20 At the time Victoria had so much depth that their Second XI was of comparable strength to the first choice teams from other states 20 In early 1922 he made his Sheffield Shield debut against South Australia at the Adelaide Oval He batted at No 8 and made an unbeaten 22 11 Batting at No 7 in his second match against Western Australia Woodfull registered his maiden first class century with 153 2 6 He was run out in his second and final innings of his debut first class season so he was yet to be dismissed by a bowler Both matches were won by an innings 19 part of a dominant summer for the Victorians 20 During this time he also studied for an arts degree at night in addition to his post at Williamstown High School 18 The following season Woodfull was promoted to open and his consistent performances in all conditions meant that he was to play there for the rest of his career 11 Between 1922 and 1926 he accumulated over 3 000 first class runs at an average of 67 2 6 In the first match of the 1922 23 season Woodfull scored 74 run out and four not out as Victoria scraped past the Marylebone Cricket Club by two wickets 19 The next match against New South Wales was Woodfull s first against Victoria s arch rivals 19 21 Woodfull made 47 in the first innings before being dismissed by Test leg spinner Arthur Mailey After exactly 300 first class runs a bowler had dismissed him for the first time He then made an unbeaten 84 to steer his team to a seven wicket victory 19 He showed a liking for the South Australian bowlers scoring 0 115 123 and 94 not out as Victoria won both of their matches against the aforementioned team 19 He ended his first full season with 598 runs at 74 75 19 Despite this Victoria lost the Sheffield Shield to New South Wales on scoring difference both teams had finished equal on points 22 He played in each match for the Victorian Sheffield Shield team in the 1923 24 season when he scored 300 runs at 37 50 19 including a 117 against New South Wales Victoria won all five of their matches and took the title 19 23 In a match against New South Wales in 1924 25 he compiled 81 and 120 not out as Victoria managed to take a seven wicket win after their opponents had accumulated 614 in the first innings 2 6 He scored fifties in each of the four other matches three of which were won Woodfull ended the Australian season with 494 runs at 61 75 19 Woodfull was nevertheless omitted for selection in the Tests against the touring England team 19 24 As a reward for winning the Sheffield Shield 25 Victoria embarked on a tour of New Zealand at the end of the season Woodfull scored 212 not out against Canterbury before scoring 110 50 and 150 against New Zealand without being dismissed at all 19 The unbeaten 150 was achieved on a sticky wicket 25 He ended the tour with 706 runs at 176 50 19 In one two year period Woodfull s defence was so solid that he was never bowled 7 During the 1925 26 season players were vying for selection for the 1926 Ashes tour The selectors were interested in Woodfull and selected him for an Australian XI to play the Rest of Australia in a Test trial He made 11 and 42 as The Rest upset the Australian XI 19 26 After three matches without passing 53 Woodfull added 97 and 236 in a match against South Australia He scored 126 in the next match but was unable to stop an innings defeat to New South Wales for the second time in the season 19 As a result of consistent performances for Victoria Woodfull was selected for Herbie Collins Test team for the 1926 Ashes tour 2 He scored 148 and 64 as the Australians defeated Tasmania by an innings in consecutive matches before sailing for England 19 He ended the Australian season with 890 runs at 63 57 19 Test debut editDespite being regarded as the last man picked for the tour 10 Woodfull headed the batting averages in the first class matches and was third in the Tests 6 In his first two first class innings on tour Woodfull struck a 201 against Essex at Leyton and a 118 against Surrey at The Oval Both were made on damp pitches with the double century coming in only four hours of batting 7 Woodfull s effort was the only double century by an Australian during the tour 27 They were the first of eight centuries during the tour in which he compiled 1809 runs at 58 35 2 6 28 After making a duck against the Marylebone Cricket Club which was a dress rehearsal for the Tests as the MCC fielded a virtual England team 19 Woodfull scored an unbeaten 98 against Cambridge University before running out of partners He added 69 against the South of England and 100 against Middlesex and entered the Tests with 653 runs on tour at an average of 59 36 19 Woodfull made his debut in the first Test at Trent Bridge but it was an anti climax Australia did not bat in a washed out match as England reached 0 32 when rain ended play 19 27 29 30 He failed to make an impression in the second Test at Lord s scoring 13 and a duck in another drawn match 19 29 It capped off an unhappy June for Woodfull he had scored only 120 runs at 13 33 for the month with rain interruptions being frequent 19 Woodfull then regained his form striking 102 not out in an innings win over Nottinghamshire 19 He then established himself as a Test opener in the third Test at Headingley where Australia were sent in to bat on a sticky wicket with erratic bounce After