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Neil Harvey

Robert Neil Harvey OAM MBE (born 8 October 1928) is an Australian former cricketer who was a member of the Australian cricket team between 1948 and 1963, playing in 79 Test matches. He was the vice-captain of the team from 1957 until his retirement. An attacking left-handed batsman, sharp fielder and occasional off-spin bowler, Harvey was the senior batsman in the Australian team for much of the 1950s and was regarded by Wisden as the finest fielder of his era. Upon his retirement, Harvey was the second-most prolific Test run-scorer and century-maker for Australia.

Neil Harvey
Harvey in 1950
Personal information
Full name
Robert Neil Harvey
Born (1928-10-08) 8 October 1928 (age 94)
Fitzroy, Victoria, Australia
NicknameNinna
Height1.71 m (5 ft 7 in)
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingRight-arm off-spin
RoleTop-order batsman
Relations
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 178)23 January 1948 v India
Last Test15 February 1963 v England
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1946/47–1956/57Victoria
1958/59–1962/63New South Wales
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class
Matches 79 306
Runs scored 6,149 21,699
Batting average 48.41 50.93
100s/50s 21/24 67/94
Top score 205 231*
Balls bowled 414 2,574
Wickets 3 30
Bowling average 40.00 36.86
5 wickets in innings 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0
Best bowling 1/8 4/8
Catches/stumpings 64/0 229/0
Source: CricketArchive, 29 February 2008

One of six cricketing brothers, four of whom represented Victoria, Harvey followed his elder brother Merv into Test cricket and made his debut in January 1948, aged 19 and three months. In his second match, he became the youngest Australian to score a Test century, a record that still stands. Harvey was the youngest member of the 1948 Invincibles of Don Bradman to tour England, regarded as one of the finest teams in history. After initially struggling in English conditions, he made a century on his Ashes debut. Harvey started his career strongly, with six centuries in his first thirteen Test innings at an average over 100, including four in 1949–50 against South Africa, including a match-winning 151 not out on a sticky wicket. As Bradman's team broke up in the 1950s due to retirements, Harvey became Australia's senior batsman, and was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1954, in recognition of his feat in scoring more than 2,000 runs during the 1953 tour of England.

In 1957, Harvey was passed over for the captaincy and was named as the deputy of Ian Craig, who had played just six matches, as Australia sought to rebuild the team with a youth policy following a decline in the team. Craig later offered to demote himself due to poor form, but Harvey prevented him from doing so. At any rate, Craig fell ill the following season, but Harvey had moved interstate, so Richie Benaud was promoted to the captaincy ahead of him. Harvey continued in the deputy's role until the end of his career, but he was captain for only one Test match. In the Second Test at Lord's in 1961, when Benaud was injured, Harvey led the team in the "Battle of the Ridge" on an erratic surface, grinding out a hard-fought victory. Only Bradman had scored more runs and centuries for Australia at the time of Harvey's retirement. Harvey was best known for his extravagant footwork and flamboyant stroke play, as well as his fielding. Harvey was particularly known for his innings in conditions unfavourable to batting, performing when his colleagues struggled, such as his 151 not out in Durban, his 92 not out in Sydney in 1954–55, and his 96 on the matting in Dhaka. In retirement, he became a national selector for twelve years but in recent times is best known for his strident criticism of modern cricket. In 2000, he was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in and selected in the Australian Cricket Board's Team of the Century. In 2009, Harvey was one of the 55 inaugural inductees into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame.

Early years

 
The laneway next to the family home in Fitzroy where the Harvey brothers learned to play cricket. In this photo, Harvey is recreating the event in 1950.

Harvey was the fifth of six boys born to Horace Harvey. Despite his small build, Harvey was born large, weighing in at 4.5 kilograms (10 lb).[1] The family lived in Broken Hill, where Horace was a miner, before moving to Sydney, and finally to Melbourne in 1926, where they settled in the inner northern industrial suburb of Fitzroy. There the six boys were taught cricket under the guidance of their father. In conditions conducive to producing batsmen rather than bowlers, they played cricket using a tennis ball on cobblestones or a marble rebounding from the backyard pavement. The boys went to George Street State School and Falconer Street Central School.[2][3] Cricket and cricket talk was an integral part of the daily family life. Horace held the family batting record with 198 for Broken Hill, and continued to play in Melbourne club cricket. Harvey's eldest brother Merv went on to play one Test for Australia, while Mick and Ray both played for Victoria. All six brothers, the other two being Brian and Harold, also played for Fitzroy in district cricket. Except for Harold, all five represented Victoria in baseball.[2][4]

Harvey played his first game aged nine as a wicket-keeper in the North Fitzroy Central School team, the average age of which was 14. In a school final, he once made 112 of the total of 140. Aged twelve, he joined the local Fitzroy club and rose to the first-grade team when he was fourteen.[2][4] By this stage, he had transferred to Collingwood Technical School. On the advice of the Victorian coach, Arthur Liddicut, Harvey stopped wicket-keeping to focus on his batting.[2] Joe Plant, another Fitzroy veteran, also gave advice on batting. Both Liddicut and Plant identified Harvey's potential as a batsman. "What they liked about him was his modesty, his eagerness to pick up every point in the game, and his willingness to listen to the old hands."[5] Briefly playing for Fitzroy Football Club, Harvey gave up the sport and played baseball during winter.[4] After leaving school, Harvey worked as an apprentice fitter and turner for the Melbourne City Council.[1] The apprenticeship was supposed to take three years, but it eventually took six years because Harvey's cricket career caused frequent absences.[6]

First-class cricket had been cancelled during World War II and resumed in 1945–46.[7] At the start of the season, Harvey was selected for a trial match. The Victorian state team played against the Rest of Victoria, and Harvey represented the latter. However, he made a duck in his only innings and was not selected for the senior state side during the season.[8]

An aggressive 113 for Fitzroy against Melbourne Cricket Club in 1946–47 saw Harvey selected for the Victorian team at the age of 18.[4] He made 18 in his only innings during his first-class debut against Tasmania. In the next match against Tasmania, Harvey made his maiden first-class century, scoring 154.[8] He said that his effort was inspired by elder brother Merv, who gained Test selection in the same year.[9]

At the time, Tasmania was not part of Sheffield Shield,[10] and Harvey made his Shield debut against New South Wales. He was dismissed without scoring in the first innings before making 49 in the second innings in an emphatic 298-run win over their arch-rivals.[8] Victoria went on to win the title convincingly.

His next match for Victoria was against Wally Hammond's English tourists. After the fall of three early wickets, Harvey joined captain Lindsay Hassett. He dominated a partnership of 120, making 69 in his second match against the guileful leg spin of Doug Wright. His opponents had no doubt that he would become a Test player.[2][4] English wicket-keeper Godfrey Evans congratulated him by proclaiming "We'll be seeing you in England next year [for Australia's 1948 tour of that country]".[1] He ended his debut first-class season with 304 runs at 50.66.[8]

Test debut

 
Harvey in 1948

In 1947–48, Harvey played in two Shield matches with his brothers Merv and Ray. Merv had already gained Test selection, but soon Neil was attracting more attention.[11] In the opening match of the season, Harvey struck 87 against the touring Indian cricket team.[8] He was selected for an Australian XI, which played the Indians before the Tests in what was effectively a dress rehearsal. He made 32 in the first innings and was unbeaten on 56 in the second as the hosts succumbed for 203 and suffered a 47-run loss.[8] Despite this, he was initially overlooked for the Tests. He reached 35 in each of his next five innings for Victoria, including two fifties.[8]

Three months after his 19th birthday, Harvey made his entry into international cricket, in the last two Tests against India. He batted at No. 6 and made 13 in his only innings on debut in the Fourth Test at the Adelaide Oval as Australia swept to an innings victory. The selectors retained him for the Fifth Test on his home ground at Melbourne. After reaching stumps on 78, he reached his century the following day, 7 February 1948.[12] His score of 153 after being promoted to No. 5 made him the youngest Australian Test centurion, surpassing Archie Jackson's previous record.[2][11] He brought up the mark with an all run five, having turned a short ball from Lala Amarnath towards the square leg boundary.[4]

The innings in replacing Bradman was taken to be symbolism of the fact that Harvey had been tipped to become Australia's leading batsman.[13] His innings laid the foundations that secured Australia another innings victory and a 4–0 series triumph.[14][15] It was only his 13th match at first-class level.[3]

The innings ensured him a place on the 1948 tour of England. Speaking about Harvey's selection, Bradman opined "He has the brilliance and daring of youth, and the likelihood of rapid improvement."[16] In the warm-up matches before the team headed to England, Harvey struck 104 against Tasmania and 79 against Western Australia.[8] He had scored 733 runs at 52.36 for the season.[8]

Australia traditionally fielded its first-choice team in the tour opener, which was customarily against Worcestershire.[17] Despite scoring a century in Australia's most recent Test, Harvey was made 12th man and it appeared that he was not initially in Bradman's Test plans.[8][18][19][20]

At first, Harvey struggled in the English conditions, failing to pass 25 in his first six innings.[8] His most notable contribution in the early stages of the campaign was against Yorkshire in Bradford, on a damp pitch that suited slower bowling.[8][21] The match saw 324 runs fall for 36 wickets.[22] No sooner had Harvey walked out to bat, stand-in captain Lindsay Hassett was caught to leave Australia at 5/20 in pursuit of 60. To make matters worse, Sam Loxton was injured and could not bat, so Australia were effectively six wickets down and faced its first loss to an English county since 1912.[23] Harvey had scored a solitary run when he hit a ball to Len Hutton at short leg, who dived forwards and grabbed it with both hands before dropping it. Harvey then swept the next ball for a boundary.[22][23] Colin McCool was out at 6/31 before Harvey and wicket-keeper Don Tallon steadied Australia. Harvey was reprieved on 12; he charged the bowling but the wicketkeeper fumbled the stumping opportunity. Harvey then hit the winning runs with a six over the sightscreen, ending unbeaten on 18 not out. It was the closest Australia had come to defeat for the whole tour.[22][24]

Due to his weak performances in the opening matches, Harvey was omitted for the match against the Marylebone Cricket Club at Lord's. The MCC fielded seven players who would represent England in the Tests,[25][26][27][28][29][30] and were basically a full strength Test team, while Australia fielded their first-choice team and went on to win by an innings.[18] The omission signified that Harvey was on the outer with regards to Test selection.

