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Harold Gimblett

Harold Gimblett (19 October 1914 – 30 March 1978) was a cricketer who played for Somerset and England. He was known for his fast scoring as an opening batsman and for the much-repeated story of his debut. In a book first published in 1982, the cricket writer and Somerset historian David Foot wrote: "Harold Gimblett is the greatest batsman Somerset has ever produced."[1] Gimblett is a member of the Gimblett family, an Anglo-French family who arrived in Britain in the early 18th century from Metz. The family spread out over Britain, with branches located in Somerset, Scotland, and South Wales. There are variations of the spelling of the name, including Gimlet, Gimlette, and Gimblette.

Harold Gimblett
Gimblett in 1936
Personal information
Full name
Harold Gimblett
Born(1914-10-19)19 October 1914
Bicknoller, Somerset, England
Died30 March 1978(1978-03-30) (aged 63)
Verwood, Dorset, England
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
RoleBatsman
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 290)27 June 1936 v India
Last Test24 June 1939 v West Indies
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1935–1954Somerset
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class
Matches 3 368
Runs scored 129 23,007
Batting average 32.25 36.17
100s/50s 0/1 50/122
Top score 67* 310
Balls bowled 0 3,949
Wickets 41
Bowling average 51.80
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling –/– 4/10
Catches/stumpings 1/– 247/1
Source: Cricinfo, 31 August 2009

Gimblett scored at a fast rate throughout his career, and hit 265 sixes – "surely a record for a regular opening batsman", wrote Eric Hill, his postwar opening partner and thereafter a long-time journalist watcher of Somerset.[2] He appeared, however, in only three Tests, none of them against Australia, and he left first-class cricket abruptly, suffering from mental health problems that would remain with him to the end of his life.

Background edit

Harold Gimblett was born at Bicknoller in the Quantock Hills in west Somerset, where his family had been farmers since the 15th century.[3] He was the youngest of three brothers and was educated at the local school at Williton and then at the fee-paying West Buckland School just over the border in Devon.[4]

He played cricket successfully at school and for Watchet Cricket Club. In 1931, he left school; in August of that year, he made the first of his significant innings. In the match between Watchet and Wellington Cricket Club, he came to the wicket with Watchet on 37 for seven, chasing a total of 160. With another teenage batsman, Allan Pearse, Gimblett hit off the runs, making 91 himself.[5] A year later, he was co-opted into the Somerset Stragglers team, a peripatetic amateur team which played matches across south west England, composed of former public school players of varying abilities, some of whom were the amateurs who formed a large contingent of Somerset county players up to the Second World War. In his first match for the Stragglers team, against Wellington School, he made 142 in 75 minutes.[6]

Gimblett briefly moved to London to work, but city life was not to his taste and he returned home, resuming cricket for the Watchet club. One of the patrons of Watchet cricket, the town tailor W. G. Penny, who was also prominent in Somerset County Cricket Club, recommended him for a trial with the county, though there appears to have been some reservations over his temperament and his impetuous batting.[7] There is also, in the same source, some suggestion that Gimblett himself was reluctant to test himself against top-class cricketers.

Even so, at the start of the 1935 season, Gimblett was invited to go to Taunton for a two-week trial with the county. The trial seems not to have been a success, but it led directly to the sensation that was Gimblett's first-class cricket debut.

First-class debut edit

Gimblett's entry into first-class cricket in May 1935 was instant legend. Wisden, in its obituary of him in 1979, wrote: "The start of his career was so sensational that any novelist attributing it to his hero would have discredited the book."[8]

Having a two-week trial with Somerset, Gimblett had been told, before the period was over, that he had no future as a first-class cricketer. Accounts vary as to how this decision was reached. Gimblett himself, quoted in David Foot's biography, which relies heavily on material taped by Gimblett in the years immediately before his death, said he was told by the county secretary and former captain, John Daniell: "You may as well finish the week. We'll pay you 35 shillings and your bus fare. Afraid you're just not good enough."[9] Daniell's son, quoted in the same book, said that the Somerset professional players had advised against taking Gimblett on to the county staff: "They used to tell my father they thought Harold was far too impulsive."[10] A further factor may have been the almost permanent financial crisis that surrounded Somerset: the county club was probably not able to afford another professional player.

On the final Friday of Gimblett's trial, Somerset found themselves a player short for the match that started the following day against Essex at Frome when the amateur Laurie Hawkins reported in sick. Gimblett was told to get himself to Frome: Daniell arranged for the wicketkeeper Wally Luckes, who had a car, to pick him up from Bridgwater. Gimblett missed the bus from Taunton, and hitched a lift in a lorry. Somerset won the toss and chose to bat: three batsmen were out for 35, and at lunch the score was 105 for five. Soon after lunch, Dickie Burrough was out and Gimblett came to the wicket with Somerset six wickets down for 107 runs, joining Arthur Wellard.[11]

Gimblett's first run came off his third ball, and shortly afterwards he was hitting the leg-break and googly bowler Peter Smith for 15 in an over. He raced to his 50 in just 28 minutes, off 33 balls, reaching it with a six. Wellard, unusually for him, was outpaced and was out, followed swiftly by Luckes, but Gimblett was joined by Bill Andrews, who also hit powerfully. Gimblett's century came in just 63 minutes, which proved to be the fastest century of the season, and it was made out of 130 runs added while he had been at the wicket. He finished with 123 out of 175 in 80 minutes, with three sixes and 17 fours.[12] Somerset won the match with an innings to spare.[13]

The innings turned Gimblett into an instant celebrity. Foot's biography records that Fleet Street writers and photographers descended on the Gimblett farm at Bicknoller; the former cricketer Jack Hobbs congratulated Gimblett in his newspaper column, but also warned that such a start would be difficult to sustain.[14]