opening partner Warren Bardsley was dismissed without scoring from the first ball 31 32 Woodfull put on a second wicket partnership of 235 with Charlie Macartney to register his maiden Test century of 141 Macartney launched a vicious counterattack and became the second Australian to score a Test century before lunch on the opening day this bold play helped Woodfull to settle in and the Australians to seize the initiative on a bowler friendly surface 31 33 The tourists made 494 on the sticky wicket and forced England to follow on but were unable to finish them off 19 30 After scoring 65 against Lancashire Woodfull made it back to back Test centuries in the fourth Test at Old Trafford with 117 the highest score of the innings 2 6 28 33 It was another rain affected draw in a wet summer 33 Woodfull followed this with 156 in another weather curtailed match against Surrey 19 The first four Tests were drawn so the fate of the Ashes depended on the fifth Test 30 which would be timeless 33 Woodfull could manage only 35 and a duck as Australia lost the Test by 289 runs and thus the Ashes 29 His 306 runs at 51 00 in the Tests placed him third behind Bardsley and Macartney 34 In the closing stages of the tour Woodfull compiled his eighth and final century of the campaign an unbeaten 116 against an England XI in a drawn match 19 Upon his return to Australia he established his partnership with Bill Ponsford and in the 1926 27 Shield season they put on a 375 run opening stand in less than four hours 35 which laid the foundation for the world record first class score of 1107 against New South Wales 2 6 36 The stand eclipsed the Sheffield shield record of 298 for the first wicket by Victor Trumper and Reg Duff in 1902 03 35 Woodfull made 133 and the Victorians won by an innings and 656 runs 19 He ended the season by scoring 140 and 29 not out as the Australian XI defeated The Rest by seven wickets 19 He scored two further fifties and ended the season with 483 runs at 69 00 in five matches 19 He then toured Malaya and Singapore with Bert Oldfield s team during the off season scoring three centuries none of the matches were first class 19 In 1927 28 Australian season Woodfull played in five matches and was highly productive in the last three He scored 99 and 191 not out in a victory over New South Wales before adding 106 in an innings triumph over South Australia He rounded off the season with 94 and 81 not out in a draw in the return match against New South Wales 19 He ended the Australian campaign with 645 runs at 129 00 19 With Ponsford amassing 1217 runs at 152 12 Victoria usually got off to a strong start with the bat and won the Shield easily 37 Woodfull recorded his career best score of 284 compiled in five and a half hours of batting 7 during a brief tour to New Zealand as part of an Australian XI at the end of the season 2 He added 184 for the first wicket with Ponsford and 218 for the fourth with Karl Schneider 38 He scored centuries in the first two matches before adding fifties in the next two He ended the first class matches with 781 runs at 130 16 19 Woodfull was appointed as vice captain to Jack Ryder for the 1928 29 home Ashes series 39 The Australian board had spent a great deal of time arguing over whether Woodfull or Victor Richardson should be Ryder s deputy before realising that he selectors had omitted the latter 40 With six members of the team that played in the last Test in 1926 having retired Australia would field and young and inexperienced team 40 Woodfull prepared for the Tests with an unbeaten 67 for Victoria in a drawn tour match against Percy Chapman s touring Englishmen 19 Woodfull played his first Test on Australian soil in the first Test at Brisbane He made a duck in the first innings as Australia fell for 122 to concede a 411 run first innings lead 19 29 before Australia were forced to chase 742 for victory Woodfull carried his bat to make an unbeaten 30 as Australia were skittled for 66 on a sticky wicket in Brisbane in the first Test to lose by a record 675 runs 2 19 28 41 42 Woodfull then made 68 to top score in the first innings of the second Test in Sydney Australia conceded another mammoth first innings lead 383 19 Woodfull then scored his first Test century in Australia with 111 in the second innings to force the tourists to bat again Despite this England scored 2 16 to win the match 19 42 The third Test was Woodfull s first at his home ground in Melbourne and despite scoring 107 in the second innings the tourists won by three wickets in front of Test world record crowd 2 30 43 Woodfull made only one and 30 as Australia fell short by 12 runs in the fourth Test in Adelaide but ended the season on a high 19 In a tour match against the Englishmen Woodfull made 275 not out for Victoria his highest score for his state 2 28 41 During the match Woodfull was captain and had agreed with English captain Chapman to vary rules that had been laid by the Australian Board of Control The two men agreed to cover the pitch throughout the match and to bowl overs of six balls instead of eight The Australian Board of Control reacted by reprimanding the Victorian Cricket Association 44 The match was a high scoring draw 19 The teams returned to Melbourne for the fifth Test where Woodfull scored 102 and 35 in front of his home crowd as Australia won by five