After asking Bradman about his difficulties, Harvey was told that these were caused by rash shot selection and a tendency to hit the ball in the air. Bradman said "He was technically perfect in his shot production. He was batting well enough and simply getting out early."[16]

Harvey adapted his style and improved his performance. He scored 36 and 76 not out against Lancashire at Manchester and an unbeaten 100 at Hove against Sussex in only 115 minutes in the last match before the First Test.[16] Former Australian Test batsman Jack Fingleton described Harvey's innings as "a superb century, rich in youthful daring and stroke production".[31] However, this was not enough for selection and reserve opener Bill Brown batted out of position in the middle-order, as he had done against Worcestershire and the MCC.[19][25][30] Harvey was the 12th man because of his fielding abilities, and spent a large proportion of time on the field due to an injury to pace spearhead Ray Lindwall.[32]

During the first two Tests, Brown struggled in his unfamiliar role, and he was dropped for the third.[25][26][27][33][34] During the Third Test, opener Sid Barnes was injured, opening a vacancy for the Fourth Test at Headingley.[34][35]

Harvey forced his way into the team with a scoring sequence of 49, 56, 43, 73* and 95.[16] After Harvey hit 49 and 56 against Yorkshire, Fingleton opined that he "probably gained the respect of this most discerning crowd more quickly than any other cricketer in recent years".[36] Harvey then scored 43 and 73 against Surrey and had taken a catch amongst a flock of pigeons. Australia wanted to finish the run-chase quickly so they could watch the Australian John Bromwich play in the Wimbledon tennis final. Harvey volunteered to play as a makeshift opener and promised Bradman that he would reach the target quickly. Australia chased down the target of 122 in just 58 minutes and 20.1 overs. Harvey ended unbeaten on 73 and the Australians arrived at Wimbledon on time.[8][18][37][38] He then added 95 against Gloucestershire, attacking the off spin of Tom Goddard.[39]

After England had amassed 496 in the first innings, Australia had slumped to 3/68 with Bradman one of the dismissed batsmen. Harvey, the youngest member of the squad, joined cavalier all-rounder Keith Miller. Australia were more than 400 behind and if England were to remove the pair, they would expose Australia's lower order and give themselves an opportunity to take a large first innings lead. Upon arriving in the middle, Miller greeted him cheerfully and said to Harvey, "OK, mate, get up the other end. I'll take the bowling for a while until you get yourself organised." Harvey said, "Mate, that will do me." I couldn't get up the other end quick enough. I watched him play a few overs and I thought, "This is good", and then they brought Laker on to bowl. The third and the fifth balls of Laker's over disappeared over my head, on the way up, and they both finished in the crowd for six. . . . I can honestly thank Keith Miller for the confidence he gave me during our partnership . . . and it did so much for my future cricket career."[40]

The pair launched a counterattack, with Miller taking the lead and shielding Harvey from Jim Laker, as the young batsman was struggling against the off breaks that were turning away from him.[41] Miller then hit a series of boundaries against Laker.[41] This allowed Australia to seize the initiative, with Harvey joining the counterattack during the next over, hitting consecutive boundaries against Laker, the second of which almost cleared the playing area.[42] By the time Miller was out for 58,[42][43] the partnership had yielded 121 runs in 90 minutes, and was likened by Wisden to a "hurricane".[2] Fingleton said that he had never "known a more enjoyable hour" of "delectable cricket".[44]

Loxton came in at 4/189 to join Harvey,[28] who continued to attack the bowling, unperturbed by Miller's demise. Australia went to lunch on the third day at 4/204, with Harvey on 70.[45]

After lunch, Harvey accelerated after the second new ball was taken, and 80 minutes into the middle session, reached his century to a loud reception as Australia passed 250. Harvey's knock had taken 177 minutes and included 14 fours.[46] The partnership yielded 105 in only 95 minutes. Harvey was eventually out for 112 from 183 balls, bowled by Laker while playing a cross-batted sweep. His shot selection prompted Bradman to throw his head back in disappointment.[47] Harvey ended as the first Australian left-hander to score a century on his Ashes debut,[3] in an innings noted for powerful driving on both sides of the wicket. The innings and the high rate of scoring helped to swing the match into a balanced position when Australia were finally dismissed for 458.[2][4] In the second innings, Harvey took two noted catches, including one where he bent over to catch the ball at ankle height while running. Fingleton said that it "was the catch of the season—or, indeed, would have been had Harvey not turned on several magnificent aerial performances down at The Oval [against Surrey]".[48][49] On the final afternoon, Harvey was at the crease and got off the mark by hitting the winning boundary in the second innings as Australia successfully completed a Test world record run chase of 3/404 in less than one day.[50]

He had only one more innings in the series, scoring 17 in the Fifth and final Test at The Oval where Australia won by an innings.[14] Harvey added centuries in consecutive matches after the Tests against Somerset and the South of England.[8] In the entire first-class tour, he scored four centuries to aggregate 1129 runs at 53.76.[11] Harvey was an acrobatic fielder, regarded as the best in the Australian team. Fingleton said that Harvey was "by far the most brilliant fieldsman of both sides, who was to save many runs in the field".[32] He was twelfth man in the early Tests because of his fielding and he took several acclaimed catches throughout the tour.[38]

Consolidation

 
Harvey batting in 1950
 
Harvey heading for the 1951–1952 Test series vs. West Indies

No international matches were scheduled for the 1948–49 Australian season, and Harvey had a disappointing first-class season, scoring only 539 runs at 33.68.[51] He scored 72 and 75 in Victoria's totals of 165 and 197 as they lost to arch-rivals New South Wales by 88 runs, but his only other score beyond 50 was an 87 for Lindsay Hassett's XI in a Test trial at the end of the season.[8] Nevertheless, the selectors persisted with him for the 1949–50 tour of South Africa.[51]

Harvey was forced to shoulder more responsibility in the batting order now that Bradman had retired and Sid Barnes took an extended break.[52] The youngest player in the team,[53] Harvey rose to the challenge by establishing several Australian records. His Test figures of 660 at 132.00 was the most runs on a Test tour of South Africa by a visiting batsman, surpassing Len Hutton's previous mark by 83 runs,[53] as were his 1,526 first-class runs at 76.30 and eight centuries on tour.[2] His eight first-class centuries on one South African tour equalled the efforts of Denis Compton, Len Hutton and Arthur Morris.[53]

Harvey started the tour well and was highly productive in seven first-class matches leading into the Tests. He scored 100 and 145 not out against North Eastern Transvaal and Orange Free State.[8] There were two matches against a South African XI that were effectively dress rehearsals for the Tests. In the first, Harvey made 34 in an innings victory. He then made an even 100 in the second match, a week before the First Test. He had scored 480 runs at 60.00 in the matches leading up to the Tests.[8]

After scoring 34 in the First Test at Johannesburg, Harvey amassed 178 in the first innings of the Second Test at Cape Town, which set up a first innings lead of 248 runs. He then scored 23 not out to guide Australia to an eight-wicket victory in the second innings.[8][14] This was followed by an unbeaten 151 in five and a half hours at Durban, regarded as one of his finest Test innings. Having been dismissed for 75 on a wet wicket in the first innings, Australia had slumped to 3/59 in pursuit of a victory target of 336. On a crumbling, sticky pitch, the Australians were having extreme difficulty with the spin of Hugh Tayfield and faced their first Test defeat against South Africa for 39 years.[15] Despite a few square cuts,[54] Harvey adapted his game to play a patient innings, prompting heckling from spectators for the first time in his career. On 40, a ball from Tufty Mann broke through his defence and Harvey thought himself bowled, only to see that the ball had goven for byes.[54] However, Mann and Tayfield began to tire in the heat and Harvey began to score more quickly, reaching 50 in 137 minutes by the lunch break.[55] He registered his slowest ever century on his way to guiding his team to an improbable victory by five wickets.[2][53] Harvey brought up the winning runs by clipping a ball from Mann to the midwicket boundary.[55]

Harvey continued his productive sequence in the Fourth Test in Johannesburg, scoring an unbeaten 56 and 100 in a drawn match. It was the first Test in which Harvey had played that Australia did not win.[8][15] After scoring 100 not out against Griqualand West,[8] Harvey finished the series with 116 in the Fifth Test at Port Elizabeth, as Australia won by an innings and took the series 4–0. He had amassed four centuries in consecutive Tests in the series and had scored six in his first nine Tests, totally 959 runs at 106.55.[14] Harvey's fast scoring made him a crowd favourite and marketing drawcard in South Africa. When Harvey was rested for a tour match in East London, media complaints prompted Australian selectors to reverse their decision.[1] He finished the season with 55 in an Australian total of 55 before the tourists dismissed a South African XI for 49 and 90 to complete an innings victory.[8]

Harvey's triple figure average from his first two Test seasons could not be maintained when Australia hosted the 1950–51 Ashes series. Following his success in South Africa, Harvey played regularly at either the No. 3 or No. 4 from that point onwards. He managed 362 runs at 40.22 with three half centuries as Australia took the series 4–1. Harvey had trouble with Alec Bedser's in-swingers in the early part of the series and Bedser was the only Englishman to dismiss Harvey in the first three Tests.[11] On the first day of the series, Harvey top-scored with 74 out of Australia's 228. It turned out to be crucial as rain created a sticky wicket; England made 7/68 and Australia 7/32, both declared.[56] Australia went on to win by 70 runs.[15] The Second Test in Melbourne was also low scoring; Harvey made 42 and 31 as Australia won after neither team passed 200.[8] He performed steadily through the series, with 39, 43 and 68 in the next two Tests, which were both won. He then made one and 52 in the Fifth Test defeat;[8] it was the first in his 14 Tests and Australia's first since World War II and came on his home ground in Melbourne.[8][15] Outside the Tests, Harvey scored 141 in a win over South Australia and then added 146 in the second innings of a match against New South Wales to stave off defeat.[8] He ended the season with 1099 runs at 45.79.[8]

The 1951–52 season was less productive, with the West Indies touring Australia. Playing in all five Tests, Harvey scored 261 runs at 26.10 with one half century as Australia won 4–1.[14] Harvey had difficulties in dealing with the dual spin bowling combination of Alf Valentine and Sonny Ramadhin, who bowled left arm orthodox and leg spin respectively and accounted for him six times in the Tests.[8][11] His only fifty was an 83 in the first innings of the Fourth Test in Melbourne. Australia went on to complete a dramatic one-wicket victory.[8] Harvey had a poor season overall, scoring only 551 first-class runs at 32.41 without managing a single century.[8]

Peak years

 
Harvey batting in 1952
 
Harvey at Lord's in 1953

Harvey started the 1952–53 season without a first-class century in more than 18 months and in three matches ahead of the Tests, suffered two defeats and was yet to break his drought.[8]

Having failed to score a century in ten Tests and almost three years, the season saw Harvey at his productive best as South Africa, whom he had scored four centuries against three years earlier, toured Australia.[14] On a slow pitch difficult for stroke play,[57] Harvey scored 109 and 52 in Brisbane where Australia grounded out a victory in the First Test. He top-scored in the first innings and was the second top-score (run out) in the second.[8][58]

Such was his performance in the series that his scores of 11 and 60 in the Second Test, top-scoring in the second innings,[58] were his worst, as Australia lost their first Test to South Africa for 42 years.[8][14]

He then top-scored with 190 in the Third Test in Sydney to set up a large first innings lead of 270 and an innings victory.[59] Harvey alone made more than his opponents in the first innings and the innings saw him complete 1000 Test runs against the South Africans in only eight Tests.[58] Harvey made it consecutive centuries in as many matches, with 84 and 116 in Adelaide. Starting with an on-driven boundary off the first ball of the last day's play, Harvey's century took 106 minutes and was the fastest record in the Australia since World War II and the sixth fastest of all time in Australia.[4][53] With leading pacemen Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller breaking down in the match, Harvey bowled for only the third time in his Test career. He took his first of three wickets at Test level, that of Russell Endean as a depleted Australian attack could not defeat the visitors who finished seven wickets down.[58][60]

As the series 2–1 in Australia's favour and not yet won, the Fifth Test in Melbourne was a timeless Test.[58] Harvey compiled his third consecutive century and highest Test score of 205 as Australia amassed 520 in the first innings. This put Australia in control of the Test, despite South Africa successfully chasing an unlikely target of 295. Harvey accumulated 834 Test runs at 92.66 in the series. This surpassed Bradman's aggregate of 806 runs in 1931–32 as a series record against South Africa.[61] In ten Tests against South Africa, he had eight centuries, totalling 1494 runs at an average of 106.71.[14][62]

Harvey totalled 1,659 runs at 63.81 for the season,[8] the second highest tally for a season in Australian history, just 31 runs behind Bradman's record.[53] In the last four matches of the season, he scored 95, 148, 49, 81 and 48 to come within striking distance.[8] In the last match of the season, Western Australian captain Wally Langdon declared early on the last afternoon to allow Harvey another innings so he could break the record. However, Harvey muttered "I wouldn't want to break a record that way" and managed only 13.[53]

In 1953 he became only the third Australian in a quarter of a century to score 2,000 runs on an Ashes tour. Bradman (three times) and Stan McCabe were the others. He made 2,040 at 65.80 and his ten centuries were twice that of the next best in the side.[2]