So it proved. Gimblett retained his place for the next match, against Middlesex at Lord's, only because of another injury to a regular player, and though he top-scored with 53 in the second innings (still batting at No 8), he himself was injured and missed the next month. Returning to the side in mid-season, he played with little success, though he took a few wickets with his medium-pace, including four wickets for just 10 runs against Gloucestershire at Bath, which would remain his best first-class bowling performance.[15] Wisden Cricketers' Almanack summed up his first first-class season in its 1936 edition, noting that he "failed to maintain his early form". It went on: "Almost entirely a forward player, he appeared to pay little heed to defence, and in the end lack of experience contributed to his undoing. Still, shrewd observers maintain that he possesses distinct possibilities, and with further opportunities he may become more than a useful member of the side."[16]

Test cricketer edit

That Wisden assessment was made to look unduly modest within weeks of the start of the 1936 season. Regular opening batsman Jack Lee had been allowed to leave Somerset to become coach at Mill Hill School, and Gimblett was promoted to open the innings against the Indians in Somerset's first match of the season. He made 103 and then an unbeaten 46 as Somerset won the match by nine wickets after making the Indians follow on.[17] In the very next match against Lancashire at Old Trafford, he did even better with 93 in the first innings and an unbeaten 160 in the second, when he held on with the Somerset tail-enders to deny Lancashire victory.[18] That gave him fleetingly a season's batting average of more than 200, and he followed that up with a third century a week later against the admittedly weak Northamptonshire side.[19] This form earned Gimblett selection for the Test trial match for the series against the Indian team, a match between North and South at Lord's that featured a mix of established Test players and up-and-coming young players. Gimblett failed in the match, scoring just four runs in his only innings.[20] He was nonetheless selected for the England team for the first Test of the 1936 series in an experimental opening partnership with Arthur Mitchell of Yorkshire.

Gimblett's first Test appearance was the most successful of his short Test career. In a low-scoring match in which the Indian team led England by 13 on the first innings, it was Gimblett's top-scoring 67 not out in the second innings that brought victory to his side.[21] England had been set 107 to win, but with a damp pitch and uncertain weather, "the task could not be regarded as an easy one," Wisden wrote.[22] It went on: "As Gimblett got the pace of the wicket, he developed sound hitting powers and hooked superbly." In partnership with Maurice Turnbull, who made 37, Gimblett hit off the runs in 100 minutes, playing "with much skill and verve".

Gimblett's status as one of the coming men of English cricket was confirmed by his selection on the Players' side for the Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's, one of the centrepieces of the English cricket season. He was not a success, making just three and one.[23] But he retained his place in the England team for the second Test at Old Trafford, opening this time with the Kent batsman Arthur Fagg, who was making his Test debut. This time, Gimblett failed, making just nine in England's single innings.[24] The carrot at the end of the 1936 season was selection for the MCC team to tour Australia and New Zealand in the 1936–37 season; the side was picked in early August, and Gimblett was not named in it, the young opening batsmen selected being Fagg and Charles Barnett, who replaced Gimblett for the third and final Test match against India. In fact, Gimblett's form for the second half of the 1936 season was patchy, and from the high of averaging 200 with the bat in May he ended up at the end of the season with an aggregate of 1608 runs at an average of 32.81, half a dozen runs per innings less than both Fagg and Barnett.[25] Wisden noted that he had achieved "nothing of note" in important matches apart from his "dashing" 67 in his first Test.[26] It went on: "As his slip-fielding fell rather below international standard, it became abundantly clear that he could not yet be labelled an England player." And it repeated criticism of a year before about lack of discretion: "Using the horizontal bat with a great amount of freedom, he frequently fell, through lack of discrimination in selecting the right ball to hit, to catches on the leg-side. Still, most of his faults were due to inexperience, and as he is only 22 years of age his career will be watched with interest beyond the confines of his own county."[26]

David Foot's biography of Gimblett indicates that this 1936 season, although one of his most successful, also showed early signs of the illness that was to afflict him later. He reacted badly to being criticised for dropping an easy catch in the Old Trafford Test, and when he himself was dropped from the team for the final Test, he responded with relief: "'Thank goodness that's over,' he said to anyone within earshot."[27] Foot wrote: "The Lord's and Old Trafford Tests became painful rather than treasured memories; he pleaded silently that he would not ever be selected again."[28]

In contrast to the drama of 1936, the 1937 and 1938 seasons were quiet ones for Gimblett. Other batsmen of his own age, such as Leonard Hutton, moved ahead of him in the Test pecking order, and he was at times not fully fit.[29] He completed 1000 runs easily in both seasons and there were occasional innings of brilliance: at Wells in 1937, he made 141 in 150 minutes with nine sixes and 16 fours against Hampshire.[30] In 1938, Wisden noted that he was, at times, more defensive than he had been previously, and in run-getting he was overshadowed by his opening partner, Frank Lee, who scored more than 2,000 runs in the season.[29] For some matches in 1938, Gimblett batted at No 4, Bertie Buse opening with Lee.