wickets It was the first time that Woodfull had played in a winning Test after ten matches 29 30 He hit three centuries in the series with 491 runs at 54 56 despite which Australia lost the Ashes 4 1 41 Woodfull ended the entire season with 854 runs at 85 40 19 45 Woodfull started the 1929 30 Australian season by scoring an unbeaten 100 against the touring MCC overseeing a successful run chase 19 However his season was cut short in the third match when he suffered a broken hand after being hit by a short ball from Hugh Thurlow in a match against Queensland 2 28 41 Woodfull was forced to retired hurt and recovered just in time for the warm up matches against Tasmania before the national team headed to England 19 He had scored 231 runs at 77 00 in five matches during the season 19 Captaincy edit nbsp Heavy rain on the third day of the third England Australia Test at Headingley delayed the match The team captains Chapman and Woodfull right are inspecting the field on 14 July 1930 nbsp Woodfull s Test career batting performance The red bars indicate the runs that he scored in an innings with the blue line indicating the batting average in his last ten innings The blue dots indicate an innings where he remained not out 29 After the heavy 4 1 defeat in the previous Ashes series captain and fellow Victorian Jack Ryder was omitted altogether from the 1930 Ashes tour and Woodfull appointed captain Ryder was one of the three selectors and advocated his own retention but his two colleagues had voted him off 46 At first Woodfull was reluctant to accept the job feeling that it rightfully belonged to Ryder When he was informed that Ryder was not even touring Woodfull only agreed after a ballot was organised 41 He was unanimously selected by the board 47 Woodfull had limited leadership experience and in his brief captaincy duties had been the first captain to declare his team s second innings in Shield history 7 After winning the vote Woodfull led the youngest fifteen man squad to ever tour England with eleven never having played on English soil 47 Commentators expected Australia to be easily defeated being described as the weakest squad ever to come to these shores 41 In some quarters the team was dubbed Woodfull s kindergarten 1 The tour started with a match against Worcestershire with Woodfull scoring a century and Don Bradman making 236 in 275 minutes 41 Woodfull s first game in command ended with a resounding innings victory 19 He added 54 in a win over Essex and scored 121 a drawn match against Yorkshire the dominant county of the era with many leading Test players 19 48 Woodfull then added consecutive fifties in draws against the MCC and Surrey After consecutive innings wins of Oxford University and Hampshire Woodfull completed his Test preparation by striking 216 in an innings win over Cambridge University 19 Heading into the Tests Woodfull had amassed 662 runs at 66 20 19 However concerns over the Australian bowling attack prompted Woodfull and the senior players to ask the board to send another spinner This was refused 49 However Woodfull s Test captaincy started poorly in the first Test at Trent Bridge he scored two and four as Australia fell to a 93 run defeat 29 30 41 after losing their last seven wickets for 104 49 Immediately after he scored 141 against Surrey 19 He set the tone with an opening stand of 162 with fellow Victorian Ponsford in the second Test at Lord s Ponsford was dismissed immediately after the teams had an audience with King George V 50 Woodfull then made a 231 run stand with Bradman 254 in only two and a half hours and reached 155 41 50 Australia put themselves in control with 6 729 declared Woodfull was unbeaten on 26 in the second innings as Australia reached 72 to complete a seven wicket triumph 19 Woodfull then won the toss for the first time and contributed 50 to a stand of 192 with Bradman in the third Test at Headingley the match in which Bradman scored 309 in a day 30 41 Australia reached 566 but rain helped England to a draw after being forced to follow on 29 41 Woodfull scored 54 as the fourth Test was rained out before the second innings 29 51 With the series tied at 1 1 the fifth Test at The Oval was a timeless match Woodfull won the toss and after England made 405 he scored 54 as Australia amassed 695 to win by an innings and regain the Ashes 2 1 19 29 30 During the Tests Woodfull had contributed 345 runs at 57 50 second only to Bradman 41 In all first class matches he compiled 1 435 runs at 57 36 including six centuries Woodfull and his fellow Victorian Ponsford played a significant part by making three century opening stands 162 at Lord s 159 at The Oval and 106 at Old Trafford to help Australia take the initiative in three Tests 2 28 The Times commented that No praise is too high for Woodfull and commended the Australian captain s encouragement of his young team 52 Upon returning to Australia Woodfull was elected as Victoria s delegate on the five man national selection panel replacing Ryder 53 However he resigned from the role before the next international series thereby never participating in the selection of a Test team 54 This was followed by home series against the West Indies in 1930 31 the first Test tour of Australia by the Caribbean side 30 Ahead of the Tests Victoria defeated the tourists by an innings and 254 but