Harvey started the first-class campaign with an unbeaten 202 against Leicestershire, setting up an innings victory. After reaching 25 in each of the next four innings without converting any starts into a score beyond 66, Harvey rectified this in the two weeks before the Tests started.[8]

He struck 109 against the Minor Counties, 103 against Lancashire, 82 and 137 not out against Sussex and 109 against Hampshire. His 109 against Minor Counties was only nine less than the entire opposition managed in two innings, and he had scored 540 runs in four completed innings in 14 days.[8]

Harvey was not at his best in the five Tests. In the 11 innings leading up to the Tests, Harvey's lowest score was 14, and he had only failed to pass 30 twice. However, in the First Test at Trent Bridge, Harvey had a duck and two and falling twice to Bedser as Australia hung on for a draw in a rain-affected contest.[8] After scoring 69 against Yorkshire, Harvey made 59 and 21 in the Second Test at Lord's, again falling to Bedser in both innings. Some tenacious batting in the second innings saw the hosts save the match with three wickets in hand.[8]

Harvey returned to form by striking 141 against Gloucestershire before taking 3/9, his first three-wicket haul at first-class level, to help Australia take a nine-wicket win. He added a second century in as many innings with 118 in an innings win over Northamptonshire.[8] Harvey then struck 122 in the rain affected Third Test at Manchester; he helped Australia take a 42-run first innings lead, but was out for a duck in the second innings.[8] Australia collapsed to 8/35 and were saved from defeat by the rain, which meant that less than 14 hours of play was possible.[63]

Harvey then returned to Headingley, the venue of his famous innings five years earlier. In a low-scoring match, he top-scored for the entire match with 71 in the first innings as Australia took a 99-run lead.[63] The tourists looked set for victory and retention of The Ashes at the start of the final day, but time-wasting and defiant defence from the English batsmen left Australia a target of 177 in the last two hours. This would have required a scoring rate much higher than in the first four days of the match.[64] Harvey quickly scored 34 at a run a minute, and Australia had made 111 in 75 minutes and were on schedule for a win.[64] At that point, English medium-pacer Trevor Bailey began bowling with the wicket-keeper more than two metres down the leg side to deny the Australians an opportunity to hit the ball, but the umpires did not penalise them as wides.[64] The match ended in a draw, and Harvey described Bailey's tactics as "absolutely disgusting".[64] English wicket-keeper Godfrey Evans said that the tourists "were absolutely livid" and he sympathised with them,[65] saying that "they were right" in claiming that Bailey's bowling was "the worst kind of negative cricket" and that he had "cheated [them] of victory".[65]

With the series locked at 0–0, the fate of The Ashes would be determined in the Fifth and final Test at The Oval.[15] In the lead-up, Harvey scored 113 and 180 in consecutive innings against Surrey and Glamorgan, before failing to pass single figures in his next three innings before the deciding match.[8]

Harvey made 36 as Australia made 275 batting first. England then took a 31-run lead and Harvey was out for only one in the second innings as the hosts won the Ashes 1–0 after 19 years in Australian hands.[14] Harvey scored 346 runs at 34.60 for the series; in a low-scoring series, this placed him second behind captain Lindsay Hassett (365 runs at 36.50).[66] Harvey failed to pass 41 in the four first-class matches remaining after the Tests. With the retirement of Hassett at the end of the season, Harvey was to bear more responsibility in the batting line-up. In recognition of his performances during the summer, during which he scored 2040 runs at 65.40, he was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year.[2] The next highest Australian aggregate and average was 1433 at 51.17 by Miller, and the second most prolific centurymaker was Hassett with five.[67]

Harvey returned to Australia and played in the 1953–54 season, which was purely domestic.[15] He scored 639 runs at 42.60, including a century against New South Wales and four fifties. He had a few near-misses during the season; he scored 97 against Queensland in two matches and made 88 against South Australia.[8]

The 1954–55 season saw England tour Australia, and Harvey scored 98 in three innings in warm-up matches against the visitors.[8] He struck 162 in the First Test in Brisbane after Australia were sent in, helping to compile 8/601 to set up an innings victory.[68] Between Tests, he scored 59 and 34 not out for Victoria against the Englishmen.[8]

This was followed by a low scoring Second Test in Sydney when Australia were 4/77 needing 223 to win on a poor wicket against the lethal pace of Frank Tyson and Brian Statham. The express Tyson was bowling with the help of tailwind and the slips cordon were over 50 m behind the bat. Harvey stood firm while Tyson scattered the stumps of his partners, and he farmed the strike ruthlessly, protecting the tailenders and counter-attacking the England fast bowlers, relying on the cut shot and clipping anything on his pads through the leg side.[69] Schoolboys watching the game leaned over the fence to beckon the boundaries towards them.[70] Last man Bill Johnston came in at 9/145 with 78 runs still required, but protected by Harvey he only had to face 16 balls in 40 minutes and they almost produced an unlikely Australian victory.[4] Harvey continued to attack the bowling, and he hooked Tyson over fine leg's head for four.[69] Together, Harvey and Johnston they had added 39 for the last wicket and halved the runs required. At this point, the Australian pair were confident. Harvey and Johnston felt that Tyson was about to run out of energy, and that their prospects would improve when Hutton would have been forced to change bowlers in the near future.[71] However, it was not enough and England won by 38 runs when Johnston gloved a Tyson delivery down the leg side to the wicket-keeper.[71] Harvey had played what many observers thought was the greatest innings of his life, a defiant, unbeaten 92, exactly half of the Australian innings of 184 in which no other batsmen reached 15.[4]

From there on, Harvey's series was unproductive, failing to pass 31 in the six innings of the final three Tests. Australia's form slumped along with that of Harvey, losing the next two Tests and the series 3–1. Harvey ended with 354 runs at 44.25 for the series.[14] Despite this, he continued to productive in the other first-class matches and was by far the most productive batsman in the 1954–55 Australian season, accumulating 1100 at 47.83 runs ahead of Les Favell's 663.[72] He scored a pair of 62s in a 36-run win over New South Wales, 95 and 66 against Queensland and 82 and 47 in a match for a Tasmania Combined XI against England.[8]

This was followed by a tour in early 1955 to the West Indies, the first by an Australian team. Harvey began with two consecutive centuries, scoring exactly 133 in both the First and Second Tests at Kingston and Port-of-Spain respectively. The matches ended in an innings victory and draw to Australia respectively. In a low scoring match in Georgetown, Harvey scored 38 and 41* as Australia took a 2–0 lead. Another half century in the drawn Fourth Test followed, before Harvey scored the second double century of his career, 204 in the Fifth Test in Kingston in just over seven hours of batting.[53] His 295 run partnership with Colin McDonald was the foundation of a Test total of 8/758, setting up an innings victory for Australia. He totalled 650 runs at 108.33 for the series.[14] For the entire tour, he scored 789 runs at 71.73.[8] After the tour Arthur Morris retired, leaving Harvey as the most experienced batsman of the team. Harvey had also expunged his demons that he experienced against Ramadhin and Valentine in the previous series. Of the spin duo, only Ramadhin was able to dismiss Harvey on one occasion.[73]

The 1955–56 Australian summer was another purely domestic season. Harvey had a successful campaign with 772 runs 55.14.[8] He struck 128 and 76 against a New South Wales team composed mainly of Test players, but Victoria's arch-rivals hung on for a draw with three wickets in hand. He added two further centuries and a 96, and all of these innings came in the span of a month in which he amassed 612 runs.[8]

Struggles in 1956

The 1956 Ashes tour to England was a disappointment for Harvey individually as well for the Australians collectively. It was an English summer dominated by off spinner Jim Laker and his Surrey teammate Tony Lock, who repeatedly dismantled the tourists on dusty spinning pitches specifically tailored to their cater for them.[74]

The tour started poorly for Harvey. In five innings in the first three weeks, he scored only 36 runs at 7.20, and this included a ten-wicket defeat at the hands of Laker and Lock's Surrey.[8][75] It was Australia's first loss to a county side since 1912. Harvey began to run into some form after that, scoring 45 against Cambridge University before the match against the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), which fielded a virtual England Test team in what was effectively a dress rehearsal for the Tests. Harvey made 225 in Australia's 413 and the hosts made 9/203 to draw the match.[8] However, he was unable to replicate this form in the Tests.[14]

In the First Test at Nottingham Harvey scored 64 and three in a rain-affected draw.[75] He then made a duck and ten as Australia took the series lead in the Second Test at Lord's. Despite Australia's success, Harvey was having an extended run-drought; he had made only 23 runs in three weeks.[8]

Then came the two Australian capitulations against Laker and Lock in the Tests. Harvey made 11 as Australia were bowled out for 143 and forced to follow on in the Third Test played on a turning pitch at Headingley. He then contributed 69 of 140 in the second innings of the Third Test at Headingley,[76] when the rest of the team struggled to deal with Laker and Lock, who spun England to an innings victory.[4] It was the first time Australia had suffered an innings defeat in a Test since 1938.[15] However, Harvey was unable to repeat his defiant form over the next three weeks.[8] The Fourth Test in Manchester was the low point, when Harvey managed a pair, falling both times to Laker, who took a world record 19 wickets. Australia were routed by an innings in what is known as "Laker's match" to concede the Ashes 2–1.[14] The debacle at Old Trafford was part of a three-week trough during which Harvey scored only 11 runs, including three consecutive ducks in a 17-day period that yielded not a solitary run.[8]

Harvey then returned to productivity with 145 against Warwickshire and added a further half-century in the remaining matches. He also took 5/57 in an innings to help set up a seven-wicket win over the Minor Counties, although the match was not first-class.[8] Harvey compiled 197 runs at 19.70 in five Tests with two half centuries. It was by far his most unproductive summer in England, with 976 runs at 31.48. Such was the dominance of the Laker-Lock-led attack that Harvey was Australia's fifth-highest runscorer in the Tests and fourth in the first-class matches.[77][78]

On the return to Australia, the team stopped on the Indian subcontinent to play their first Tests on Pakistani and Indian soil respectively.[15] In a short tour, the four Tests were the only fixtures.[8] Harvey failed to pass double figures in a one-off Test against Pakistan in Karachi, the first between the two countries. Moving to India, he scored 140 in the drawn Second Test in Bombay, scoring runs all around the ground.[79] Due to injuries and illness to many of the bowlers, the Australians were unable to dismiss their hosts twice. In the final match, Australia were in trouble after taking a 41-run first innings lead. In the second innings they were struggling on a sticky wicket caused by flooding, but made 69 out of 9/189 in the low-scoring Third Test in Calcutta to help Australia to a 2–0 series win.[80] He ended with 253 runs at 63.25 for the series.[14] His performances on the subcontinent were marked by his aggressive footwork in moving down to meet the pitch of the ball.[61] After seven months away, the Australians returned home.[81]

Senior player and vice captaincy

As expected, the Australian team's leaders Ian Johnson and Keith Miller, retired from cricket after the tour. Harvey replaced Johnson as Victorian captain and was the logical choice as successor to the Test captaincy, as the most experienced member of the team (48 Tests).[82][83] Queensland's captain, the veteran paceman Ray Lindwall, was no longer an automatic Test selection. However, both Harvey and Benaud had been criticised for their attitude towards Johnson in an official report to the board about the 1956 tour.[84] Harvey was surprisingly overlooked for the captaincy, which went to Ian Craig, who had replaced Miller as New South Wales skipper. Craig was only 22 and had played six Tests; he had yet to establish himself in the team. After several disappointing results against England, the selectors chose a youthful team. Harvey was named vice-captain to Craig for both the 1956–57 non-Test tour of New Zealand and the 1957–58 Test tour to South Africa.[79][85]

