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Jack Siedle

Ivan Julian "Jack" Siedle (11 January 1903 – 24 August 1982) was a South African cricketer who played in 18 Test matches from 1927–28 to 1935–36.[1]

Jack Siedle
Siedle in 1935
Personal information
Full name
Ivan Julian Siedle
Born(1903-01-11)11 January 1903
Berea, Durban, Colony of Natal
Died24 August 1982(1982-08-24) (aged 79)
Bulwer, Natal, South Africa
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm
International information
National side
Test debut21 January 1928 v England
Last Test28 February 1936 v Australia
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class
Matches 18 123
Runs scored 977 7,730
Batting average 28.73 40.05
100s/50s 1/5 17/32
Top score 141 265*
Balls bowled 19 49
Wickets 1 1
Bowling average 7.00 35.00
5 wickets in innings 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0
Best bowling 1/7 1/7
Catches/stumpings 7/– 57/1
Source: Cricinfo, 14 November 2022

Family background and personal life edit

Born on 11 January 1903 in Berea, Durban, Colony of Natal, Siedle was the youngest son of Otto Siedle, who was born in Woolwich, London of southern German stock and who trained as a watchmaker, subsequently emigrating to Durban where he became prominent in the shipping business and public affairs. Otto Siedle's wife Mary became deputy mayor of Durban. Jack's older brother Karl Siedle played first-class cricket for Natal before the First World War, in which he was killed; his sister Perla Siedle Gibson became a well-known singer and a symbol of her country during the Second World War.

Siedle married Lesley Maud McPherson on 14 March 1931, with his cricket colleague Eric Dalton as best man.[2] Their son, John Siedle (1932–2008), played a few first-class cricket matches for Natal and Western Province in the mid-1950s.

Early cricket career edit

A right-hander who played for Natal for 15 seasons from 1922–23 to 1936–37, Jack Siedle bowled occasionally and kept wicket just as infrequently, but his chief value to South Africa was as an opening batsman. He had had no great success when he was picked, in the 1923–24 season, for the match that was the trial for the 1924 tour to England and the 56 he scored in his second innings there was his highest score to that point, as well as the top score for his side, but he was not picked for the tour.[3] For the next couple of seasons that decision was made to look wise as Siedle struggled for runs in the Natal side, not improving his highest score and averaging little over 20 runs per innings.[4] But in the first match of the 1926–27 season for Natal against Border he hit his first century, 114.[5] Two matches on, he did better, sharing a partnership of 424 for the first wicket with John Nicolson against Orange Free State which remains the record for the first wicket for Natal and was the record for the whole of first-class cricket in South Africa until January 2020;[6] Nicolson made an unbeaten 252 but Siedle's dismissal for 174 broke the partnership.[7]

Siedle was in less good form the following year, though he managed a second century against Orange Free State.[8] He was then called up for the third Test at Durban against the touring England team, opening the innings and scoring 11 and 10.[9] That was not enough for him to retain his place for the remaining games of the series. First-class cricket in South Africa in 1928–29 was restricted to a series of matches around Christmas in Durban, but Siedle took advantage of the match against a weak Border team to hit an unbeaten 212, his highest score to that point, and the innings secured his place on the 1929 tour to England.[10]

Test regular edit

Siedle did well in the early first-class matches of the tour to England: in the second county match of the tour, he hit an unbeaten 169 against Leicestershire, taking more than five hours to reach 100 but then adding a further 69 in little more than an hour.[11][12] Three weeks later he almost repeated the feat by making 168 against Yorkshire including 20 fours in what Wisden Cricketers' Almanack described as "an admirable innings".[13][14] After that, however, he was forced to retire ill in the match against the Minor Counties and he then missed six of the next seven tour matches, and they included the first two Tests of the five-match series. He returned to fitness in time to be selected for the third Test, but he was not a success, being dismissed for 0 and 14 as England won the match by five wickets.[15] There was no success for him in the remaining Tests in the series, either: he scored 6 and 1 in the fourth match and another 14 in a single innings in the final game.[16][17] But away from the Tests, Siedle continued to be a regular and reliable scorer, though there were no more centuries. He ended the tour with 1579 runs, the second highest aggregate after Bruce Mitchell, at an average of 35.88, the second highest average after Herbie Taylor.[18] His overall performance earned praise from Wisden: "Siedle, though a failure in the three Test matches in which he took part, was very consistent otherwise and never looked an easy man of whom to dispose. He watched the ball well and had a nice variety of strokes," it wrote.[19]