Woodfull was unable to score any runs against his Test opponents making a duck 19 In the Tests Woodfull unselfishly broke up his opening combination with Ponsford by dropping down to No 6 to accommodate the prodigiously talented young batsman Archie Jackson Woodfull was uncomfortable batting out of position 41 scoring six 58 and 17 in the first three Tests 30 Woodfull batted only once in each Test as Australia easily won the first Test by ten wickets and the next two by an innings 30 Woodfull was restored to the top of the order for the fourth Test in Melbourne after Jackson s illness became too much forcing the young batsman to withdraw from competition Woodfull struck 83 run out as Australia took a third consecutive innings victory 19 30 He then scored his first century for the season making 177 and 27 not out in a state match against South Australia 19 However Australia s winning run came to an end with a 30 run loss in the fifth Test with Woodfull scoring 22 and 18 29 30 He ended the series with a modest 204 runs at 34 00 as Australia won 4 1 41 55 He ended the summer with 477 runs at 47 70 19 The following season saw a tour to Australia by the South Africans for the first time in two decades 30 Woodfull started the season by scoring 121 and leading his state to an 88 run win over the tourists ahead of the Tests 19 It was a signal of what was to follow in the Tests 56 He then managed only 32 and nine as Victoria narrowly lost to South Australia by 21 runs 19 Woodfull scored 74 and 58 as Australia took innings victories in the first two Tests over the South Africans in Brisbane and Sydney 29 30 He then scored 147 to script a three wicket win over arch rivals New South Wales after Victoria had been forced to chase 434 for victory 19 In the third Test in Melbourne Australia found themselves on the back foot for the first time in the series Woodfull scored only seven in the first innings as Australia made only 198 and South Africa took a 160 run lead He then compiled his Test best of 161 in the second innings 29 adding 274 in partnership with Bradman in only three hours 57 58 to help Australia make 554 and set up a 169 run win 19 It was the second successive Test season in which Woodfull had saved his highest Test score of the series for his home crowd 29 30 He continued his run with 82 and 37 not out in the fourth Test which was won by ten wickets 19 Woodfull had an opportunity to inflict more blows on the tourists as Victoria played them for the second time ahead of the final Test While his state was unable to force a result Woodfull continued his strong form with 44 and 73 not out 19 The Australian captain finished the season with a duck from the opening ball of the fifth Test bowled after failing to offer a shot 59 but Australia won by an innings and 72 runs in the equivalent of a single day s play on a sticky wicket 29 30 59 Woodfull opened for the entire series and returned his best ever series figures of 421 at 70 17 second only to Bradman 2 28 41 The 5 0 result remains the only time that Australia has clean swept South Africa over five Tests 30 He ended the season with 849 runs at 65 31 19 Bodyline edit Main article Bodyline In 1932 33 the English team led by Douglas Jardine toured Australia and won the Ashes in a very acrimonious series 2 It has been described as the most controversial period in Australian cricket history 60 and voted the most important Australian moment by a panel of Australian cricket identities 61 England s bodyline tactics which involved bowling at speeds of around 150 km h at the heads and torsoes of the Australian batsmen including Woodfull and employing a close leg side cordon to catch balls fended away from the upper body caused great controversy and ill feeling among Australian players and crowds 2 60 England devised the tactics in an attempt to curb Donald Bradman Australia s star batsman whose average hovered around 100 around twice that of all other world class batsman 62 63 However they also hoped to restrict the other batsmen Woodfull among them through such means 64 During the season Woodfull s physical courage stoic and dignified leadership won him many admirers He refused to employ retaliatory tactics and did not publicly complain even though he and his men were repeatedly hit 2 60 according to Ken Piesse 34 times in all 65 Once the issue was resolved and practice stopped Woodfull refused to discuss the matter fearing that it would disturb the peace 10 Woodfull started the season strongly scoring 74 and 83 in a loss to New South Wales in the second match of the summer 19 but was soon confronted by Jardine s Englishmen He made five and 25 as England crushed Victoria by an innings 19 Although England did aim at the batsmen s body they did not enforce the second half of the Bodyline structure by not packing the leg side 64 This changed in the next match when Woodfull led an Australian XI against the tourists in Melbourne in what was effectively a Test rehearsal With Jardine rested from the match his deputy Bob Wyatt used the full Bodyline tactics for the first time 64 66 The match was drawn and Woodfull struggled making 18 and a duck 19 Utilising his hopping technique and attempting to play unorthodox shots resembling overhead tennis smashes Bradman failed to make an impact and England were buoyed ahead of the Tests 