Australia's two new leaders featured in a dramatic game during the season—the first tied match in Sheffield Shield history, played at the Junction Oval in Melbourne. New South Wales, chasing 161 to win, slumped to 7/70 when Craig (suffering tonsillitis) defied medical orders, left his hospital bed, and came out to bat. A partnership of 75 with Richie Benaud took them to within 16 runs of victory, but another collapse left the scores tied.[8]

The day after the captaincy announcement, the Harvey-led Victorians met Craig's New South Welshmen at the SCG in the last match of the Shield season.[86] Harvey admitted to being irked by the board's snub and felt that it was because of his blunt nature.[86] The men were cordial at the toss and Craig sent the Victorians in to bat. At the same time, Victorian batsman Colin McDonald hit a ball into his face and broke his nose while practising, as Harvey and Craig went out to toss.[86] Harvey asked for a gentleman's agreement to allow a substitute for McDonald. Craig refused, citing the importance of the match. This evoked a rare angry response from Harvey, according to Benaud. Playing with ten men, Benaud said that Harvey "proceeded, with a certain amount of anger, to play one of the best innings I have seen in Sheffield Shield". He made 209 and later forced New South Wales to follow-on. In the end the match was drawn and Harvey was unable to deny New South Wales the title.[87] Harvey said that his first double century for Victoria "gave me as much pleasure as any innings I had ever played".[79] He finished his only season as Victorian captain by leading the Shield averages with 836 runs at 104.50.[88]

His other substantial scores were 108 (more than half the team total) and 53 in an innings loss to Queensland, 125 and 66 not out in a win over against South Australia and 115 in the return match against Queensland.[8] In a selection trial, he led Harvey's XI to a seven-wicket win over Lindwall's XI, scoring 31 and 61 not out.[8]

The New Zealand tour was regarded as a test of Craig as a leader. Wicket-keeper Barry Jarman said that Craig "had to do it himself...I wasn't so dumb that I couldn't see the senior players didn't give him much support".[86] The senior players resented his surprise selection as captain, but he gained favour by defying a management-imposed curfew, which was later scrapped.[89]

Harvey was unable to maintain his form from the Australian season after crossing the Tasman to face the New Zealanders. He scored 129 runs at 25.80, including an 84, as Australia won the third and final match to take the series 1–0.[8] Outside the international matches, Harvey was productive, and he totalled 460 runs at 46.00 for the tour.[8]

Some players remained resentful of Craig's dubious elevation ahead of Harvey during the 1957–58 tour of South Africa but appreciated that he had not promoted himself and that he was fair and open to input from teammates.[90] On the tour, Harvey broke a finger at catching practice and missed the early tour matches.[91] After it healed, Harvey returned for a match against a South African XI, in a virtual dress rehearsal for the Tests. He scored 173 as the tourists crushed their hosts by an innings.[8]

However, he broke the same finger again and missed the First Test,[91] ending a run of 48 consecutive Test matches.[92] He returned for the remaining Tests and scored 68 in the Third Test to help to force a draw,[93] after Australia had conceded a 221-run first innings lead,[8] but apart from that he had a disappointing series, failing to pass 25 and finishing with 131 runs at 21.83.[14]

Despite the disagreement as to whether Craig was deserving of the captaincy, the team proceeded smoothly without infighting.[94] Prior to the Fifth Test, Craig wanted to drop himself due to poor form, which would have made Harvey captain.[94] Peter Burge, the third member of the selection panel and a Harvey supporter,[90] was comfortable with this, but Harvey relinquished his opportunity to seize the leadership by ordering Burge to retain Craig. When the vote was formally taken, Harvey and Burge outvoted Craig, who was still offering to drop himself.[94]

The Tests aside, Harvey continued to score regularly in the other games, and ended with 759 first-class runs at 50.60, with two centuries and five fifties.[8] The team under Craig and Harvey, labelled the worst to leave Australian shores, went home 3–0 victors in the five Test series.[95]

Move to New South Wales and non-captaincy

After returning from South Africa, Harvey embarrassed the Board of Control when he frankly discussed his financial situation during a television interview. He revealed that the players earned only £85 per Test and that he was almost broke, despite being an automatic selection for Australia. Ten years of making time for cricket had disrupted his working life, so he was contemplating a move to South Africa, the homeland of his wife, Iris. Consequently, Harvey received a job offer to work as a sales supervisor for a glass manufacturer in Sydney, so he moved to New South Wales and gave up the Victorian captaincy.[92][96] As a new player to NSW, he was behind vice-captain Richie Benaud in the state's pecking order, despite being the Test vice-captain, ahead of Benaud. Fatefully, Craig was unfit for the start of the 1958–59 season, due to the after-effects of hepatitis.[4]

This left the Australian captaincy open again. Harvey started the season strongly and scored 326 runs in his first three innings. This included 160 against Queensland and 149 for his new state against the touring England team of Peter May.[8] In this match, Benaud had captained New South Wales and the hosts had the better of the play. They took a 214-run first innings lead and May's men when 6/356 when time ran out.[8]

Harvey was appointed to captain an Australian XI in a warm-up match against the touring Englishmen, indicating that the selectors were considering him for the Test captaincy.[97] Harvey scored a duck and 38 and the Australians lost heavily by 345 runs on a wicket with a crater.[8][97] Therefore, Benaud was made Australian captain ahead of Harvey.[4][62]

As Benaud's deputy, Harvey helped materially in Australia's surprise 4–0 series victory to reclaim the Ashes. Harvey's form was modest, though. He scored 296 runs at 42.29, with more than half coming in one innings—a brilliant 167 in the Second Test at Melbourne, more than half his team's 308,[8] which helped secure an eight wicket victory in the match. Otherwise, a 41 in the Fourth Test was the only other time he passed 25 in the series.[14] Outside the Tests, he scored 92 in the second match of the season between New South Wales and England, and ended the season with 949 runs at 49.95.[8] It was season of two-halves; in the latter two months, he scored only 339 runs.[8]

During the 1959–60 season, Australian undertook an arduous tour of the subcontinent, with three and five Tests against Pakistan and India, respectively.[15] Prior to the trip, Harvey made 112 in the second innings to help Lindwall's XI defeat Benaud's XI by seven wickets.[8]

In Dhaka, East Pakistan (now in Bangladesh), Harvey made 96 on a matting pitch over rough ground in the First Test, mastering the medium pace of Fazal Mahmood, while his teammates struggled to score.[4] In the course of the innings, Harvey had to overcome a fever, dysentery and physical illness, which forced him to leave six times to recompose himself. Gideon Haigh called it "one of his most dazzling innings".[98] Described by Benaud as "one of the best innings at Test level",[99] it set up an Australian win. During his stay at the crease, his partners contributed 48 runs while seven wickets fell.[80] Harvey's innings allowed Australia to score 225 in reply to the hosts' 200. Harvey then made 30 in the second innings to help ensure an eight-wicket win.[8][100]

After scoring 43 in the first innings, the second Test in Lahore came down to a run-chase for Australia, with Harvey and Norm O'Neill seemingly on schedule to win before time ran out. However, the Pakistani fielders began to waste time in an attempt to foil an Australian victory. They swapped the cover and midwicket fielders very slowly whenever the left and right-handed combination of Harvey and O'Neill took a single and changed the batsman on strike. To counter this, Harvey deliberately backed away from a straight ball and let himself be bowled, throwing his wicket away for 37. This allowed Benaud to come in and bat with O'Neill so that the two right-handed batsmen would give the Pakistanis no opportunity to waste time by switching the field.[99][101] Australia won the match with minutes to spare. Harvey scored 54 and 13 not out in the drawn third Test at Karachi. Australia took the series 2–0, but would not win another Test in Pakistan until 1998. Harvey ended the series with 273 runs at 54.60.[14]

In India, Harvey scored 114 out of Australia's 468 in the First Test at Delhi, setting up an innings victory for Australia. On a pitch conducive to spin at Kanpur for the second Test, Harvey was given a rare opportunity to bowl and he took the wicket of the Indian captain, Gulabrai Ramchand. In addition, he scored 51 and 25, the second highest Australian score in each innings in a low-scoring match, but India won to square the series, with off spinner Jasu Patel taking 14/124.[102] Harvey hit 102 in a drawn third Test in Bombay and took his third (and final) Test wicket, A. G. Milkha Singh, in the fourth Test at Madras. He ended the series with 356 runs at 50.86, a significant contribution to Australia's 2–1 triumph.[14][99]

International twilight

 
Neil Harvey'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.[14]

In the last years of his Test career, Harvey struggled, making 876 runs at 33.69 in three Test series.[14]

At the start of the 1960–61 season, there was little indication of this. In his first five innings for the summer, Harvey hit 135 against Queensland, 80 and 63 for an Australian XI against the touring West Indies, 229 against Queensland and 109 for New South Wales against the Caribbean team.[8] However, his form tapered away during the thrilling 1960–61 home series against the West Indies (which included the first tie in Test history). Harvey was ineffective apart from a score of 85 in the second innings of the Third Test, which Australia lost. He then missed the Fourth Test due to injury.[14] He struggled in the Tests, scoring only 143 runs at 17.88,[8] but prospered against the Caribbean tourists in the tour matches, scoring 326 runs at 81.50.[8] Overall, he totalled 849 runs at 56.60 for the season.[8]

Harvey began his final tour to England in 1961, and Benaud's regular absences due to a shoulder injury allowed him to lead Australia for a third of the tour matches. This included most of the first month of the tour; Benaud hurt his shoulder in the first match against Worcestershire, and spent most of the next three weeks either not bowling or travelling to London away from his men for specialist treatment.[103] At one stage, Australia were left with only 10 men on the field when Benaud excused himself and his replacement succumbed to illness, requiring an Englishman to stand in.[104] Harvey scored 474 runs at 47.40 in eight matches leading up to the Tests, including centuries against Lancashire and Glamorgan.[8] It seemed that Harvey would captain Australia in a Test for the first time with Benaud's shoulder still problematic, but the captain declared himself fit.[104] Harvey then made 114 in the drawn First Test at Edgbaston.[14] This helped Australia take a 321-run first innings lead and put them in control of the match, but the hosts batted for the remainder of the match to stave off defeat;[8] Benaud's shoulder prevented him from bowling more than nine overs.[105]

The injury forced Benaud out of the next Test, meaning that Harvey finally captained Australia at the highest level, in the Second Test at Lord's, with Davidson carrying an injury and wicketkeeper Wally Grout with a black eye.[106] This meant that Australia's two best bowlers were injured, although Davidson agreed to play.[107] Played on a controversial pitch with a noticeable ridge running across it, which caused irregular bounce, it was one of the great Test matches, known as "The Battle of the Ridge".[108] Davidson took 5/42 and bruised many of the English batsmen with the irregular bounce as the hosts were bowled out for 205.[109] Australia then replied with 339, in large part due to Bill Lawry's 130, during which he sustained many blows.[110] In the second innings, Harvey's captaincy moves proved to be highly productive. He gave the new ball to Graham McKenzie, a young paceman playing in his first international series. McKenzie responded by taking 5/37. Harvey brought the part-time leg spin of Bob Simpson into the attack when Ray Illingworth had just arrived at the crease, and moved himself into the leg slip position. Illingworth edged Simpson into Harvey's hands for a duck.[111] England fell for 202, leaving Australia a target of 69.[112]

However, victory appeared to be far from certain when Australia slumped to 4/19 on the erratic surface. Harvey sent Peter Burge out to attack the bowling, a tactic that worked as Australia won by five wickets. Burge hit the winning runs after earlier being dropped.[111] The "Battle of the Ridge" was the only time Harvey captained Australia in a Test match.[4] Despite the win, Harvey was not prominent in terms of his individual contribution, scoring 27 and four.[14] Harvey described the win as "propbably my proudest moment. We really got on the French champagne that afternoon. I knew it'd be my only Test match as captain and, being at Lord's, I decided to make the best of it."[111]