Gimblett had another of his "purple patches" early in the 1939 season, which was his most successful so far. He scored 905 runs in the first seven Somerset matches, including five centuries in successive matches.[31] Wisden noted, though, that he now revealed "less of the electrifying methods that first brought him to the front".[31] The return to form brought him back into Test contention. He was picked for the first Test against West Indies at Lord's, opening with Hutton and making 22 and 20.[32] In the second innings, with England needing fast runs for victory, he hit the first two balls bowled by fast bowler Leslie Hylton for four and six.[33] He did not retain his place in the Test team, but played in the Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's, making 52 in the Players' first innings.[34] In the season as a whole, he made 1922 runs at an average of 40.89.[25]

War service edit

Gimblett volunteered for the Royal Air Force for the Second World War, but was allocated instead to the Fire Service, and saw duty in badly bombed cities such as Plymouth and Bristol.[35]

Postwar county stalwart edit

In the eight seasons after the Second World War Gimblett was the mainstay of the Somerset batting. Without taming his aggressive instincts, he had become more judicious in his shot selection, and though he remained until the end of his career likely to smash the first ball of a match for six, he also took on the role of senior batsman in a Somerset side that was usually weak in batting. In the 1946 season, Somerset's best for more than 50 years, he made 1947 runs at an average of 49.92 runs per innings, the highest seasonal average of his career.[25] There were seven centuries, the most of any season, and they included 231 against Middlesex at Taunton, his first double century and part of what Wisden termed a "merciless onslaught" by the Somerset batsmen.[36][37]

The return in 1947 was lower, but in 1948, with the Somerset batting seeming ever more dependent on him for runs, he responded with all of the four centuries scored by the team in the summer, and one of them was his own highest score and the highest innings made to that stage by a Somerset batsman: 310 against Sussex at Eastbourne.[38] The previous Somerset record had been 292, set by the late Victorian era amateur Lionel Palairet. Gimblett told his biographer David Foot, on the tapes that form the backbone of the biography, that he had said on the pitch at Eastbourne to Sussex player James Langridge: "Well, that's got rid of one amateur's name in our county's record books."[39] Gimblett went on to say that a collection had been proposed to mark the feat, but that Somerset's secretary had been dismissive of the idea. "I think that was when I first decided that my career with Somerset was going to end. I was deeply hurt," he said.[40]

But it didn't end quite yet. In 1949, Gimblett passed 2000 runs for the season for the first time in his career, his 2093 in the season being a new record for Somerset at the time.[25] He also hit two centuries in a match for the first time in his career, with 115 and an unbeaten 127 in the game against Hampshire at Taunton.[41] "The feeling that if he got out almost all was over never affected his play," Wisden commented of his efforts across the season.[42]

The pattern was repeated in 1950, but with an odd mid-season twist. The England Test side was being outplayed by the West Indies, and specifically by two previously unknown spin bowlers, Sonny Ramadhin and Alf Valentine. After a bad defeat in the second Test at Lord's, the England selectors sent for Gimblett for the third match at Trent Bridge with the apparent aim of having him hit the two spinners out of their rhythm. It would have been Gimblett's first Test for 11 years and the move, according to Foot, was highly popular, and not just in Somerset.[43] But just before the match, Gimblett developed a large boil, a "carbuncle", on the back of his neck. He was dosed with penicillin and travelled to Nottingham. "A nation's sporting press meticulously documented the carbuncle's throb-rate," Foot writes. It was to no avail: Gimblett withdrew from the match, and was not picked again.

At the end of the 1950 English season, however, he ventured abroad for the first time, taking part in a Commonwealth tour of India and Sri Lanka and opening the batting in all five of the representative games. He had some success on the tour, scoring one century, the only one of the 50 centuries in his career not to be made for Somerset.[44] Perhaps more typically, he was homesick and unhappy: "At first I wondered whether I'd picked up a bug. But it was purely mental," he said in a tape transcribed in his biography.[45] Lighter by about 12 kg, he struggled for runs more than usually in the 1951 season, and took a long break from cricket in July, returning to some form afterwards.

Somerset awarded Gimblett a benefit match in 1952, though perhaps typically he grumbled that it was not the potentially lucrative bank holiday local derby match with Gloucestershire but the game with Northamptonshire at Glastonbury that he was allocated.[46] Gimblett made a century in that match and had, in terms of run aggregate, his best-ever season in 1952.[47] He scored 2134 runs in all matches, at an average of 39.51.[25] Against Derbyshire at Taunton, he became the first Somerset player to hit two centuries in a match twice, scoring 146 and 116 in a drawn game.[48]

If 1952 was a good season for Gimblett, then it was a poor one for his team. After several years in which the side had defied predictions and finished mid-table in the County Championship, Somerset fell to bottom place in 1952, and stayed there for four years. But Gimblett's own performance drew one of the game's accolades: in the 1953 edition of Wisden, he was named one of the Five Cricketers of the Year, alongside Tom Graveney, David Sheppard, Stuart Surridge and Fred Trueman.[49]

The 1953 season, with 19 Championship defeats, was even worse than 1952: Gimblett's own performance was maintained, though three matches missed through injury meant his aggregate fell a little, but he "seldom received adequate support from his colleagues", wrote Wisden.[50] The unbeaten 167 he made against Northamptonshire at Taunton was the 50th century of his first-class career.[51] At the end of the 1953 season he played festival cricket at Hastings and Kingston and Wisden's notes on Somerset in 1954 announced that he had "accepted a five-year contract to remain with the club".[50]

Health problems and later career edit

Throughout his life, Gimblett's personality was inclined to be morose and depressive, and there is evidence from across his cricket career of a gulf between his entertaining cricket style and his own personal negativism. Alan Gibson, the cricket writer who himself suffered from bouts of mental illness, wrote of him: "Most of those who watched him, or even met him, took him for a cheerful extrovert. This was wrong. He thought a lot, worried a lot, fretted a lot, all the more because he struggled to present a calm, bold front to the outer world."[52]

David Foot, the author of Gimblett's biography, wrote in his history of Somerset cricket that Gimblett "retained obsessive complexes about class, money and health".[53] In the biography, Foot writes of discovering the depth and the variety of Gimblett's different hatreds: "The hate – his uncompromising word – was spread over a wide area."[54] He appears to have found congeniality difficult and resentment easy, and there were periods of depressive illness. These culminated at the end of the 1953 cricket season in what appears to have been a full-scale breakdown.