19 Australia lost heavily by ten wickets in the first Test at Sydney when the bodyline spearhead Harold Larwood took ten wickets 10 while Woodfull managed only seven and a duck 29 Before the second Test in Melbourne Woodfull had to wait until minutes before the game before he was confirmed as captain by the selectors 67 This caused the toss to be delayed and fomented speculation that the Australian Board of Control were considering the possibility of removing Woodfull because of his absolute refusal to allow his bowlers to use retaliatory tactics 68 69 His deputy Victor Richardson had advocated retaliation along with several other players 70 Richardson recalled Woodfull s private response There is no way I will be influenced to adopt such tactics which bring such discredit to the game I know Tim could do it but I am not going to participate in actions that can only hurt the game 70 Although Woodfull led Australia to a dramatic victory by 111 runs his form was a problem as he managed only 10 and 26 28 29 30 he was also hit by the bowling 71 The bodyline controversy reached its peak during the second day of the third Test An all time record Adelaide Oval crowd of 50 962 4 72 watched Australia finish off England s first innings for 341 Then Woodfull opened Australia s batting with Jack Fingleton who was dismissed straight away for a duck Minutes later Larwood bowling to a conventional field setting struck Woodfull an agonising blow under his heart with a short lifting delivery 4 73 74 As Woodfull bent down over his bat in pain for several minutes an image that became one of the defining symbols of the series the huge crowd began jeering hooting and verbally abusing the English team 4 something that was almost unheard of for the social standards of the era Jardine reacted by saying Well bowled Harold 4 74 When play resumed England s Gubby Allen bowled an entire over to Bradman 75 As Larwood prepared to bowl his next over to Woodfull Jardine changed to the Bodyline field setting The capacity Saturday afternoon crowd viewed this as hitting a man when he was down 4 5 Journalist cricketer Dick Whitington wrote that Jardine s actions were seen as an unforgivable crime in Australian eyes and certainly no part of cricket 76 Mass hooting and jeering occurred after almost every ball 4 76 Whitington noted that Umpire Hele believes that had what followed occurred in Melbourne the crowd would have leapt the fence and belaboured the English captain Larwood and possibly the entire side 76 Some English players later expressed fears that a large scale riot and that the police would not be able to stop the irate home crowd who were worried that Woodfull or Bradman could be killed from attacking them 4 77 When Larwood immigrated to Australia two decades later he remained fearful for his safety 78 During the over another rising Larwood delivery knocked the bat out of Woodfull s hands He battled it out for 89 minutes collecting more bruises before Allen bowled him for 22 79 Later in the day the English team manager Pelham Warner visited the Australian dressing room to express his sympathies to Woodfull Woodfull had remained calm in public refusing to complain about Jardine s tactics 4 5 Woodfull s abrupt response was meant to be private but it was leaked to the press and became the most famous quotation of this tumultuous period in cricket history 2 I do not want to see you Mr Warner There are two teams out there One is playing cricket and the other is not 2 3 4 5 Woodfull reportedly added This game is too good to be spoilt It s time some people got out of it 3 4 5 hinting that he might withdraw his team from competition in protest 80 Australia s Leo O Brien later reported that Warner was close to tears following Woodfull s rebuke 5 Australian singer Paul Kelly reflected on Woodfull s character in this incident in his song Bradman Now Bill Woodfull was as fine a man as ever went to wicket And the bruises on his body that day showed that he could stick it But to this day he s still quoted and only he could wear it There are two sides out there today and only one of them s playing cricket 81 nbsp Woodfull left walks out to open the batting with Vic Richardson in the final Bodyline Test In the meantime the second innings in Adelaide saw England set Australia a near impossible 532 for victory even today 19 the highest successful Test run chase is 418 82 Australia lost its first wicket at three when Jack Fingleton was bowled by Larwood Woodfull was joined by Bradman who played in an unorthodox counterattacking method before being dismissed for 66 Woodfull continued on to score an unbeaten 73 carrying his bat as his teammates capitulated around him Australia was eventually all out for 193 with Oldfield unable to bat due to his fractured skull 19 80 Woodfull made scores of 67 19 14 and 67 in the final two Tests which Australia lost by six and eight wickets respectively 29 30 83 In the fifth Test in Sydney Larwood broke a bone in his foot but Jardine made him complete the over even though the laws of cricket permit a captain to switch bowlers mid over in the case of injury Larwood stood stationary at the wicket and bowled without a run up but Woodfull refused to take advantage of the injured bowler He blocked the five remaining deliveries back down the wicket towards Larwood and refused to