Benaud returned for the Third Test, when England levelled the series despite twin half-centuries of 73 and 53 from Harvey, who top-scored in both innings[112] on a dustbowl in a match that lasted only three days.[80][113] Harvey failed to pass 35 in the last two Tests, and ended with 338 runs at 42.25, and was a significant factor in Australia's eventual 2–1 victory.[4][14][62][114] In the second half of the tour, Harvey added centuries against Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire and took his career best bowling fugres of 4/8 against Middlesex to help set up a ten-wicket win.[8] He ended his final tour for Australia with 1452 runs at 44.00 with five centuries. During the season, Harvey and Benaud led aggressively to force a result through attacking strategy and a determination to avoid time-wasting.[8]

The 1961–62 was purely domestic,[15] and Harvey played a full season in the Sheffield Shield as New South Wales won their ninth consecutive title.[8][10] However, Harvey was not prominent in the team's success and scored only 425 runs at 26.56 with two fifties for the season.[8]

Having stated his intention to retire at the end of the summer, Harvey started his final season in 1962–63 strongly.[4] He scored 83, 44 and 128 not in his first three interstate innings for the season, and then scored 51, 21 and 63 in warm-up matches against England.[8]

Harvey was thus selected in the series against England, his last in international cricket.[115] During the season, Harvey applied to the Australian Cricket Board for permission to work as a journalist while also playing cricket. The application was refused, but Harvey wrote some bitter criticism of England captain Ted Dexter at the end of the series. Following a complaint from the Marylebone Cricket Club, the ACB said that it deplored Harvey's comments.[116] Beginning steadily with half-centuries in the first and third Tests, Harvey made his 21st and final century in the fourth Test at Adelaide. Scoring 154 in a drawn match at the venue where his international career began 15 seasons earlier, Harvey then returned to his adopted hometown of Sydney for his farewell match. With the series level at 1–1, the Ashes were still alive but the game turned into a dull draw and Harvey scored 22 and 28. He was bowled by David Allen in the final innings.[8] In the two English innings, he held six catches to equal the world record, a reminder of his prowess as one of Australia's great all-round fielders.[14] Harvey retired as Australia's most capped player, and a tally of runs and centuries second only to Don Bradman.[4][115]

Harvey made centuries in two of his last three first-class matches. In his last Sheffield Shield match, he scored an unbeaten 231 against South Australia in less than five hours, including 120 runs in one session.[115] This set up a ten-wicket victory.[8] In his final season, Harvey scored 1110 runs at 52.85.[8]

Style

Harvey was regarded as a mercurial batsman of great artistry and style.[4] A short man at 172 cm (5 ft 8 in), he batted with aggression, and was known for his timing of the ball. His batting against spin bowling in particular was a crowd-pleaser, highlighted by his extravagant footwork in charging the bowlers.[4] Harvey often charged five paces down the pitch to spinners,[117] with one bowler quipping: "He kept coming so far along the track toward me that I thought he must want to shake my hands".[1] Despite running out of the crease so much, Harvey was never stumped in a Test match.[1] He was of the belief that any bowling could and should be hit, and he gave the impression that the balls were reaching the boundary with a minimum of power. According to Johnnie Moyes, "the sight of his slim figure, neat and trim-looking, always capless, coming to bat brought new hope for spectators. He will never prod a half volley or decline the challenge of a long hop...he will go looking for the ball which he can hit for four."[4] Following the retirement of Sir Donald Bradman, he was seen as Australia's leading batsman, noted by critics for a similar ability to change the mood of matches with his attacking play. Ashley Mallett said that Harvey was Australia's best batsman since Bradman.[118] This was despite the fact that he was found to have faulty eyesight.[4][62] With the global expansion of cricket, Harvey was the first Australian to make Test centuries in 15 different cities, succeeding in a variety of conditions.[117] Harvey made 67 first-class centuries spread across 35 venues in six countries. He scored 38 of these overseas, where his average was higher. He was the first batsman to score more than 10,000 runs for Australian teams at home and abroad.[80]

Harvey's attacking style often led to criticism that his batting was risky,[4] with England captain Len Hutton feeling that he played and missed too much, while dour all-rounder Trevor Bailey quipped: "I wonder how many runs Harvey would make if he decided to stop playing strokes with an element of risk about them".[79] Harvey was nevertheless happy to continue his flamboyant strokeplay.[79] However, as Harvey progressed in seniority, he eschewed his hook shot and played more conservatively for his team's sake. He typically evaded bouncers by tilting his head, rather than ducking the ball.[79]

Although Harvey started as a wicketkeeper at school, he became a highly regarded cover fielder and later in his international career became an agile slips catcher. He bowled off spin from a three- to four-pace approach on rare occasions, taking only three wickets in his Test career.[2][4] Away from the field, Harvey had a quiet and unassuming manner, in complete contrast to his dynamic batting, and his aversion to smoking and drinking set him apart from the prevailing cricket culture of his period.[2] Harvey was known for his respect for umpiring decisions and for never appealing for leg before wicket when he fielded in the slips.[92]

When not travelling overseas on cricket tours, Harvey played baseball in the winter for the Fitzroy Baseball Club. He was twice named in the Australian baseball team, but the team was named only for the distinction accorded on the players; that is, they never competed. Harvey's fielding abilities were regarded by Wisden as the "finest outfielder in the world" during his career. As a baseball infielder, Harvey developed a half round-arm throw; its speed and accuracy caused many batsmen to be run out while attempting a run.[2] Ray Robinson said that Harvey's throw was "arrow-like" in accuracy and that "as a versatile fieldsman, this ball-hawk...takes top place".[117] His baseball training also influenced his habit of catching the ball above head height, with which he rarely dropped catches. This was based on the theory that the fielder need never take his eyes off the ball and, if it were to bounce out of his hands, he would have time to attempt to grab the rebound. Harvey also covered ground quickly and possessed an efficient method of picking up and returning the ball.[2] From late 1958 when Norm O'Neill made his Test debut until Harvey's retirement in 1963, the duo formed a formidable pairing in the covers, helping to restrict opposition batsmen from scoring in the region.[13]

Later years

He was an Australian selector from 1967 to 1979.[4] Immediately after his appointment, he was embroiled in controversy during the First Test against India at Brisbane in 1967–68. The Queensland Cricket Association wrote to the board, complaining that Harvey, who was the selector on duty at the Test, had missed two hours of play. He had been at a race meeting at the invitation of the QCA president. The ACB gave Harvey a talking to. Despite this, he retained his position at the next annual election, with Queensland's Ken Mackay failing to gain a seat on the selection panel.[119]

From 1971 onwards, Harvey was the chairman of selectors.[115] It was a tumultuous period in Australian cricket, where captain Bill Lawry was acrimoniously sacked in the middle of the 1970–71 series against England after a dispute between players and Australian officials.[120] Lawry was not informed of his fate and learned of his omission on the radio when he was still one of Australia's most productive batsmen. The dispute was the genesis of the pay dispute which, led to the formation of World Series Cricket in 1977 and generated a mass exodus of players. This resulted in the recall of Bob Simpson after ten years in retirement at the age of 41 to captain the Test team.[121] Following the rapprochement between the establishment and the WSC players, Harvey left the selection panel. The WSC representatives felt that Harvey's anti-WSC comments made him prejudiced against the selection of former WSC players.[122]

After returning from South Africa in 1950, Harvey was offered a job in captain Lindsay Hassett's sports store. Harvey accepted immediately because sports stores gave more flexible arrangements for leave to play cricket.[6] Harvey was sponsored by Stuart Surridge to use their cricket equipment. He was paid £300 a year, but nevertheless lived at home and shared a bedroom with his brothers Brian and Ray until he married, due to poverty. He used the same cricket uniforms for more than five years.[123]

Harvey's career extended into a successful business, Har-V-Sales, which distributed tupperware, kitchen and cosmetic products.[115][124]

In later life, he was known for his blunt and critical comments towards modern players, believing the cricket in earlier times to be superior. After Steve Waugh's team set a world record of consecutive Test victories, Harvey named three Australian teams that he thought to be superiors, saying "no, far from it" in response to the suggestion that Waugh's men were the best team in history. He attributed the wins to weak opponents, stating "No I don't think they're up to the world standard they were years ago" and that the 1980s West Indies team were far superior.[125] He also criticised the Australian team for publicly praising the skills of their opponents, believing that they did so to aggrandise their statistical performances against teams he considered to be weak.[126] In 2000, he was named in the Australian Cricket Board's Team of the Century and criticised modern-day batsmen, noting that players in earlier eras had to play on sticky wickets, saying: "these guys who play out here are a little bit spoilt in my opinion. They play on flat wickets all the time and they grizzle if ... the ball does a little bit off the pitch, and whatever ... But we had to put up with that" and going to assert his opinion that the current players would be no match.[127]

Harvey was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2000, in the first annual induction of two players since the inaugural ten members were announced in 1996.[128] In 2009, Harvey was one of the 55 inaugural inductees into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame.[129] He was also inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1985.[130] Harvey vociferously called for Shane Warne and Mark Waugh to be banned from cricket after it was revealed that they accepted money from bookmakers to give pitch and weather information and the ACB privately fined them. He lamented the decline in player conduct in the modern era, also criticising the modern advent of sledging.[131]

In 2002, Harvey called for Mark and Steve Waugh to be dropped from the Australian team, claiming that they were a waste of space. He stated:

Money is the only thing that keeps them playing...If they earned the same money as I did when I was playing they'd have retired at 34 as I did, and Australian cricket would be the better for it.[132]

When Waugh was close to being dropped during the 2002–03 series against England, Harvey wrote off a half-century made by Waugh, saying "he's playing against probably one of the worst cricket teams I've ever seen."[133]

Following the death of Arthur Morris on 22 August 2015, Harvey became the last surviving member of the Invincibles who toured England in 1948.[134]

Harvey received the Medal of the Order of Australia in the Queen's 2018 Birthday Honours (Australia) for service to cricket.[135]

Personal life

 
Harvey's mother and fiancée, Iris Greenish, in 1953

During the 1949–50 tour of South Africa, Harvey met his first wife Iris Greenish. At the time, Greenish was only 16 years old and Harvey 21, and their relationship became the subject of controversy when her father told the media that he would object to the couple's engagement until his daughter turned 18.[136] They married four years later at Holy Trinity Church in East Melbourne and had three children: two sons and a daughter.[11][115]

Test match performance

  Batting[137] Bowling[138]
Opposition Matches Runs Average High Score 100 / 50 Runs Wickets Average Best (Inns)
England 37 2416 38.34 167 6/12 15 0
India 10 775 59.63 153 4/2 59 2 29.50 1/8
Pakistan 4 279 39.85 96 0/2 8 0
South Africa 14 1625 81.25 205 8/5 20 1 20.00 1/9
West Indies 14 1054 43.91 204 3/3 18 0
Overall 79 6149 48.21 205 21/24 120 3 40.00 1/8

Test Centuries

The following table summarises the Test centuries scored by Neil Harvey.