Gimblett's own words, quoted in the Foot biography, tell the story. "I couldn't take much more. I was taking sleeping pills to make me sleep and others to wake me up. By the end of 1953 the world was closing in on me. I couldn't offer any reason why and I don't think the medical profession knew either."[55] In the winter of 1953–54, Gimblett spent 16 weeks in Tone Vale Hospital, a psychiatric institution, where he was given electro-convulsive therapy, and was released in time to join the Somerset team for the start of the 1954 season.[56] He played in the first two county matches of the new season, but was not fit enough mentally to continue and – though the details vary – Somerset agreed to give him time off.[57] He did not appear in first-class cricket again. Later in the 1954 season, according to Gimblett's own report, he went to Somerset's Taunton ground to watch some of the cricket, and was "ordered out of the ground".[58]

Out of first-class cricket, Gimblett took a job as a cricket professional with Ebbw Vale Cricket Club in South Wales. He then applied for and got a job with his old Somerset captain, Jack Meyer, who was headmaster of Millfield School. The link with Meyer gave rise to continuing rumours of a possible comeback for Somerset across the 1950s, but it did not happen. In 1959, however, he appeared in a few Minor Counties matches for Dorset. At Millfield, Gimblett helped with the cricket coaching, ran the school shop and did other tasks around the school such as driving minibuses.[59] In the end, his mental and physical health problems – he suffered from arthritis – meant he fell out with Millfield in the same way that he had with county cricket, and he retired to live at Minehead; he was involved in a minor way with coaching and fund-raising for Somerset, but his behaviour was sometimes unpredictable and he found it hard to reconcile his former fame with his reduced circumstances.[59]

At the time of his death, Gimblett had moved from Minehead to a mobile home at Verwood, Dorset. He died after taking an overdose of prescription drugs.[60] He was survived by his wife, Marguerita (Rita), whom he married in 1938, and by a son.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Foot, p. 1.
  2. ^ "Counties: Somerset". Barclays World of Cricket (1986 ed.). Book Club Associates. p. 448.
  3. ^ Foot, p. 41.
  4. ^ Foot, pp. 43–48.
  5. ^ Foot, pp. 53–54.
  6. ^ Foot, p. 53.
  7. ^ Foot, pp. 56–60.
  8. ^ Obituary, 1978. Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1979 ed.). Wisden. 8 February 2006. pp. 1077–1079. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  9. ^ Foot, p. 60.
  10. ^ Foot, p. 62.
  11. ^ Foot, pp. 64–66.
  12. ^ Foot, pp. 66–68.
  13. ^ "Somerset v Essex". www.cricketarchive.com. 18 May 1935. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
  14. ^ Foot, p. 68.
  15. ^ "Somerset v Gloucestershire". www.cricketarchive.com. 29 June 1935. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  16. ^ "Somerset Matches". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1936 ed.). Wisden. p. 374.
  17. ^ "Somerset v Indians". www.cricketarchive.com. 9 May 1936. Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  18. ^ "Lancashire v Somerset". www.cricketarchive.com. 16 May 1936. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  19. ^ "Northamptonshire v Somerset". www.cricketarchive.com. 23 May 1936. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  20. ^ "South v North". www.cricketarchive.com. 13 June 1936. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  21. ^ "England v India". www.cricketarchive.com. 27 June 1936. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  22. ^ "India in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1937 ed.). Wisden. p. 24.
  23. ^ "Gentlemen v Players". www.cricketarchive.com. 27 June 1936. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  24. ^ "England v India". www.cricketarchive.com. 25 July 1936. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  25. ^ a b c d e "First-class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Harold Gimblett". www.cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  26. ^ a b "Somerset Matches". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1937 ed.). Wisden. p. 224.
  27. ^ Foot, p. 82.
  28. ^ Foot, p. 83.
  29. ^ a b "Somerset in 1938". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1939 ed.). Wisden. p. 485.
  30. ^ "Somerset v Hampshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 21 July 1937. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  31. ^ a b "Somerset in 1939". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1940 ed.). Wisden. p. 426.
  32. ^ "England v West Indies". www.cricketarchive.com. 24 June 1939. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  33. ^ "West Indies in England in 1939". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1940 ed.). Wisden. p. 197.
  34. ^ "Gentlemen v Players". www.cricketarchive.com. 7 July 1939. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  35. ^ Foot, pp. 94–97.
  36. ^ "Somerset v Middlesex". www.cricketarchive.com. 13 July 1946. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  37. ^ "Somerset in 1946". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1947 ed.). Wisden. p. 404.
  38. ^ "Sussex v Somerset". www.cricketarchive.com. 18 August 1948. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  39. ^ Foot, p. 102.
  40. ^ Foot, p. 103.
  41. ^ "Somerset v Hampshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 21 May 1949. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  42. ^ "Somerset in 1949". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1950 ed.). Wisden. p. 476.
  43. ^ Foot, p. 104.
  44. ^ "Madhya Pradesh President's XI v Commonwealth XI v Hampshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 15 December 1950. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  45. ^ Foot, p. 105.
  46. ^ Foot, p. 107.
  47. ^ "Somerset v Northamptonshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 26 July 1952. Retrieved 10 October 2009.
  48. ^ "Somerset v Derbyshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 12 July 1952. Retrieved 10 October 2009.
  49. ^ "Five Cricketers of the Year". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1953 ed.). Wisden. pp. 65–75.
  50. ^ a b "Somerset in 1953". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1954 ed.). Wisden. p. 518.
  51. ^ "Somerset v Northamptonshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 18 July 1953. Retrieved 10 October 2009.
  52. ^ Alan Gibson (1985). Growing up with cricket (1985 ed.). George Allen & Unwin. p. 26. ISBN 0-04-796099-X.
  53. ^ David Foot (1986). Sunshine, Sixes and Cider: a History of Somerset Cricket (1986 ed.). David and Charles. p. 168. ISBN 0-7153-8890-8.
  54. ^ Foot, p. 121.
  55. ^ Quoted in Foot, pp. 108–109.
  56. ^ Foot, p. 109.
  57. ^ Foot, p. 110.
  58. ^ Quoted in Foot, p. 111.
  59. ^ a b Foot, pp. 112–119.
  60. ^ Foot, David (9 June 2003). "Tale of a tormented genius". CricInfo. Retrieved 10 September 2009.