Back in South Africa in the 1929–30 season, Siedle hit the highest score of his career in making an unbeaten 265 for Natal in the Currie Cup first-class match against Orange Free State.[20] It was at that time and still remains the second highest innings for Natal, beaten only by Dave Nourse's 304 not out in 1919–20 against Transvaal.[21]

In 1930–31, England toured South Africa, and the Currie Cup was suspended. Siedle made 46 and 38 in Natal's match against the touring side, and that was enough to earn him a place in the team for the first of a five-Test series.[22] The match was won by South Africa by the narrow margin of 28 runs and Siedle, with 13 and 35, had his best Test so far.[23] The second Test was the sixth of Siedle's career and finally he was able to make runs: opening the batting with Bruce Mitchell, he scored 141 out of a first-wicket partnership of 260 that was the highest at the time for South Africa in Tests, and set the team on its way to its then-highest Test total, 513 for eight wickets declared.[24] Mitchell and Herbie Taylor also scored centuries in the innings and England were forced to follow on, though the match ended as a draw. In the rain-hit third Test, Siedle made 38 in South Africa's first innings, surviving while four of his partners were out, but he was dismissed for 0 in the second innings.[25] The fourth Test was a tight match that ended in a draw and Siedle scored 62 in the first innings and 8 in the second.[26] And he made 57 and 30 in the final game of the series, also a draw, which left South Africa with a 1–0 series victory; in this match, with the game petering out to a draw, South Africa bowled its part-time bowlers, and Siedle took the only wicket of his entire first-class career, having the England batsman Maurice Turnbull caught and bowled.[27] In the series as a whole, Siedle scored 384 runs at an average of 42.66; he was the second highest scorer for South Africa after Mitchell.

Hiatus edit

In 1931–32, South Africa toured Australia and New Zealand. Siedle was initially selected to be vice-captain to Jock Cameron on the tour.[28] In the end, though, he did not go on the tour, and played very little domestic cricket that season in South Africa. He continued to appear fairly regularly for Natal in Currie Cup and other first-class games over the next seasons, but having missed the Australasian tour, there were no other opportunities for Test cricket until 1935, when he was selected against for the tour to England.

Return to Test cricket edit

Siedle was very much the form player in the first weeks of the South African tour of England in 1935. In May, he made centuries in three consecutive first-class matches, against Surrey, Oxford University and the MCC. In the Surrey game, Siedle was somewhat overshadowed by Dudley Nourse, who hit a century in each innings, but his unbeaten 104 in the second innings and an unbroken partnership of 160 with Nourse set up the declaration from which the South Africans achieved a decisive victory.[29] Nourse was prominent with a first-innings century in the Oxford match as well, but in the second South African innings Siedle shared an opening stand of 164 with Herby Wade and then an unbroken partnership of 205 with Eric Rowan as a high-scoring match petered out to a draw: Siedle's 164 not out was his highest score of the tour.[30] The match against MCC at Lord's was ruined as a contest by rain on the second and third days, but on the first day Siedle had carried his bat for 132 in the South Africans' innings of 297.[31] Wisden reported that "chief honours" in the match went to Siedle and that his innings was "a great feat in view of the previous poor scoring at headquarters". It went on: "Siedle, who batted for nearly five hours without giving anything approaching a chance, never took the slightest risk, but some of his off-side strokes and the square and late cuts were perfectly executed."[32] Siedle did not keep up this rate of scoring and the three centuries in May were his only centuries of the tour, but he continued to make runs through June and was the first member of the touring team to reach 1,000 runs in the season.[33]