  • In the column Runs, * indicates being not out.
  • The column title Match refers to the Match Number of his career.
Neil Harvey's Test Centuries[139]
# Runs Match Against City/Country Venue Year Result
[1] 153 2   India Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground 1948 Won
[2] 112 3   England Leeds, England Headingley 1948 Won
[3] 178 6   South Africa Cape Town, South Africa Newlands 1949 Won
[4] 151* 7   South Africa Durban, South Africa Kingsmead 1950 Won
[5] 100 8   South Africa Johannesburg, South Africa Ellis Park 1950 Drawn
[6] 116 9   South Africa Port Elizabeth, South Africa St George's Park 1950 Won
[7] 109 20   South Africa Brisbane, Australia Brisbane Cricket Ground 1952 Won
[8] 190 22   South Africa Sydney Sydney Cricket Ground 1953 Won
[9] 116 23   South Africa Adelaide, Australia Adelaide Oval 1953 Drawn
[10] 205 24   South Africa Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground 1953 Lost
[11] 122 27   England Manchester, England Old Trafford 1953 Drawn
[12] 162 30   England Brisbane, Australia Brisbane Cricket Ground 1954 Won
[13] 133 35   West Indies Kingston, Jamaica Sabina Park 1955 Won
[14] 133 36   West Indies Port of Spain, Trinidad Queen's Park Oval 1955 Drawn
[15] 204 39   West Indies Kingston, Jamaica Sabina Park 1955 Won
[16] 140 47   India Mumbai, India Brabourne Stadium 1956 Drawn
[17] 167 54   England Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground 1958 Won
[18] 114 61   India Delhi, India Feroz Shah Kotla 1959 Won
[19] 102 63   India Mumbai, India Brabourne Stadium 1960 Drawn
[20] 114 70   England Birmingham, England Edgbaston 1961 Drawn
[21] 154 78   England Adelaide, Australia Adelaide Oval 1963 Drawn

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Robinson, p. 258.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Wisden 1954 – Neil Harvey". Wisden. 1954. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  3. ^ a b c Mallett, p. 170.
  4. ^ 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 Cashman; Franks; Maxwell; Sainsbury; Stoddart; Weaver; Webster (1997). The A-Z of Australian cricketers. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. pp. 117–119. ISBN 0-19-550604-9.
  5. ^ The Argus November 1950 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article23020667
  6. ^ a b Haigh, p. 21.
  7. ^ Harte, pp. 388–393.
  8. ^ 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 RN Harvey". CricketArchive. Retrieved 14 May 2009.
  9. ^ Perry, p. 227.
  10. ^ a b Williamson, Martin. "A history of the Sheffield Shield". Cricinfo. Retrieved 30 November 2007.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Perry (2000), p. 228.
  12. ^ "5th Test: Australia v India at Melbourne Feb 6–10 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
  13. ^ a b Perry (2002), p. 100.
  14. ^ 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 "Statsguru – RN Harvey – Tests – Innings by innings list". Cricinfo. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Statsguru – Australia – Tests – Results list". Cricinfo. Retrieved 21 December 2007.
  16. ^ a b c d Perry (2002), p. 101.
  17. ^ Haigh, Gideon (26 May 2007). "Gentrifying the game". Cricinfo. Retrieved 1 June 2007.
  18. ^ a b c "Matches, Australia tour of England, Apr–Sep 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  19. ^ a b "Worcestershire v Australians". CricketArchive. Retrieved 18 December 2008.
  20. ^ Fingleton, p. 42.
  21. ^ Fingleton, pp. 53–55.
  22. ^ a b c "Yorkshire v Australians". CricketArchive. Retrieved 18 December 2008.
  23. ^ a b Fingleton, p. 55.
  24. ^ Fingleton, p. 56.
  25. ^ a b c "1st Test England v Australia at Nottingham Jun 10–15 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
  26. ^ a b "2nd Test England v Australia at Lord's Jun 24–29 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
  27. ^ a b "3rd Test England v Australia at Manchester Jul 8–13 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
  28. ^ a b "4th Test England v Australia at Leeds Jul 22–27 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
  29. ^ "5th Test England v Australia at The Oval Aug 14–18 1948". Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
  30. ^ a b "MCC v Australians". CricketArchive. Retrieved 18 December 2008.
  31. ^ Fingleton, p. 79.
  32. ^ a b Fingleton, p. 96.
  33. ^ "Second Test match England v Australia". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Wisden. 1949. Retrieved 2 July 2008.
  34. ^ a b "Third Test match England v Australia". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Wisden. 1949. Retrieved 2 July 2008.
  35. ^ Fingleton, pp. 145–155.
  36. ^ Fingleton, p. 193.
  37. ^ "Surrey v Australians". CricketArchive. Retrieved 18 December 2008.
  38. ^ a b Fingleton, p. 196.
  39. ^ Fingleton, p. 199.
  40. ^ Bannerman
  41. ^ a b Fingleton, p. 162.
  42. ^ a b Fingleton, p. 163.
  43. ^ Perry, p. 246.
  44. ^ Fingleton, pp. 162–163.
  45. ^ Fingleton, p. 164.
  46. ^ Fingleton, p. 165.
  47. ^ Fingleton, p. 166.
  48. ^ Fingleton, p. 170.
  49. ^ Fingleton, p. 172.
  50. ^ Perry (2002), pp. 101–102.
  51. ^ a b Perry (2002), p. 102.
  52. ^ Cashman, pp. 15, 35.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g h Robinson, p. 259.
  54. ^ a b Haigh, p. 14.
  55. ^ a b Haigh, p. 15.
  56. ^ Haigh, p. 325.
  57. ^ Benaud, p. 60.
  58. ^ a b c d e Haigh, p. 327.
  59. ^ Benaud, p. 66.
  60. ^ Pollard, p. 61.
  61. ^ a b Perry, p. 229.
  62. ^ a b c d Pollard, Jack (1969). Cricket the Australian Way. p. 59.
  63. ^ a b Haigh, p. 328.
  64. ^ a b c d Haigh, p. 79.
  65. ^ a b Haigh, p. 80.
  66. ^ "Test Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1953". CricketArchive. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  67. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1953". CricketArchive. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  68. ^ Benaud, pp. 89–95.
  69. ^ a b Haigh, p. 89.
  70. ^ E.W. Swanton (ed), The Barclays World of Cricket, Collins, 1986, pp. 295–296.
  71. ^ a b Haigh, p. 90.
  72. ^ Benaud, p. 95.
  73. ^ Perry (2002), p. 104.
  74. ^ Haigh, pp. 98–101.
  75. ^ a b Haigh, p. 98.
  76. ^ Haigh, p. 330.
  77. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1956". CricketArchive. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  78. ^ "Test Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1956". CricketArchive. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  79. ^ a b c d e f Robinson, p. 260.
  80. ^ a b c d Robinson, p. 263.
  81. ^ Haigh, p. 102.
  82. ^ Cashman, p. 67.
  83. ^ Harte, pp. 452–453.
  84. ^ Haigh, pp. 101, 103.
  85. ^ Benaud, pp. 120–124.
  86. ^ a b c d Haigh, p. 104.
  87. ^ Benaud, pp. 125–126.
  88. ^ Benaud, p. 146.
  89. ^ Haigh, p. 105.
  90. ^ a b Haigh, p. 108.
  91. ^ a b Benaud, p. 133.
  92. ^ a b c Robinson, p. 261.
  93. ^ Benaud, p. 138.
  94. ^ a b c Haigh, pp. 114–115.
  95. ^ Benaud, p. 142.
  96. ^ Benaud, pp. 147–150.
  97. ^ a b Robinson, pp. 261–262.
  98. ^ Haigh, p. 129.
  99. ^ a b c Benaud, pp. 164–167.
  100. ^ Haigh, pp. 128–129.
  101. ^ Haigh, p. 130.
  102. ^ Haigh, p. 333.
  103. ^ Haigh, p. 159.
  104. ^ a b Haigh, p. 160.
  105. ^ Haigh, p. 161.
  106. ^ Robinson, p. 262.
  107. ^ Haigh, p. 162.
  108. ^ Haigh, pp. 163–165.
  109. ^ Haigh, p. 164.
  110. ^ Haigh, p. 165.
  111. ^ a b c Haigh, p. 166.
  112. ^ a b Haigh, p. 334.
  113. ^ Haigh, p. 167.
  114. ^ Benaud, pp. 192–194.
  115. ^ a b c d e f Robinson, p. 264.
  116. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 130.
  117. ^ a b c Robinson, p. 257.
  118. ^ Mallett, p. 173.
  119. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 146.
  120. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 171.
  121. ^ Williamson, Martin (16 December 2006). "The end of a Victorian hero". Cricinfo. Retrieved 25 June 2007.
  122. ^ Haigh and Frith, p. 201.
  123. ^ Haigh, p. 22.
  124. ^ Perry, pp. 231–232.
  125. ^ "Are Our Cricketers THAT Good?". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 4 December 2000. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  126. ^ "Australia's overwhelming success robs cricket of contest". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 4 December 2000. Retrieved 24 December 2004.
  127. ^ "Panel selects cricket team of the century". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 18 January 2000. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  128. ^ . Melbourne Cricket Ground. Archived from the original on 9 June 2007. Retrieved 16 July 2007.
  129. ^ "Border, Harvey, Gower, Underwood inducted into Hall of Fame".
  130. ^ "Neil Harvey". Sport Australia Hall of Fame. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
  131. ^ "Scandal could turn cricket fans away". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 12 April 2000. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  132. ^ "Public back sacked Waugh". British Broadcasting Corporation. 14 February 2002. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  133. ^ "Waugh bats with career on the line". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 27 December 2002. Retrieved 6 June 2007.
  134. ^ "Last Invincible, Neil Harvey, pays tribute to 'dear friend' Arthur Morris". Fox Sports. 22 August 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  135. ^ "HARVEY, Robert Neil". Australian Honours Search Facility, Dept of the Prime Minister & Cabinet. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  136. ^ Haigh, p. 246.
  137. ^ "Statsguru – RN Harvey – Test matches – Batting analysis". Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 April 2008.
  138. ^ "Statsguru – RN Harvey – Test Bowling – Bowling analysis". Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 April 2008.
  139. ^ Statsguru: Neil Harvey, Cricinfo, 17 March 2010.