Bibliography edit

  • David Foot (1984). Harold Gimblett: Tormented Genius of Cricket (1984 ed.). Star (W. H. Allen). ISBN 0-352-31426-5.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Harold Gimblett at Wikimedia Commons
  • Harold Gimblett at ESPNcricinfo

harold, gimblett, october, 1914, march, 1978, cricketer, played, somerset, england, known, fast, scoring, opening, batsman, much, repeated, story, debut, book, first, published, 1982, cricket, writer, somerset, historian, david, foot, wrote, greatest, batsman,. Harold Gimblett 19 October 1914 30 March 1978 was a cricketer who played for Somerset and England He was known for his fast scoring as an opening batsman and for the much repeated story of his debut In a book first published in 1982 the cricket writer and Somerset historian David Foot wrote Harold Gimblett is the greatest batsman Somerset has ever produced 1 Gimblett is a member of the Gimblett family an Anglo French family who arrived in Britain in the early 18th century from Metz The family spread out over Britain with branches located in Somerset Scotland and South Wales There are variations of the spelling of the name including Gimlet Gimlette and Gimblette Harold GimblettGimblett in 1936Personal informationFull nameHarold GimblettBorn 1914 10 19 19 October 1914Bicknoller Somerset EnglandDied30 March 1978 1978 03 30 aged 63 Verwood Dorset EnglandBattingRight handedBowlingRight arm mediumRoleBatsmanInternational informationNational sideEnglandTest debut cap 290 27 June 1936 v IndiaLast Test24 June 1939 v West IndiesDomestic team informationYearsTeam1935 1954SomersetCareer statisticsCompetition Test First classMatches 3 368Runs scored 129 23 007Batting average 32 25 36 17100s 50s 0 1 50 122Top score 67 310Balls bowled 0 3 949Wickets 41Bowling average 51 805 wickets in innings 010 wickets in match 0Best bowling 4 10Catches stumpings 1 247 1Source Cricinfo 31 August 2009 Gimblett scored at a fast rate throughout his career and hit 265 sixes surely a record for a regular opening batsman wrote Eric Hill his postwar opening partner and thereafter a long time journalist watcher of Somerset 2 He appeared however in only three Tests none of them against Australia and he left first class cricket abruptly suffering from mental health problems that would remain with him to the end of his life Contents 1 Background 2 First class debut 3 Test cricketer 4 War service 5 Postwar county stalwart 6 Health problems and later career 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground editHarold Gimblett was born at Bicknoller in the Quantock Hills in west Somerset where his family had been farmers since the 15th century 3 He was the youngest of three brothers and was educated at the local school at Williton and then at the fee paying West Buckland School just over the border in Devon 4 He played cricket successfully at school and for Watchet Cricket Club In 1931 he left school in August of that year he made the first of his significant innings In the match between Watchet and Wellington Cricket Club he came to the wicket with Watchet on 37 for seven chasing a total of 160 With another teenage batsman Allan Pearse Gimblett hit off the runs making 91 himself 5 A year later he was co opted into the Somerset Stragglers team a peripatetic amateur team which played matches across south west England composed of former public school players of varying abilities some of whom were the amateurs who formed a large contingent of Somerset county players up to the Second World War In his first match for the Stragglers team against Wellington School he made 142 in 75 minutes 6 Gimblett briefly moved to London to work but city life was not to his taste and he returned home resuming cricket for the Watchet club One of the patrons of Watchet cricket the town tailor W G Penny who was also prominent in Somerset County Cricket Club recommended him for a trial with the county though there appears to have been some reservations over his temperament and his impetuous batting 7 There is also in the same source some suggestion that Gimblett himself was reluctant to test himself against top class cricketers Even so at the start of the 1935 season Gimblett was invited to go to Taunton for a two week trial with the county The trial seems not to have been a success but it led directly to the sensation that was Gimblett s first class cricket debut First class debut editGimblett s entry into first class cricket in May 1935 was instant legend Wisden in its obituary of him in 1979 wrote The start of his career was so sensational that any novelist attributing it to his hero would have discredited the book 8 Having a two week trial with Somerset Gimblett had been told before the period was over that he had no future as a first class cricketer Accounts vary as to how this decision was reached Gimblett himself quoted in David Foot s biography which relies heavily on material taped by Gimblett in the years immediately before his death said he was told by the county secretary and former captain John Daniell You may as well finish the week We ll pay you 35 shillings and your bus fare Afraid you re just not good enough 9 Daniell s son quoted in the same book said that the Somerset professional players had advised against taking Gimblett on to the county staff They used to tell my father they thought Harold was far too impulsive 10 A further factor may have been the almost permanent financial crisis that surrounded Somerset the county club was probably not able to afford another professional player On the final Friday of Gimblett s trial Somerset found themselves a player short for the match that started the following day against Essex at Frome when the amateur Laurie Hawkins reported in sick Gimblett was told to get himself to Frome Daniell arranged for the wicketkeeper Wally Luckes who had a car to pick him up from Bridgwater Gimblett missed the bus from Taunton and hitched a lift in a lorry Somerset won the toss and chose to bat three batsmen were out for 35 and at lunch the score was 105 for five Soon after lunch Dickie Burrough was out and Gimblett came to the wicket with Somerset six wickets down for 107 runs joining Arthur Wellard 11 Gimblett s first run came off his third ball and shortly afterwards he was hitting the leg break and googly bowler Peter Smith for 15 in an over He raced to his 50 in just 28 minutes off 33 balls reaching it with a six Wellard unusually for him was outpaced and was out followed swiftly by Luckes but Gimblett was joined by Bill Andrews who also hit powerfully Gimblett s century came in just 63 minutes which proved to be the fastest century of