In the first Test at Nottingham, he top-scored in South Africa's first innings with 59, though he was quickly out for 2 when South Africa were forced to follow on; the first innings was played on a pitch made awkward by weekend rain and Wisden wrote that he played "with commendable skill and steadiness for about three hours" and "afforded emphatic proof of his strength in defence".[34][35] But Siedle then had a poor match in the second game of the series, which took place at Lord's and which the South Africans won by 157 runs, their first victory in England ever and, as the only decisive result in the whole series, a series-winning victory; Siedle's contributions were 6 and 13.[36] There were better scores of 33 and 21 in the third Test, which was drawn, but Siedle strained a knee in the match.[37] The knee injury kept him away from cricket for three weeks and that included missing the fourth Test, but he was recovered in time for the final game of the series where he made innings of 35 and 36 in a high-scoring draw that confirmed the series win for South Africa.[38] Injured again, he did not then play in any further first-class fixtures on the tour. His record in the Test series of 205 runs and a batting average of 25.62 put him well down the list of the South African batsmen: sixth in terms of aggregate and eighth in terms of average; on the tour as a whole, however, he made 1346 runs at an average of 39.58.[39]

The South African cricket season immediately following the England tour included a series of five Tests against the Australians, and although the series was won rather easily by Australia and there were many changes in the South African team, Siedle maintained his place in the Test side throughout the season. In the first match, he made 31 and 59, in both innings scoring much faster than his opening partner, Bruce Mitchell, but the match was lost by nine wickets.[40] Innings of 22 and 34 followed in the next game which was drawn, largely through a huge score of 231 by Dudley Nourse.[41] The third Test was a very heavy defeat for the South Africans and Siedle, with scores of 1 and 59, was the top-scorer for this side in the match.[42] The following match was an even heavier defeat and a four-day match was over inside two days: Siedle again top-scored, making 44 in the first innings but 0 in the second.[43] The batting overall was better in the fifth and final match of the series, though the result was still an innings defeat: Siedle scored 36 and 46 in this match; in contrast to his style earlier in the series, and in the second innings of this match, Siedle's first innings took more than two-and-a-half hours and his 36 was scored out of a total of 124.[44] In the series as a whole, Siedle scored 332 runs at an average of 33.20 and was second only to Nourse both in aggregate and average.[45]

Siedle played only one further season of first-class cricket for Transvaal after this and had retired by the time of the next Test series played by the South African team. In the 1936–37 season, his last, he signed off with a score of 207 in his final first-class innings for Natal in the match against Western Province.[46] He died on 24 August 1982 in Bulwer, Natal.