References

External links

neil, harvey, footballer, footballer, squash, player, squash, player, robert, born, october, 1928, australian, former, cricketer, member, australian, cricket, team, between, 1948, 1963, playing, test, matches, vice, captain, team, from, 1957, until, retirement. For the footballer see Neil Harvey footballer For the squash player see Neil Harvey squash player Robert Neil Harvey OAM MBE born 8 October 1928 is an Australian former cricketer who was a member of the Australian cricket team between 1948 and 1963 playing in 79 Test matches He was the vice captain of the team from 1957 until his retirement An attacking left handed batsman sharp fielder and occasional off spin bowler Harvey was the senior batsman in the Australian team for much of the 1950s and was regarded by Wisden as the finest fielder of his era Upon his retirement Harvey was the second most prolific Test run scorer and century maker for Australia Neil HarveyHarvey in 1950Personal informationFull nameRobert Neil HarveyBorn 1928 10 08 8 October 1928 age 94 Fitzroy Victoria AustraliaNicknameNinnaHeight1 71 m 5 ft 7 in BattingLeft handedBowlingRight arm off spinRoleTop order batsmanRelationsMick Harvey brother Ray Harvey brother Merv Harvey brother International informationNational sideAustralia 1948 1963 Test debut cap 178 23 January 1948 v IndiaLast Test15 February 1963 v EnglandDomestic team informationYearsTeam1946 47 1956 57Victoria1958 59 1962 63New South WalesCareer statisticsCompetition Test First classMatches 79 306Runs scored 6 149 21 699Batting average 48 41 50 93100s 50s 21 24 67 94Top score 205 231 Balls bowled 414 2 574Wickets 3 30Bowling average 40 00 36 865 wickets in innings 0 010 wickets in match 0 0Best bowling 1 8 4 8Catches stumpings 64 0 229 0Source CricketArchive 29 February 2008One of six cricketing brothers four of whom represented Victoria Harvey followed his elder brother Merv into Test cricket and made his debut in January 1948 aged 19 and three months In his second match he became the youngest Australian to score a Test century a record that still stands Harvey was the youngest member of the 1948 Invincibles of Don Bradman to tour England regarded as one of the finest teams in history After initially struggling in English conditions he made a century on his Ashes debut Harvey started his career strongly with six centuries in his first thirteen Test innings at an average over 100 including four in 1949 50 against South Africa including a match winning 151 not out on a sticky wicket As Bradman s team broke up in the 1950s due to retirements Harvey became Australia s senior batsman and was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1954 in recognition of his feat in scoring more than 2 000 runs during the 1953 tour of England In 1957 Harvey was passed over for the captaincy and was named as the deputy of Ian Craig who had played just six matches as Australia sought to rebuild the team with a youth policy following a decline in the team Craig later offered to demote himself due to poor form but Harvey prevented him from doing so At any rate Craig fell ill the following season but Harvey had moved interstate so Richie Benaud was promoted to the captaincy ahead of him Harvey continued in the deputy s role until the end of his career but he was captain for only one Test match In the Second Test at Lord s in 1961 when Benaud was injured Harvey led the team in the Battle of the Ridge on an erratic surface grinding out a hard fought victory Only Bradman had scored more runs and centuries for Australia at the time of Harvey s retirement Harvey was best known for his extravagant footwork and flamboyant stroke play as well as his fielding Harvey was particularly known for his innings in conditions unfavourable to batting performing when his colleagues struggled such as his 151 not out in Durban his 92 not out in Sydney in 1954 55 and his 96 on the matting in Dhaka In retirement he became a national selector for twelve years but in recent times is best known for his strident criticism of modern cricket In 2000 he was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in and selected in the Australian Cricket Board s Team of the Century In 2009 Harvey was one of the 55 inaugural inductees into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame Contents 1 Early years 2 Test debut 3 Consolidation 4 Peak years 5 Struggles in 1956 6 Senior player and vice captaincy 7 Move to New South Wales and non captaincy 8 International twilight 9 Style 10 Later years 11 Personal life 12 Test match performance 12 1 Test Centuries 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEarly years EditSee also Harvey family The laneway next to the family home in Fitzroy where the Harvey brothers learned to play cricket In this photo Harvey is recreating the event in 1950 Harvey was the fifth of six boys born to Horace Harvey Despite his small build Harvey was born large weighing in at 4 5 kilograms 10 lb 1 The family lived in Broken Hill where Horace was a miner before moving to Sydney and finally to Melbourne in 1926 where they settled in the inner northern industrial suburb of Fitzroy There the six boys were taught cricket under the guidance of their father In conditions conducive to producing batsmen rather than bowlers they played cricket using a tennis ball on cobblestones or a marble rebounding from the backyard pavement The boys went to George Street State School and Falconer Street Central School 2 3 Cricket and cricket talk was an integral part of the daily family life Horace held the family batting record with 198 for Broken Hill and continued to play in Melbourne club cricket Harvey s eldest brother Merv went on to play one Test for Australia while Mick and Ray both played for Victoria All six brothers the other two being Brian and Harold also played for Fitzroy in district cricket Except for Harold all five represented Victoria in baseball 2 4 Harvey played his first game aged nine as a wicket keeper in the North Fitzroy Central School team the average age of which was 14 In a school final he once made 112 of the total of 140 Aged twelve he joined the local Fitzroy club and rose to the first grade team when he was fourteen 2 4 By this stage he had transferred to Collingwood Technical School On the advice of the Victorian coach Arthur Liddicut Harvey stopped wicket keeping to focus on his batting 2 Joe Plant another Fitzroy veteran also gave advice on batting Both Liddicut and Plant identified Harvey s potential as a batsman What they liked about him was his modesty his eagerness to pick up every point in the game and his willingness to listen to the old hands 5 Briefly playing for Fitzroy Football Club Harvey gave up the sport and played baseball during winter 4 After leaving school Harvey worked as an apprentice fitter and turner for the Melbourne City Council 1 The apprenticeship was supposed to take three years but it eventually took six years because Harvey s cricket career caused frequent absences 6 First class cricket had been cancelled during World War II and resumed in 1945 46 7 At the start of the season Harvey was selected for a trial match The Victorian state team played against the Rest of Victoria and Harvey represented the latter However he made a duck in his only innings and was not selected for the senior state side during the season 8 An aggressive 113 for Fitzroy against Melbourne Cricket Club in 1946 47 saw Harvey selected for the Victorian team at the age of 18 4 He made 18 in his only innings during his first class debut against Tasmania In the next match against Tasmania Harvey made his maiden first class century scoring 154 8 He said that his effort was inspired by elder brother Merv who gained Test selection in the same year 9 At the time Tasmania was not part of Sheffield Shield 10 and Harvey made his Shield debut against New South Wales He was dismissed without scoring in the first innings before making 49 in the second innings in an emphatic 298 run win over their arch rivals 8 Victoria went on to win the title convincingly His next match for Victoria was against Wally Hammond s English tourists After the fall of three early wickets Harvey joined captain Lindsay Hassett He dominated a partnership of 120 making 69 in his second match against the guileful leg spin of Doug Wright His opponents had no doubt that he would become a Test player 2 4 English wicket keeper Godfrey Evans congratulated him by proclaiming We ll be seeing you in England next year for Australia s 1948 tour of that country 1 He ended his debut first class season with 304 runs at 50 66 8 Test debut EditMain article Neil Harvey with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948 See also Australian cricket team in England in 1948 and 1948 Ashes series Harvey in 1948 In 1947 48 Harvey played in two Shield matches with his brothers Merv and Ray Merv had already gained Test selection but soon Neil was attracting more attention 11 In the opening match of the season Harvey struck 87 against the touring Indian cricket team 8 He was selected for an Australian XI which played the Indians before the Tests in what was effectively a dress rehearsal He made 32 in the first innings and was unbeaten on 56 in the second as the hosts succumbed for 203 and suffered a 47 run loss 8 Despite this he was initially overlooked for the Tests He reached 35 in each of his next five innings for Victoria including two fifties 8 Three months after his 19th birthday Harvey made his entry into international cricket in the last two Tests against India He batted at No 6 and made 13 in his only innings on debut in the Fourth Test at the Adelaide Oval as Australia swept to an innings victory The selectors retained him for the Fifth Test on his home ground at Melbourne After reaching stumps on 78 he reached his century the following day 7 February 1948 12 His score of 153 after being promoted to No 5 made him the youngest Australian Test centurion surpassing Archie Jackson s previous record 2 11 He brought up the mark with an all run five having turned a short ball from Lala Amarnath towards the square leg boundary 4 The innings in replacing Bradman was taken to be symbolism of the fact that Harvey had been tipped to become Australia s leading batsman 13 His innings laid the foundations that secured Australia another innings victory and a 4 0 series triumph 14 15 It was only his 13th match at first class level 3 The innings ensured him a place on the 1948 tour of England Speaking about Harvey s selection Bradman opined He has the brilliance and daring of youth and the likelihood of rapid improvement 16 In the warm up matches before the team headed to England Harvey struck 104 against Tasmania and 79 against Western Australia 8 He had scored 733 runs at 52 36 for the season 8 Australia traditionally fielded its first choice team in the tour opener which was customarily against Worcestershire 17 Despite scoring a century in Australia s most recent Test Harvey was made 12th man and it appeared that he was not initially in Bradman s Test plans 8 18 19 20 At first Harvey struggled in the English conditions failing to pass 25 in his first six innings 8 His most notable contribution in the early stages of the campaign was against Yorkshire in Bradford on a damp pitch that suited slower bowling 8 21 The match saw 324 runs fall for 36 wickets 22 No sooner had Harvey walked out to bat stand in captain Lindsay Hassett was caught to leave Australia at 5 20 in pursuit of 60 To make matters worse Sam Loxton was injured and could not bat so Australia were effectively six wickets down and faced its first loss to an English county since 1912 23 Harvey had scored a solitary run when he hit a ball to Len Hutton at short leg who dived forwards and grabbed it with both hands before dropping it Harvey then swept the next ball for a boundary 22 23 Colin McCool was out at 6 31 before Harvey and wicket keeper Don Tallon steadied Australia Harvey was reprieved on 12 he charged the bowling but the wicketkeeper fumbled the stumping opportunity Harvey then hit the winning runs with a six over the sightscreen ending unbeaten on 18 not out It was the closest Australia had come to defeat for the whole tour 22 24 Due to his weak performances in the opening matches Harvey was omitted for the match against the Marylebone Cricket Club at Lord s The MCC fielded seven players who would represent England in the Tests 25 26 27 28 29 30 and were basically a full strength Test team while Australia fielded their first choice team and went on to win by an innings 18 The omission signified that Harvey was on the outer with regards to Test selection After asking Bradman about his difficulties Harvey was told that these were caused by rash shot selection and a tendency to hit the ball in the air Bradman said He was technically perfect in his shot production He was batting well enough and simply getting out early 16 Harvey adapted his style and improved his performance He scored 36 and 76 not out against Lancashire at Manchester and an unbeaten 100 at Hove against Sussex in only 115 minutes in the last match before the First Test 16 Former Australian Test batsman Jack Fingleton described Harvey s innings as a superb century rich in youthful daring and stroke production 31 However this was not enough for selection and reserve opener Bill Brown batted out of position in the middle order as he had done against Worcestershire and the MCC 19 25 30 Harvey was the 12th man because of his fielding abilities and spent a large proportion of time on the field due to an injury to pace spearhead Ray Lindwall 32 During the first two Tests Brown struggled in his unfamiliar role and he was dropped for the third 25 26 27 33 34 During the Third Test opener Sid Barnes was injured opening a vacancy for the Fourth Test at Headingley 34 35 Harvey forced his way into the team with a scoring sequence of 49 56 43 73 and 95 16 After Harvey hit 49 and 56 against Yorkshire Fingleton opined that he probably gained the respect of this most discerning crowd more quickly than any other cricketer in recent years 36 Harvey then scored 43 and 73 against Surrey and had taken a catch amongst a flock of pigeons Australia wanted to finish the run chase quickly so they could watch the Australian John Bromwich play in the Wimbledon tennis final Harvey volunteered to play as a makeshift opener and promised Bradman that he would reach the target quickly Australia chased down the target of 122 in just 58 minutes and 20 1 overs Harvey ended unbeaten on 73 and the Australians arrived at Wimbledon on time 8 18 37 38 He then added 95 against Gloucestershire attacking the off spin of Tom Goddard 39 After England had amassed 496 in the first innings Australia had slumped to 3 68 with Bradman one of the dismissed batsmen Harvey the youngest member of the squad joined cavalier all rounder Keith Miller Australia were more than 400 behind and if England were to remove the pair they would expose Australia s lower order and give themselves an opportunity to take a large first innings lead Upon arriving in the middle Miller greeted him cheerfully and said to Harvey OK mate get up the other end I ll take the bowling for a while until you get yourself organised Harvey said