take a run 84 England reclaimed the Ashes 4 1 2 Overall Woodfull had scored 305 runs at a moderate 33 89 average it was the slowest scoring rate for his career but significantly he had defied the English bowling for over twenty hours in total more than any other Australian 3 80 Amid the high drama of the season Woodfull s struggles spread beyond the Test arena he scored only 297 runs at 33 00 in matches outside the Tests 19 In 1933 34 cricket returned to normality with the departure of Jardine s men Woodfull scored 118 in a one off match between his XI and Richardson s XI which ended in a draw He then scored 129 in the run chase as The Rest of Australia narrowly defeated New South Wales by two wickets 19 Woodfull scored fifties in both interstate matches against New South Wales and added consecutive centuries for the national team against Tasmania before departing for his final tour of England 19 He ended the season with 818 runs at 62 92 returning to form after the tumult of the previous summer 19 International farewell edit In 1934 having been reappointed to a position on the selection panel 85 Woodfull led Australia back to England on a tour that had been under a cloud after the tempestuous cricket diplomacy of the previous bodyline series After agreements were put in place so that bodyline would not be used the tour went ahead 86 87 88 However there were occasions when the Australians felt that their hosts had crossed the mark with tactics resembling bodyline 86 Woodfull started his final English campaign slowly In his first eight innings he scored only 161 runs at 20 12 with one half century 19 Other players sensed that Woodfull had become less cheerful following the bodyline series and he offered to drop himself following his run of poor form but fellow selectors Bradman and Alan Kippax disagreed 88 In the traditional Test rehearsal against the MCC Australia reduced the hosts to be eight down in their second innings still in arrears when the match ended in a draw 19 In his final innings before the Tests Woodfull struck form with 172 not out against Lancashire 19 In the first Test at Trent Bridge Woodfull struck 26 and two Australia led by 106 on the first innings and although Woodfull was so concerned with batting England out of the match that he declared with less than five hours remaining on the final day 89 his men went on to win by 238 runs 19 albeit with only ten minutes of play remaining 89 England struck back in the second Test at Lord s Woodfull made 22 as Australia replied to England s 440 with 284 The hosts enforced the follow on as rain breathed life into the pitch and Woodfull made 43 as Australia were all out for 118 in an innings defeat 19 30 90 91 He then scored 73 run out his only fifty in the Tests as Australia made 491 and ceded a 136 run lead in the third Test at Old Trafford However they held on for a draw Woodfull made a duck in the fourth Test at Headingley 19 but another Bradman triple century put them in control before rain shortened the match England still needed 155 runs to make Australia bat again with only four wickets in hand when the match ended 19 The draw meant that the series was at 1 1 heading into the final Test at The Oval which would be timeless 19 92 In the lead up to the decider Woodfull ran into form In consecutive innings he scored 131 and 228 not out against Gloucestershire and Glamorgan respectively 19 However controversy followed in a match against Nottinghamshire In the first innings Woodfull scored 81 as Australia batted first and made 237 19 Bill Voce one of the bodyline practitioners of 1932 33 employed it with the wicket keeper standing to the leg side and took 8 66 88 90 In the second innings Voce repeated the tactic late in the day in fading light against Woodfull and Bill Brown Of his 12 balls 11 were no lower than head height 90 Woodfull told the Nottinghamshire administrators that if Voce s leg side bowling was repeated his men would leave the field and return to London He further said that Australia would not return to the county in future The following day Voce was absent ostensibly due to a leg injury 41 88 90 93 Already angered by the absence of Larwood the Nottinghamshire faithful heckled the Australians all day 88 Australia had previously and privately complained that some pacemen had strayed past the agreement in the Tests 90 When the teams took to the field for the deciding Test Woodfull won the toss and elected to bat 30 He scored 49 as Australia amassed 701 in the timeless match England replied with 321 and Woodfull made 13 in his final Test innings The tourists made 327 and set England a target of 708 for victory His bowlers then dismissed the hosts for 145 to seal a decisive win by 562 runs and the series 2 1 19 30 On 22 August for the second time in four years Australia had won the Ashes on Woodfull s birthday 92 The victory made Woodfull the only captain to regain the Ashes twice 2 He scored 1 268 runs at 52 83 during the tour with three centuries 19 His tally of 25 Tests as captain was a world record and remained unsurpassed for a quarter of a century 8 Woodfull performed poorly in the Tests with 228 runs at 28 50 but it was sufficient for an Australian triumph as Bradman and Ponsford each averaged over 90 and Clarrie Grimmett and Bill O Reilly each took over 25 wickets Woodfull was