References edit

  1. ^ "Jack Siedle". www.cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  2. ^ "The Daily Representative 1931, January to March". www.eggsa.org. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  3. ^ "Scorecard: JMMCommaille's XI v NV Lindsay's XI". www.cricketarchive.com. 31 December 1923. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  4. ^ "Batting and Fielding in each Season by Jack Siedle". www.cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  5. ^ "Scorecard: Natal v Border". www.cricketarchive.com. 16 December 1926. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  6. ^ "Easterns pair go big, break record". SA Cricket Mag. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  7. ^ "Scorecard: Orange Free State v Natal". www.cricketarchive.com. 30 December 1926. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  8. ^ "Scorecard: Orange Free State v Natal". www.cricketarchive.com. 16 December 1927. Retrieved 3 February 2012.
  9. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v England". www.cricketarchive.com. 21 January 1928. Retrieved 3 February 2012.
  10. ^ "Scorecard: Natal v Border". www.cricketarchive.com. 19 December 1928. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  11. ^ "Scorecard: Leicestershire v South Africans". www.cricketarchive.com. 4 May 1929. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  12. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1930 ed.). Wisden. p. 10.
  13. ^ "Scorecard: Yorkshire v South Africans". www.cricketarchive.com. 25 May 1929. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  14. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1930 ed.). Wisden. p. 16.
  15. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 13 July 1929. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  16. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 27 July 1929. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  17. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 17 August 1929. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  18. ^ "Scorecard: First-class Batting and Fielding for South Africans". www.cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  19. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1930 ed.). Wisden. pp. 3–4.
  20. ^ "Scorecard: Natal v Orange Free State". www.cricketarchive.com. 15 March 1930. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  21. ^ "Most Runs in an Innings for Natal". www.cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  22. ^ "Scorecard: Natal v MCC". www.cricketarchive.com. 21 November 1930. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  23. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v England". www.cricketarchive.com. 24 December 1930. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  24. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v England". www.cricketarchive.com. 1 January 1931. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  25. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v England". www.cricketarchive.com. 16 January 1931. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  26. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v England". www.cricketarchive.com. 13 February 1931. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  27. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v England". www.cricketarchive.com. 21 February 1931. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  28. ^ "South Africa win the rubber". The Times. No. 45757. London. 26 February 1931. p. 6.
  29. ^ "Scorecard: Surrey v South Africans". www.cricketarchive.com. 11 May 1935. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  30. ^ "Scorecard: Oxford University v South Africans". www.cricketarchive.com. 15 May 1935. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  31. ^ "Scorecard: MCC v South Africans". www.cricketarchive.com. 18 May 1935. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  32. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1936 ed.). Wisden. p. 16.
  33. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1936 ed.). Wisden. p. 5.
  34. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 15 June 1935. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  35. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1936 ed.). Wisden. p. 24.
  36. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 29 June 1935. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  37. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 13 July 1935. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  38. ^ "Scorecard: England v South Africa". www.cricketarchive.com. 17 August 1935. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  39. ^ "South Africans in England". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Vol. Part II (1936 ed.). Wisden. pp. 60–62.
  40. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v Australia". www.cricketarchive.com. 14 December 1935. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  41. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v Australia". www.cricketarchive.com. 24 December 1935. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  42. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v Australia". www.cricketarchive.com. 1 January 1936. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  43. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v Australia". www.cricketarchive.com. 15 February 1936. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  44. ^ "Scorecard: South Africa v Australia". www.cricketarchive.com. 28 February 1936. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  45. ^ "Australian Team in South Africa". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1937 ed.). Wisden. p. 667.
  46. ^ "Scorecard: Natal v Western Province". www.cricketarchive.com. 6 March 1937. Retrieved 15 February 2012.