the season and it was made out of 130 runs added while he had been at the wicket He finished with 123 out of 175 in 80 minutes with three sixes and 17 fours 12 Somerset won the match with an innings to spare 13 The innings turned Gimblett into an instant celebrity Foot s biography records that Fleet Street writers and photographers descended on the Gimblett farm at Bicknoller the former cricketer Jack Hobbs congratulated Gimblett in his newspaper column but also warned that such a start would be difficult to sustain 14 So it proved Gimblett retained his place for the next match against Middlesex at Lord s only because of another injury to a regular player and though he top scored with 53 in the second innings still batting at No 8 he himself was injured and missed the next month Returning to the side in mid season he played with little success though he took a few wickets with his medium pace including four wickets for just 10 runs against Gloucestershire at Bath which would remain his best first class bowling performance 15 Wisden Cricketers Almanack summed up his first first class season in its 1936 edition noting that he failed to maintain his early form It went on Almost entirely a forward player he appeared to pay little heed to defence and in the end lack of experience contributed to his undoing Still shrewd observers maintain that he possesses distinct possibilities and with further opportunities he may become more than a useful member of the side 16 Test cricketer editThat Wisden assessment was made to look unduly modest within weeks of the start of the 1936 season Regular opening batsman Jack Lee had been allowed to leave Somerset to become coach at Mill Hill School and Gimblett was promoted to open the innings against the Indians in Somerset s first match of the season He made 103 and then an unbeaten 46 as Somerset won the match by nine wickets after making the Indians follow on 17 In the very next match against Lancashire at Old Trafford he did even better with 93 in the first innings and an unbeaten 160 in the second when he held on with the Somerset tail enders to deny Lancashire victory 18 That gave him fleetingly a season s batting average of more than 200 and he followed that up with a third century a week later against the admittedly weak Northamptonshire side 19 This form earned Gimblett selection for the Test trial match for the series against the Indian team a match between North and South at Lord s that featured a mix of established Test players and up and coming young players Gimblett failed in the match scoring just four runs in his only innings 20 He was nonetheless selected for the England team for the first Test of the 1936 series in an experimental opening partnership with Arthur Mitchell of Yorkshire Gimblett s first Test appearance was the most successful of his short Test career In a low scoring match in which the Indian team led England by 13 on the first innings it was Gimblett s top scoring 67 not out in the second innings that brought victory to his side 21 England had been set 107 to win but with a damp pitch and uncertain weather the task could not be regarded as an easy one Wisden wrote 22 It went on As Gimblett got the pace of the wicket he developed sound hitting powers and hooked superbly In partnership with Maurice Turnbull who made 37 Gimblett hit off the runs in 100 minutes playing with much skill and verve Gimblett s status as one of the coming men of English cricket was confirmed by his selection on the Players side for the Gentlemen v Players match at Lord s one of the centrepieces of the English cricket season He was not a success making just three and one 23 But he retained his place in the England team for the second Test at Old Trafford opening this time with the Kent batsman Arthur Fagg who was making his Test debut This time Gimblett failed making just nine in England s single innings 24 The carrot at the end of the 1936 season was selection for the MCC team to tour Australia and New Zealand in the 1936 37 season the side was picked in early August and Gimblett was not named in it the young opening batsmen selected being Fagg and Charles Barnett who replaced Gimblett for the third and final Test match against India In fact Gimblett s form for the second half of the 1936 season was patchy and from the high of averaging 200 with the bat in May he ended up at the end of the season with an aggregate of 1608 runs at an average of 32 81 half a dozen runs per innings less than both Fagg and Barnett 25 Wisden noted that he had achieved nothing of note in important matches apart from his dashing 67 in his first Test 26 It went on As his slip fielding fell rather below international standard it became abundantly clear that he could not yet be labelled an England player And it repeated criticism of a year before about lack of discretion Using the horizontal bat with a great amount of freedom he frequently fell through lack of discrimination in selecting the right ball to hit to catches on the leg side Still most of his faults were due to inexperience and as he is only 22 years of age his career will be watched with interest beyond the confines of his own county 26 David Foot s biography of Gimblett indicates that this 1936 season although one of his most successful also showed early signs of the illness that was to afflict him later He reacted badly to being criticised for dropping an easy catch in the Old Trafford Test and when he himself was dropped from the team for the final Test he responded with relief Thank goodness that s over he said to anyone within earshot 27 Foot wrote The Lord s and Old Trafford Tests became painful rather than treasured memories he pleaded silently that he would not ever be selected again 28 In contrast to the drama of 1936 the 1937 and 1938 seasons were quiet ones for Gimblett Other batsmen of his own age such as Leonard Hutton moved ahead of him in the Test pecking order and he was at times not fully fit 29 He completed 1000 runs easily in both seasons and there were occasional innings of brilliance at Wells in 1937 he made 141 in 150 minutes with nine sixes and 16 fours against Hampshire 30 In 1938 Wisden noted that he was at times more defensive than he had been previously and in run getting he was overshadowed by his opening partner Frank Lee who scored more than 2 000 runs in the season 29 For some matches in 1938 Gimblett batted at No 4 Bertie Buse opening with Lee Gimblett had another of his purple patches early in the 1939 season which was his most successful so far He scored 905 runs in the first seven Somerset matches including five centuries in successive matches 