criticised by Robinson for his relatively defensive captaincy tending to bat opponents out of the match instead of going directly for victory from the off 41 Woodfull relied on O Reilly and Grimmett using only three specialist bowlers as he sought to reinforce the batting line up 41 However he was effective in curtailing leading English batsmen Wally Hammond When Woodfull was captaining Australia Hammond only averaged half as much as he did when another player was captaining Australia 89 He retired immediately after the tour and was awarded a joint testimonial with Ponsford on his return to Victoria 2 The match raised a total of 2 084 Australian pounds 8 In this match between Woodfull s XI and Richardson s XI he scored 111 in his final innings as his men made 316 in reply to 196 Woodfull then took his only wicket at first class level in the second innings and his team reached the target of 280 with seven wickets in hand without him having to bat 19 In early 1935 Woodfull lost his position as the Victorian delegate on the national selection panel after being defeated by William Johnson in a vote 94 Retirement edit nbsp Life size bronze statue of Bill Woodfull outside Melbourne High School by Linda KlarfeldOutside cricket Woodfull spent several years as headmaster at Box Hill High School then had a successful career as a mathematics teacher at Melbourne High School and was headmaster for six years 2 8 He was known for his stern discipline throughout his career 10 One of his students was future Australian Test all rounder and Australian Cricket Hall of Fame inductee Keith Miller whom he taught in year nine 95 Miller was a mediocre student as he did little study and focused his energy on sport 96 This disappointed Woodfull a disciplined man who invoked the school motto which meant Honour the Work and exhorted his students to work hard as Australia was attempting to emerge from the depths of the Great Depression 96 Miller scored zero in his final exam for Woodfull s geometry class 97 and was forced to repeat the year 98 Despite his credentials Woodfull refused to involve himself in coaching the school s cricket teams feeling that it would intrude on the responsibilities of the sports teachers Despite this Woodfull watched the students at cricket training and quickly noticed Miller s skills 99 writing in the school magazine that Miller has Test possibilities 100 Other notable students included Doug Ring a leg spinner who was a member of Bradman s Invincibles left arm orthodox spinner Jack Wilson and world record breaking Olympic distance runner Ron Clarke 8 The school oval was later named the Miller Woodfull Oval The rejuvenated Maldon Oval in his home town was renamed the Bill Woodfull Recreation Reserve and when the Great Southern Stand was constructed at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in 1992 one of the entrances was named the Bill Woodfull Gate 2 Woodfull married Gwen King whom he met while singing in the choir at his father s church in Albert Park and they married after Woodfull s return from the England tour in 1926 They had three children 41 His two sons Jack and Bill Jr played for Melbourne University Cricket Club and became successful dentists 8 In November 1934 the Governor General informed him that the King had offered him a knighthood 92 for services to cricket 101 The citation made a veiled reference to Woodfull s actions during the bodyline episode Woodfull always considered his contributions to education more important than anything he ever did on the cricket field and declined the honour 101 In later life he said Had I been awarded it for being an educationalist then I would have accepted it But under no circumstances would I accept it for playing cricket 101 In 1963 he was invested as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE for services to education 2 In 1965 while on holiday with his wife and daughter Jill 8 he collapsed and died while playing golf in Tweed Heads New South Wales 28 His family remained adamant that the bruising bodyline attack had permanently damaged his health and curtailed his life 102 103 Woodfull was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2001 one of the first 15 inductees 28 Test match performance edit Batting 104 Bowling 105 Opposition Matches Runs Average High Score 100 50 Runs Wickets Average Best Inns nbsp England 25 1675 44 07 155 6 8 nbsp South Africa 5 421 70 16 161 1 3 nbsp West Indies 5 204 34 00 83 0 2 Overall 35 2300 46 00 161 7 13 References editCitations edit a b c d e f Robinson p 160 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Cashman et al pp 322 323 a b c d e Robinson p 163 a b c d e f g h i j k Haigh and Frith p 73 a b c d e f Piesse p 127 a b c d e f g h i j k l Wisden 1927 Bill Woodfull Wisden 1927 Retrieved 24 May 2007 a b c d e f Robinson p 159 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Robinson p 166 a b Robinson p 162 a b c d e f g h i Pollard Jack 1988 Australian Cricket The Game and the Players Sydney Angus amp Robertson pp 1131 1132 ISBN 0 207 15269 1 a b c d e f Robinson p 158 a b c Robinson p 161 Armstrong Geoff 2002 ESPN Legends of Cricket Allen amp Unwin pp 17 22 ISBN 1 86508 836 6 a b Haigh and Frith p 94 Haigh p 256 Haigh p 31 Whitington and Hele p 139 a b Perry pp 146 147 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg Player Oracle WM Woodfull CricketArchive Retrieved 14 May 2009 a b c Harte and Whimpress p 283 Pollard pp 192 194 Harte and Whimpress p 286 Harte and Whimpress p 289 Harte and Whimpress pp 293 295 a b Harte and Whimpress p 296 Harte and Whimpress p 298 a b Harte and Whimpress p 299 a b c d e f g h i j Haigh Gideon Players and Officials Bill Woodfull Cricinfo Retrieved 24 May 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Statsguru WM Woodfull Test matches All round analysis Cricinfo Retrieved 16 June 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Statsguru Australia Tests Results list Cricinfo Retrieved 21 December 2007 a b Perry pp 110 112 Pollard p 112 a b c d Harte and Whimpress p 300 Perry p 147 a b Harte and Whimpress p 302 Piesse p 104 Harte and Whimpress p 308 Harte and Whimpress p 307 Haigh and Frith p 56 a b Harte and Whimpress p 312 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Perry pp 147 148 a b Harte and Whimpress p 313 Harte and Whimpress p 314 Haigh and Frith p 57 Harte and Whimpress pp 315 316 Haigh and Frith p 58 a b Harte and Whimpress p 322 Armstrong p 169 a b Harte and Whimpress p 324 a b Harte and Whimpress p 325 Harte and Whimpress p 326 Harte and Whimpress p 327 Haigh and Frith p 60 Haigh and Frith p 62 Harte and Whimpress pp 329 333 Harte and Whimpress p 335 Piesse p 123 Harte and Whimpress p 336 a b Piesse p 125 a b c Colman p 171 Haigh and Frith foreword Piesse p 130 Cashman et al pp 32 35 a b c Haigh and Frith p 70 Piesse p 131 Harte and Whimpress p 344 O Reilly Bill 1985 Tiger 60 Years of Cricket Collins p 88 ISBN 0 00 217477 4 Haigh and Frith p 72 Harte and Whimpress p 346 a b Colman p 181 Harte and Whimpress p 345 Harte Chris 1993 A History of Australian Cricket Andre Deutsch p 346 ISBN 0 233 98825 4 Frith p 179 a b Piesse p 126 Frith p 180 a b c Whitington Dick 1974 The Book of Australian Test Cricket 1877 1974 Wren Publishing p 173 ISBN 0 85885 197 0 Piesse pp 127 128 Growden pp 197 200 Frith p 182 a b c Perry pp 144 146 Kelly Paul 1993 Lyrics Angus amp Robertson Records Test matches Team records Highest fourth innings totals Cricinfo Retrieved 20 July 2010 Harte and Whimpress pp 347 348 Robinson pp 163 164 Haigh and Frith p 80 a b Haigh and Frith p 84 Harte and Whimpress p 354 a b c d e Robinson p 164 a b c Robinson p 165 a b c d e Haigh and Frith p 85 Harte and Whimpress p 355 a b c Harte and Whimpress p 357 Harte and Whimpress p 356 Haigh and Frith p 91 Coleman Robert 1993 Seasons In the Sun the Story Of the Victorian Cricket Association Melbourne Hargreen Publishing pp 473 478 ISBN 0 949905 59 3 a b Perry 2005 p 18 Perry 2005 p 21 Perry 2005 p 22 Perry 2005 p 19 Perry 2005 p 25 a b c Harte and Whimpress p 358 Robinson pp 165 166 Harte and Whimpress p 501 Statsguru WM Woodfull Test matches Batting analysis Cricinfo Retrieved 14 April 2008 Statsguru WM Woodfull Test Bowling Bowling analysis Cricinfo Retrieved 14 April 2008 Bibliography edit Armstrong Geoff 2002 ESPN Legends of Cricket Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86508 836 6 Cashman Richard Franks Warwick Maxwell Jim Sainsbury Erica Stoddart Brian Weaver Amanda Webster Ray 1997 The A Z of Australian cricketers Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 0 9756746 1 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Colman Mike Edwards Ken 2002 Eddie Gilbert The true story of an Aboriginal cricketing legend Sydney New South Wales ABC Books ISBN 0 7333 1154 7 Frith David 2002 Bodyline Autopsy Sydney New South Wales ABC Books ISBN 0 7333 1321 3 Growden Greg 2008 Jack Fingleton the man who stood up to Bradman Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74175 548 0 Haigh Gideon 1997 The summer game Australia in test cricket 1949 71 Melbourne Victoria Text Publishing ISBN 1 875847 44 8 Haigh Gideon Frith David 2007 Inside story unlocking Australian cricket s archives Southbank Victoria News Custom Publishing ISBN 978 1 921116 00 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Harte Chris Whimpress Bernard 2003 The Penguin History of Australian Cricket Camberwell Victoria Penguin Books Australia ISBN 0 670 04133 5 Perry Roland 2000 Captain Australia A history of the celebrated captains of Australian Test cricket Milsons Point New South Wales Random House Australia ISBN 1 74051 174 3 Perry Roland 2005 Miller s Luck the life and loves of Keith Miller Australia s greatest all rounder Milsons Point New South Wales Random House Australia ISBN 978 1 74166 222 1 Piesse Ken 2003 Cricket s Colosseum 125 Years of Test Cricket at the MCG South Yarra Victoria Hardie Grant Books ISBN 1 74066 064 1 Robinson Ray 1975 On top down under Australia s cricket captains Stanmore New South Wales Cassell Australia ISBN 0 7269 7364 5 Whitington Richard Hele George 1974 Bodyline Umpire Adelaide South Australia Rigby ISBN 0 85179 820 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bill Woodfull Bill Woodfull at ESPNcricinfo nbsp Bill Woodfull at the Sport Australia Hall of Fame nbsp Donald Bradman Woodfull William Maldon Australian Dictionary of BiographyPreceded byJack Ryder Australian Test cricket captains1930 1934 Succeeded byVic Richardson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bill Woodfull amp oldid 1153594945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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