jack, siedle, ivan, julian, jack, siedle, january, 1903, august, 1982, south, african, cricketer, played, test, matches, from, 1927, 1935, siedle, 1935personal, informationfull, nameivan, julian, siedleborn, 1903, january, 1903berea, durban, colony, nataldied2. Ivan Julian Jack Siedle 11 January 1903 24 August 1982 was a South African cricketer who played in 18 Test matches from 1927 28 to 1935 36 1 Jack SiedleSiedle in 1935Personal informationFull nameIvan Julian SiedleBorn 1903 01 11 11 January 1903Berea Durban Colony of NatalDied24 August 1982 1982 08 24 aged 79 Bulwer Natal South AfricaBattingRight handedBowlingRight armInternational informationNational sideSouth AfricaTest debut21 January 1928 v EnglandLast Test28 February 1936 v AustraliaCareer statisticsCompetition Test First classMatches 18 123Runs scored 977 7 730Batting average 28 73 40 05100s 50s 1 5 17 32Top score 141 265 Balls bowled 19 49Wickets 1 1Bowling average 7 00 35 005 wickets in innings 0 010 wickets in match 0 0Best bowling 1 7 1 7Catches stumpings 7 57 1Source Cricinfo 14 November 2022 Contents 1 Family background and personal life 2 Early cricket career 3 Test regular 4 Hiatus 5 Return to Test cricket 6 ReferencesFamily background and personal life editBorn on 11 January 1903 in Berea Durban Colony of Natal Siedle was the youngest son of Otto Siedle who was born in Woolwich London of southern German stock and who trained as a watchmaker subsequently emigrating to Durban where he became prominent in the shipping business and public affairs Otto Siedle s wife Mary became deputy mayor of Durban Jack s older brother Karl Siedle played first class cricket for Natal before the First World War in which he was killed his sister Perla Siedle Gibson became a well known singer and a symbol of her country during the Second World War Siedle married Lesley Maud McPherson on 14 March 1931 with his cricket colleague Eric Dalton as best man 2 Their son John Siedle 1932 2008 played a few first class cricket matches for Natal and Western Province in the mid 1950s Early cricket career editA right hander who played for Natal for 15 seasons from 1922 23 to 1936 37 Jack Siedle bowled occasionally and kept wicket just as infrequently but his chief value to South Africa was as an opening batsman He had had no great success when he was picked in the 1923 24 season for the match that was the trial for the 1924 tour to England and the 56 he scored in his second innings there was his highest score to that point as well as the top score for his side but he was not picked for the tour 3 For the next couple of seasons that decision was made to look wise as Siedle struggled for runs in the Natal side not improving his highest score and averaging little over 20 runs per innings 4 But in the first match of the 1926 27 season for Natal against Border he hit his first century 114 5 Two matches on he did better sharing a partnership of 424 for the first wicket with John Nicolson against Orange Free State which remains the record for the first wicket for Natal and was the record for the whole of first class cricket in South Africa until January 2020 6 Nicolson made an unbeaten 252 but Siedle s dismissal for 174 broke the partnership 7 Siedle was in less good form the following year though he managed a second century against Orange Free State 8 He was then called up for the third Test at Durban against the touring England team opening the innings and scoring 11 and 10 9 That was not enough for him to retain his place for the remaining games of the series First class cricket in South Africa in 1928 29 was restricted to a series of matches around Christmas in Durban but Siedle took advantage of the match against a weak Border team to hit an unbeaten 212 his highest score to that point and the innings secured his place on the 1929 tour to England 10 Test regular editSiedle did well in the early first class matches of the tour to England in the second county match of the tour he hit an unbeaten 169 against Leicestershire taking more than five hours to reach 100 but then adding a further 69 in little more than an hour 11 12 Three weeks later he almost repeated the feat by making 168 against Yorkshire including 20 fours in what Wisden Cricketers Almanack described as an admirable innings 13 14 After that however he was forced to retire ill in the match against the Minor Counties and he then missed six of the next seven tour matches and they included the first two Tests of the five match series He returned to fitness in time to be selected for the third Test but he was not a success being dismissed for 0 and 14 as England won the match by five wickets 15 There was no success for him in the remaining Tests in the series either he scored 6 and 1 in the fourth match and another 14 in a single innings in the final game 16 17 But away from the Tests Siedle continued to be a regular and reliable scorer though there were no more centuries He ended the tour with 1579 runs the second highest aggregate after Bruce Mitchell at an average of 35 88 the second highest average after Herbie Taylor 18 His overall performance earned praise from Wisden Siedle though a failure in the three Test matches in which he took part was very consistent otherwise and never looked an easy man of whom to dispose He watched the ball well and had a nice variety of strokes it wrote 19 Back in South Africa in the 1929 30 season Siedle hit the highest score of his career in making an unbeaten 265 for Natal in the Currie Cup first class match against Orange Free State 20 It was at that time and still remains the second highest innings for Natal beaten only by Dave Nourse s 304 not out in 1919 20 against Transvaal 21 In 1930 31 England toured South Africa and the Currie