31 Wisden noted though that he now revealed less of the electrifying methods that first brought him to the front 31 The return to form brought him back into Test contention He was picked for the first Test against West Indies at Lord s opening with Hutton and making 22 and 20 32 In the second innings with England needing fast runs for victory he hit the first two balls bowled by fast bowler Leslie Hylton for four and six 33 He did not retain his place in the Test team but played in the Gentlemen v Players match at Lord s making 52 in the Players first innings 34 In the season as a whole he made 1922 runs at an average of 40 89 25 War service editGimblett volunteered for the Royal Air Force for the Second World War but was allocated instead to the Fire Service and saw duty in badly bombed cities such as Plymouth and Bristol 35 Postwar county stalwart editIn the eight seasons after the Second World War Gimblett was the mainstay of the Somerset batting Without taming his aggressive instincts he had become more judicious in his shot selection and though he remained until the end of his career likely to smash the first ball of a match for six he also took on the role of senior batsman in a Somerset side that was usually weak in batting In the 1946 season Somerset s best for more than 50 years he made 1947 runs at an average of 49 92 runs per innings the highest seasonal average of his career 25 There were seven centuries the most of any season and they included 231 against Middlesex at Taunton his first double century and part of what Wisden termed a merciless onslaught by the Somerset batsmen 36 37 The return in 1947 was lower but in 1948 with the Somerset batting seeming ever more dependent on him for runs he responded with all of the four centuries scored by the team in the summer and one of them was his own highest score and the highest innings made to that stage by a Somerset batsman 310 against Sussex at Eastbourne 38 The previous Somerset record had been 292 set by the late Victorian era amateur Lionel Palairet Gimblett told his biographer David Foot on the tapes that form the backbone of the biography that he had said on the pitch at Eastbourne to Sussex player James Langridge Well that s got rid of one amateur s name in our county s record books 39 Gimblett went on to say that a collection had been proposed to mark the feat but that Somerset s secretary had been dismissive of the idea I think that was when I first decided that my career with Somerset was going to end I was deeply hurt he said 40 But it didn t end quite yet In 1949 Gimblett passed 2000 runs for the season for the first time in his career his 2093 in the season being a new record for Somerset at the time 25 He also hit two centuries in a match for the first time in his career with 115 and an unbeaten 127 in the game against Hampshire at Taunton 41 The feeling that if he got out almost all was over never affected his play Wisden commented of his efforts across the season 42 The pattern was repeated in 1950 but with an odd mid season twist The England Test side was being outplayed by the West Indies and specifically by two previously unknown spin bowlers Sonny Ramadhin and Alf Valentine After a bad defeat in the second Test at Lord s the England selectors sent for Gimblett for the third match at Trent Bridge with the apparent aim of having him hit the two spinners out of their rhythm It would have been Gimblett s first Test for 11 years and the move according to Foot was highly popular and not just in Somerset 43 But just before the match Gimblett developed a large boil a carbuncle on the back of his neck He was dosed with penicillin and travelled to Nottingham A nation s sporting press meticulously documented the carbuncle s throb rate Foot writes It was to no avail Gimblett withdrew from the match and was not picked again At the end of the 1950 English season however he ventured abroad for the first time taking part in a Commonwealth tour of India and Sri Lanka and opening the batting in all five of the representative games He had some success on the tour scoring one century the only one of the 50 centuries in his career not to be made for Somerset 44 Perhaps more typically he was homesick and unhappy At first I wondered whether I d picked up a bug But it was purely mental he said in a tape transcribed in his biography 45 Lighter by about 12 kg he struggled for runs more than usually in the 1951 season and took a long break from cricket in July returning to some form afterwards Somerset awarded Gimblett a benefit match in 1952 though perhaps typically he grumbled that it was not the potentially lucrative bank holiday local derby match with Gloucestershire but the game with Northamptonshire at Glastonbury that he was allocated 46 Gimblett made a century in that match and had in terms of run aggregate his best ever season in 1952 47 He scored 2134 runs in all matches at an average of 39 51 25 Against Derbyshire at Taunton he became the first Somerset player to hit two centuries in a match twice scoring 146 and 116 in a drawn game 48 If 1952 was a good season for Gimblett then it was a poor one for his team After several years in which the side had defied predictions and finished mid table in the County Championship Somerset fell to bottom place in 1952 and stayed there for four years But Gimblett s own performance drew one of the game s accolades in the 1953 edition of Wisden he was named one of the Five Cricketers of the Year alongside Tom Graveney David Sheppard Stuart Surridge and Fred Trueman 49 The 1953 season with 19 Championship defeats was even worse than 1952 Gimblett s own performance was maintained though three matches missed through injury meant his aggregate fell a little but he seldom received adequate support from his colleagues wrote Wisden 50 The unbeaten 167 he made against Northamptonshire at Taunton was the 50th century of his first class career 51 At the end of the 1953 season he played festival cricket at Hastings and Kingston and Wisden s notes on Somerset in 1954 announced that he had accepted a five year contract to remain with the club 50 Health problems and later career editThroughout his life Gimblett s personality was inclined to be morose and depressive and there is evidence from across his cricket career of a gulf between his entertaining cricket style and his own personal negativism Alan Gibson the cricket writer who himself suffered from bouts of mental illness wrote of him Most of those who watched him or even met him took him for a cheerful extrovert This was wrong He thought a lot worried a lot fretted a lot all the more because he struggled