Cup was suspended Siedle made 46 and 38 in Natal s match against the touring side and that was enough to earn him a place in the team for the first of a five Test series 22 The match was won by South Africa by the narrow margin of 28 runs and Siedle with 13 and 35 had his best Test so far 23 The second Test was the sixth of Siedle s career and finally he was able to make runs opening the batting with Bruce Mitchell he scored 141 out of a first wicket partnership of 260 that was the highest at the time for South Africa in Tests and set the team on its way to its then highest Test total 513 for eight wickets declared 24 Mitchell and Herbie Taylor also scored centuries in the innings and England were forced to follow on though the match ended as a draw In the rain hit third Test Siedle made 38 in South Africa s first innings surviving while four of his partners were out but he was dismissed for 0 in the second innings 25 The fourth Test was a tight match that ended in a draw and Siedle scored 62 in the first innings and 8 in the second 26 And he made 57 and 30 in the final game of the series also a draw which left South Africa with a 1 0 series victory in this match with the game petering out to a draw South Africa bowled its part time bowlers and Siedle took the only wicket of his entire first class career having the England batsman Maurice Turnbull caught and bowled 27 In the series as a whole Siedle scored 384 runs at an average of 42 66 he was the second highest scorer for South Africa after Mitchell Hiatus editIn 1931 32 South Africa toured Australia and New Zealand Siedle was initially selected to be vice captain to Jock Cameron on the tour 28 In the end though he did not go on the tour and played very little domestic cricket that season in South Africa He continued to appear fairly regularly for Natal in Currie Cup and other first class games over the next seasons but having missed the Australasian tour there were no other opportunities for Test cricket until 1935 when he was selected against for the tour to England Return to Test cricket editSiedle was very much the form player in the first weeks of the South African tour of England in 1935 In May he made centuries in three consecutive first class matches against Surrey Oxford University and the MCC In the Surrey game Siedle was somewhat overshadowed by Dudley Nourse who hit a century in each innings but his unbeaten 104 in the second innings and an unbroken partnership of 160 with Nourse set up the declaration from which the South Africans achieved a decisive victory 29 Nourse was prominent with a first innings century in the Oxford match as well but in the second South African innings Siedle shared an opening stand of 164 with Herby Wade and then an unbroken partnership of 205 with Eric Rowan as a high scoring match petered out to a draw Siedle s 164 not out was his highest score of the tour 30 The match against MCC at Lord s was ruined as a contest by rain on the second and third days but on the first day Siedle had carried his bat for 132 in the South Africans innings of 297 31 Wisden reported that chief honours in the match went to Siedle and that his innings was a great feat in view of the previous poor scoring at headquarters It went on Siedle who batted for nearly five hours without giving anything approaching a chance never took the slightest risk but some of his off side strokes and the square and late cuts were perfectly executed 32 Siedle did not keep up this rate of scoring and the three centuries in May were his only centuries of the tour but he continued to make runs through June and was the first member of the touring team to reach 1 000 runs in the season 33 In the first Test at Nottingham he top scored in South Africa s first innings with 59 though he was quickly out for 2 when South Africa were forced to follow on the first innings was played on a pitch made awkward by weekend rain and Wisden wrote that he played with commendable skill and steadiness for about three hours and afforded emphatic proof of his strength in defence 34 35 But Siedle then had a poor match in the second game of the series which took place at Lord s and which the South Africans won by 157 runs their first victory in England ever and as the only decisive result in the whole series a series winning victory Siedle s contributions were 6 and 13 36 There were better scores of 33 and 21 in the third Test which was drawn but Siedle strained a knee in the match 37 The knee injury kept him away from cricket for three weeks and that included missing the fourth Test but he was recovered in time for the final game of the series where he made innings of 35 and 36 in a high scoring draw that confirmed the series win for South Africa 38 Injured again he did not then play in any further first class fixtures on the tour His record in the Test series of 205 runs and a batting average of 25 62 put him well down the list of the South African batsmen sixth in terms of aggregate and eighth in terms of average on the tour as a whole however he made 1346 runs at an average of 39 58 39 The South African cricket season immediately following the England tour included a series of five Tests against the Australians and although the series was won rather easily by Australia and there were many changes in the South African team Siedle maintained his place in the Test side throughout the season In the first match he made 31 and 59 in both innings scoring much faster than his opening partner Bruce Mitchell but the match was lost by nine wickets 40 Innings of 22 and 34 followed in the next game which was drawn largely through a huge score of 231 by Dudley Nourse 41 The third Test was a very heavy defeat for the South Africans and Siedle with