to present a calm bold front to the outer world 52 David Foot the author of Gimblett s biography wrote in his history of Somerset cricket that Gimblett retained obsessive complexes about class money and health 53 In the biography Foot writes of discovering the depth and the variety of Gimblett s different hatreds The hate his uncompromising word was spread over a wide area 54 He appears to have found congeniality difficult and resentment easy and there were periods of depressive illness These culminated at the end of the 1953 cricket season in what appears to have been a full scale breakdown Gimblett s own words quoted in the Foot biography tell the story I couldn t take much more I was taking sleeping pills to make me sleep and others to wake me up By the end of 1953 the world was closing in on me I couldn t offer any reason why and I don t think the medical profession knew either 55 In the winter of 1953 54 Gimblett spent 16 weeks in Tone Vale Hospital a psychiatric institution where he was given electro convulsive therapy and was released in time to join the Somerset team for the start of the 1954 season 56 He played in the first two county matches of the new season but was not fit enough mentally to continue and though the details vary Somerset agreed to give him time off 57 He did not appear in first class cricket again Later in the 1954 season according to Gimblett s own report he went to Somerset s Taunton ground to watch some of the cricket and was ordered out of the ground 58 Out of first class cricket Gimblett took a job as a cricket professional with Ebbw Vale Cricket Club in South Wales He then applied for and got a job with his old Somerset captain Jack Meyer who was headmaster of Millfield School The link with Meyer gave rise to continuing rumours of a possible comeback for Somerset across the 1950s but it did not happen In 1959 however he appeared in a few Minor Counties matches for Dorset At Millfield Gimblett helped with the cricket coaching ran the school shop and did other tasks around the school such as driving minibuses 59 In the end his mental and physical health problems he suffered from arthritis meant he fell out with Millfield in the same way that he had with county cricket and he retired to live at Minehead he was involved in a minor way with coaching and fund raising for Somerset but his behaviour was sometimes unpredictable and he found it hard to reconcile his former fame with his reduced circumstances 59 At the time of his death Gimblett had moved from Minehead to a mobile home at Verwood Dorset He died after taking an overdose of prescription drugs 60 He was survived by his wife Marguerita Rita whom he married in 1938 and by a son Notes edit Foot p 1 Counties Somerset Barclays World of Cricket 1986 ed Book Club Associates p 448 Foot p 41 Foot pp 43 48 Foot pp 53 54 Foot p 53 Foot pp 56 60 Obituary 1978 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1979 ed Wisden 8 February 2006 pp 1077 1079 Retrieved 5 December 2014 Foot p 60 Foot p 62 Foot pp 64 66 Foot pp 66 68 Somerset v Essex www cricketarchive com 18 May 1935 Retrieved 17 September 2009 Foot p 68 Somerset v Gloucestershire www cricketarchive com 29 June 1935 Retrieved 4 October 2009 Somerset Matches Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1936 ed Wisden p 374 Somerset v Indians www cricketarchive com 9 May 1936 Retrieved 8 October 2009 Lancashire v Somerset www cricketarchive com 16 May 1936 Retrieved 9 October 2009 Northamptonshire v Somerset www cricketarchive com 23 May 1936 Retrieved 9 October 2009 South v North www cricketarchive com 13 June 1936 Retrieved 9 October 2009 England v India www cricketarchive com 27 June 1936 Retrieved 9 October 2009 India in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1937 ed Wisden p 24 Gentlemen v Players www cricketarchive com 27 June 1936 Retrieved 9 October 2009 England v India www cricketarchive com 25 July 1936 Retrieved 9 October 2009 a b c d e First class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Harold Gimblett www cricketarchive com Retrieved 9 October 2009 a b Somerset Matches Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1937 ed Wisden p 224 Foot p 82 Foot p 83 a b Somerset in 1938 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1939 ed Wisden p 485 Somerset v Hampshire www cricketarchive com 21 July 1937 Retrieved 9 October 2009 a b Somerset in 1939 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1940 ed Wisden p 426 England v West Indies www cricketarchive com 24 June 1939 Retrieved 9 October 2009 West Indies in England in 1939 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1940 ed Wisden p 197 Gentlemen v Players www cricketarchive com 7 July 1939 Retrieved 9 October 2009 Foot pp 94 97 Somerset v Middlesex www cricketarchive com 13 July 1946 Retrieved 9 October 2009 Somerset in 1946 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1947 ed Wisden p 404 Sussex v Somerset www cricketarchive com 18 August 1948 Retrieved 9 October 2009 Foot p 102 Foot p 103 Somerset v Hampshire www cricketarchive com 21 May 1949 Retrieved 9 October 2009 Somerset in 1949 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1950 ed Wisden p 476 Foot p 104 Madhya Pradesh President s XI v Commonwealth XI v Hampshire www cricketarchive com 15 December 1950 Retrieved 9 October 2009 Foot p 105 Foot p 107 Somerset v Northamptonshire www cricketarchive com 26 July 1952 Retrieved 10 October 2009 Somerset v Derbyshire www cricketarchive com 12 July 1952 Retrieved 10 October 2009 Five Cricketers of the Year Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1953 ed Wisden pp 65 75 a b Somerset in 1953 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1954 ed Wisden p 518 Somerset v Northamptonshire www cricketarchive com 18 July 1953 Retrieved 10 October 2009 Alan Gibson 1985 Growing up with cricket 1985 ed George Allen amp Unwin p 26 ISBN 0 04 796099 X David Foot 1986 Sunshine Sixes and Cider a History of Somerset Cricket 1986 ed David and Charles p 168 ISBN 0 7153 8890 8 Foot p 121 Quoted in Foot pp 108 109 Foot p 109 Foot p 110 Quoted in Foot p 111 a b Foot pp 112 119 Foot David 9 June 2003 Tale of a tormented genius CricInfo Retrieved 10 September 2009 Bibliography editDavid Foot 1984 Harold Gimblett Tormented Genius of Cricket 1984 ed Star W H Allen ISBN 0 352 31426 5 External links edit nbsp Media related to Harold Gimblett at Wikimedia Commons Harold Gimblett at ESPNcricinfo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harold Gimblett amp oldid 1195463975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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