scores of 1 and 59 was the top scorer for this side in the match 42 The following match was an even heavier defeat and a four day match was over inside two days Siedle again top scored making 44 in the first innings but 0 in the second 43 The batting overall was better in the fifth and final match of the series though the result was still an innings defeat Siedle scored 36 and 46 in this match in contrast to his style earlier in the series and in the second innings of this match Siedle s first innings took more than two and a half hours and his 36 was scored out of a total of 124 44 In the series as a whole Siedle scored 332 runs at an average of 33 20 and was second only to Nourse both in aggregate and average 45 Siedle played only one further season of first class cricket for Transvaal after this and had retired by the time of the next Test series played by the South African team In the 1936 37 season his last he signed off with a score of 207 in his final first class innings for Natal in the match against Western Province 46 He died on 24 August 1982 in Bulwer Natal References edit Jack Siedle www cricketarchive com Retrieved 12 January 2012 The Daily Representative 1931 January to March www eggsa org Retrieved 15 February 2012 Scorecard JMMCommaille s XI v NV Lindsay s XI www cricketarchive com 31 December 1923 Retrieved 2 February 2012 Batting and Fielding in each Season by Jack Siedle www cricketarchive com Retrieved 2 February 2012 Scorecard Natal v Border www cricketarchive com 16 December 1926 Retrieved 2 February 2012 Easterns pair go big break record SA Cricket Mag Retrieved 17 January 2020 Scorecard Orange Free State v Natal www cricketarchive com 30 December 1926 Retrieved 2 February 2012 Scorecard Orange Free State v Natal www cricketarchive com 16 December 1927 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v England www cricketarchive com 21 January 1928 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Scorecard Natal v Border www cricketarchive com 19 December 1928 Retrieved 4 February 2012 Scorecard Leicestershire v South Africans www cricketarchive com 4 May 1929 Retrieved 4 February 2012 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1930 ed Wisden p 10 Scorecard Yorkshire v South Africans www cricketarchive com 25 May 1929 Retrieved 4 February 2012 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1930 ed Wisden p 16 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 13 July 1929 Retrieved 6 February 2012 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 27 July 1929 Retrieved 6 February 2012 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 17 August 1929 Retrieved 6 February 2012 Scorecard First class Batting and Fielding for South Africans www cricketarchive com Retrieved 6 February 2012 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1930 ed Wisden pp 3 4 Scorecard Natal v Orange Free State www cricketarchive com 15 March 1930 Retrieved 7 February 2012 Most Runs in an Innings for Natal www cricketarchive com Retrieved 7 February 2012 Scorecard Natal v MCC www cricketarchive com 21 November 1930 Retrieved 7 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v England www cricketarchive com 24 December 1930 Retrieved 7 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v England www cricketarchive com 1 January 1931 Retrieved 7 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v England www cricketarchive com 16 January 1931 Retrieved 9 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v England www cricketarchive com 13 February 1931 Retrieved 9 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v England www cricketarchive com 21 February 1931 Retrieved 9 February 2012 South Africa win the rubber The Times No 45757 London 26 February 1931 p 6 Scorecard Surrey v South Africans www cricketarchive com 11 May 1935 Retrieved 11 February 2012 Scorecard Oxford University v South Africans www cricketarchive com 15 May 1935 Retrieved 11 February 2012 Scorecard MCC v South Africans www cricketarchive com 18 May 1935 Retrieved 11 February 2012 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1936 ed Wisden p 16 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1936 ed Wisden p 5 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 15 June 1935 Retrieved 11 February 2012 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1936 ed Wisden p 24 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 29 June 1935 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 13 July 1935 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Scorecard England v South Africa www cricketarchive com 17 August 1935 Retrieved 14 February 2012 South Africans in England Wisden Cricketers Almanack Vol Part II 1936 ed Wisden pp 60 62 Scorecard South Africa v Australia www cricketarchive com 14 December 1935 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v Australia www cricketarchive com 24 December 1935 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v Australia www cricketarchive com 1 January 1936 Retrieved 15 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v Australia www cricketarchive com 15 February 1936 Retrieved 15 February 2012 Scorecard South Africa v Australia www cricketarchive com 28 February 1936 Retrieved 15 February 2012 Australian Team in South Africa Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1937 ed Wisden p 667 Scorecard Natal v Western Province www cricketarchive com 6 March 1937 Retrieved 15 February 2012 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jack Siedle nbsp nbsp nbsp This biographical article related to South African cricket is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jack Siedle amp oldid 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