Mate that will do me I couldn t get up the other end quick enough I watched him play a few overs and I thought This is good and then they brought Laker on to bowl The third and the fifth balls of Laker s over disappeared over my head on the way up and they both finished in the crowd for six I can honestly thank Keith Miller for the confidence he gave me during our partnership and it did so much for my future cricket career 40 The pair launched a counterattack with Miller taking the lead and shielding Harvey from Jim Laker as the young batsman was struggling against the off breaks that were turning away from him 41 Miller then hit a series of boundaries against Laker 41 This allowed Australia to seize the initiative with Harvey joining the counterattack during the next over hitting consecutive boundaries against Laker the second of which almost cleared the playing area 42 By the time Miller was out for 58 42 43 the partnership had yielded 121 runs in 90 minutes and was likened by Wisden to a hurricane 2 Fingleton said that he had never known a more enjoyable hour of delectable cricket 44 Loxton came in at 4 189 to join Harvey 28 who continued to attack the bowling unperturbed by Miller s demise Australia went to lunch on the third day at 4 204 with Harvey on 70 45 After lunch Harvey accelerated after the second new ball was taken and 80 minutes into the middle session reached his century to a loud reception as Australia passed 250 Harvey s knock had taken 177 minutes and included 14 fours 46 The partnership yielded 105 in only 95 minutes Harvey was eventually out for 112 from 183 balls bowled by Laker while playing a cross batted sweep His shot selection prompted Bradman to throw his head back in disappointment 47 Harvey ended as the first Australian left hander to score a century on his Ashes debut 3 in an innings noted for powerful driving on both sides of the wicket The innings and the high rate of scoring helped to swing the match into a balanced position when Australia were finally dismissed for 458 2 4 In the second innings Harvey took two noted catches including one where he bent over to catch the ball at ankle height while running Fingleton said that it was the catch of the season or indeed would have been had Harvey not turned on several magnificent aerial performances down at The Oval against Surrey 48 49 On the final afternoon Harvey was at the crease and got off the mark by hitting the winning boundary in the second innings as Australia successfully completed a Test world record run chase of 3 404 in less than one day 50 He had only one more innings in the series scoring 17 in the Fifth and final Test at The Oval where Australia won by an innings 14 Harvey added centuries in consecutive matches after the Tests against Somerset and the South of England 8 In the entire first class tour he scored four centuries to aggregate 1129 runs at 53 76 11 Harvey was an acrobatic fielder regarded as the best in the Australian team Fingleton said that Harvey was by far the most brilliant fieldsman of both sides who was to save many runs in the field 32 He was twelfth man in the early Tests because of his fielding and he took several acclaimed catches throughout the tour 38 Consolidation Edit Harvey batting in 1950 Harvey heading for the 1951 1952 Test series vs West Indies No international matches were scheduled for the 1948 49 Australian season and Harvey had a disappointing first class season scoring only 539 runs at 33 68 51 He scored 72 and 75 in Victoria s totals of 165 and 197 as they lost to arch rivals New South Wales by 88 runs but his only other score beyond 50 was an 87 for Lindsay Hassett s XI in a Test trial at the end of the season 8 Nevertheless the selectors persisted with him for the 1949 50 tour of South Africa 51 Harvey was forced to shoulder more responsibility in the batting order now that Bradman had retired and Sid Barnes took an extended break 52 The youngest player in the team 53 Harvey rose to the challenge by establishing several Australian records His Test figures of 660 at 132 00 was the most runs on a Test tour of South Africa by a visiting batsman surpassing Len Hutton s previous mark by 83 runs 53 as were his 1 526 first class runs at 76 30 and eight centuries on tour 2 His eight first class centuries on one South African tour equalled the efforts of Denis Compton Len Hutton and Arthur Morris 53 Harvey started the tour well and was highly productive in seven first class matches leading into the Tests He scored 100 and 145 not out against North Eastern Transvaal and Orange Free State 8 There were two matches against a South African XI that were effectively dress rehearsals for the Tests In the first Harvey made 34 in an innings victory He then made an even 100 in the second match a week before the First Test He had scored 480 runs at 60 00 in the matches leading up to the Tests 8 After scoring 34 in the First Test at Johannesburg Harvey amassed 178 in the first innings of the Second Test at Cape Town which set up a first innings lead of 248 runs He then scored 23 not out to guide Australia to an eight wicket victory in the second innings 8 14 This was followed by an unbeaten 151 in five and a half hours at Durban regarded as one of his finest Test innings Having been dismissed for 75 on a wet wicket in the first innings Australia had slumped to 3 59 in pursuit of a victory target of 336 On a crumbling sticky pitch the Australians were having extreme difficulty with the spin of Hugh Tayfield and faced their first Test defeat against South Africa for 39 years 15 Despite a few square cuts 54 Harvey adapted his game to play a patient innings prompting heckling from spectators for the first time in his career On 40 a ball from Tufty Mann broke through his defence and Harvey thought himself bowled only to see that the ball had goven for byes 54 However Mann and Tayfield began to tire in the heat and Harvey began to score more quickly reaching 50 in 137 minutes by the lunch break 55 He registered his slowest ever century on his way to guiding his team to an improbable victory by five wickets 2 53 Harvey brought up the winning runs by clipping a ball from Mann to the midwicket boundary 55 Harvey continued his productive sequence in the Fourth Test in Johannesburg scoring an unbeaten 56 and 100 in a drawn match It was the first Test in which Harvey had played that Australia did not win 8 15 After scoring 100 not out against Griqualand West 8 Harvey finished the series with 116 in the Fifth Test at Port Elizabeth as Australia won by an innings and took the series 4 0 He had amassed four centuries in consecutive Tests in the series and had scored six in his first nine Tests totally 959 runs at 106 55 14 Harvey s fast scoring made him a crowd favourite and marketing drawcard in South Africa When Harvey was rested for a tour match in East London media complaints prompted Australian selectors to reverse their decision 1 He finished the season with 55 in an Australian total of 55 before the tourists dismissed a South African XI for 49 and 90 to complete an innings victory 8 Harvey s triple figure average from his first two Test seasons could not be maintained when Australia hosted the 1950 51 Ashes series Following his success in South Africa Harvey played regularly at either the No 3 or No 4 from that point onwards He managed 362 runs at 40 22 with three half centuries as Australia took the series 4 1 Harvey had trouble with Alec Bedser s in swingers in the early part of the series and Bedser was the only Englishman to dismiss Harvey in the first three Tests 11 On the first day of the series Harvey top scored with 74 out of Australia s 228 It turned out to be crucial as rain created a sticky wicket England made 7 68 and Australia 7 32 both declared 56 Australia went on to win by 70 runs 15 The Second Test in Melbourne was also low scoring Harvey made 42 and 31 as Australia won after neither team passed 200 8 He performed steadily through the series with 39 43 and 68 in the next two Tests which were both won He then made one and 52 in the Fifth Test defeat 8 it was the first in his 14 Tests and Australia s first since World War II and came on his home ground in Melbourne 8 15 Outside the Tests Harvey scored 141 in a win over South Australia and then added 146 in the second innings of a match against New South Wales to stave off defeat 8 He ended the season with 1099 runs at 45 79 8 The 1951 52 season was less productive with the West Indies touring Australia Playing in all five Tests Harvey scored 261 runs at 26 10 with one half century as Australia won 4 1 14 Harvey had difficulties in dealing with the dual spin bowling combination of Alf Valentine and Sonny Ramadhin who bowled left arm orthodox and leg spin respectively and accounted for him six times in the Tests 8 11 His only fifty was an 83 in the first innings of the Fourth Test in Melbourne Australia went on to complete a dramatic one wicket victory 8 Harvey had a poor season overall scoring only 551 first class runs at 32 41 without managing a single century 8 Peak years Edit Harvey batting in 1952 Harvey at Lord s in 1953 Harvey started the 1952 53 season without a first class century in more than 18 months and in three matches ahead of the Tests suffered two defeats and was yet to break his drought 8 Having failed to score a century in ten Tests and almost three years the season saw Harvey at his productive best as South Africa whom he had scored four centuries against three years earlier toured Australia 14 On a slow pitch difficult for stroke play 57 Harvey scored 109 and 52 in Brisbane where Australia grounded out a victory in the First Test He top scored in the first innings and was the second top score run out in the second 8 58 Such was his performance in the series that his scores of 11 and 60 in the Second Test top scoring in the second innings 58 were his worst as Australia lost their first Test to South Africa for 42 years 8 14 He then top scored with 190 in the Third Test in Sydney to set up a large first innings lead of 270 and an innings victory 59 Harvey alone made more than his opponents in the first innings and the innings saw him complete 1000 Test runs against the South Africans in only eight Tests 58 Harvey made it consecutive centuries in as many matches with 84 and 116 in Adelaide Starting with an on driven boundary off the first ball of the last day s play Harvey s century took 106 minutes and was the fastest record in the Australia since World War II and the sixth fastest of all time in Australia 4 53 With leading pacemen Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller breaking down in the match Harvey bowled for only the third time in his Test career He took his first of three wickets at Test level that of Russell Endean as a depleted Australian attack could not defeat the visitors who finished seven wickets down 58 60 As the series 2 1 in Australia s favour and not yet won the Fifth Test in Melbourne was a timeless Test 58 Harvey compiled his third consecutive century and highest Test score of 205 as Australia amassed 520 in the first innings This put Australia in control of the Test despite South Africa successfully chasing an unlikely target of 295 Harvey accumulated 834 Test runs at 92 66 in the series This surpassed Bradman s aggregate of 806 runs in 1931 32 as a series record against South Africa 61 In ten Tests against South Africa he had eight centuries totalling 1494 runs at an average of 106 71 14 62 Harvey totalled 1 659 runs at 63 81 for the season 8 the second highest tally for a season in Australian history just 31 runs behind Bradman s record 53 In the last four matches of the season he scored 95 148 49 81 and 48 to come within striking distance 8 In the last match of the season Western Australian captain Wally Langdon declared early on the last afternoon to allow Harvey another innings so he could break the record However Harvey muttered I wouldn t want to break a record that way and managed only 13 53 In 1953 he became only the third Australian in a quarter of a century to score 2 000 runs on an Ashes tour Bradman three times and Stan McCabe were the others He made 2 040 at 65 80 and his ten centuries were twice that of the next best in the side 2 Harvey started the first class campaign with an unbeaten 202 against Leicestershire setting up an innings victory After reaching 25 in each of the next four innings without converting any starts into a score beyond 66 Harvey rectified this in the two weeks before the Tests started 8 He struck 109 against the Minor Counties 103 against Lancashire 82 and 137 not out against Sussex and 109 against Hampshire His 109 against Minor Counties was only nine less than the entire opposition managed in two innings and he had scored 540 runs in four completed innings in 14 days 8 Harvey was not at his best in the five Tests In the 11 innings leading up to the Tests Harvey s lowest score was 14 and he had only failed to pass 30 twice However in the First Test at Trent Bridge Harvey had a duck and two and falling twice to Bedser as Australia hung on for a draw in a rain affected contest 8 After scoring 69 against Yorkshire Harvey made 59 and 21 in the Second Test at Lord s again falling to Bedser in both innings Some tenacious batting in the second innings saw the hosts save the match with three wickets in hand 8 Harvey returned to form by striking 141 against Gloucestershire before taking 3 9 his first three wicket haul at first class level to help Australia take a nine wicket win He added a second century in as many innings with 118 in an innings win over Northamptonshire 8 Harvey then struck 122 in the rain affected Third Test at Manchester he helped Australia take a 42 run first innings lead but was out for a duck in the second innings 8 Australia collapsed to 8 35 and were saved from defeat by the rain which meant that less than 14 hours of play was possible 63 Harvey then returned to Headingley the venue of his famous innings five years earlier In a low scoring match he top scored for the entire match with 71 in the first innings as Australia took a 99 run lead 63 The tourists looked set for victory and retention of The Ashes at the start of the final day but time wasting and defiant defence from the English batsmen left Australia a target of 177 in the last two hours This would have required a scoring rate much higher than in the first four days of the match 64 Harvey quickly scored 34 at a run a minute and Australia had made 111 in 75 minutes and were on schedule for a win 64 At that point English medium pacer Trevor Bailey began bowling with the wicket keeper more than two metres down the leg side to deny the Australians an opportunity to hit the ball but the umpires did not penalise them as wides 64 The match ended in a draw and Harvey described Bailey s tactics as absolutely disgusting 64 English wicket keeper Godfrey Evans said that the tourists were absolutely livid and he sympathised with them 65 saying that they were right in claiming that Bailey s bowling was the worst kind of negative cricket and that he had cheated them of victory 65 With the series locked at 0 0 the fate of The Ashes would be determined in the Fifth and final Test at The Oval 15 In the lead up Harvey scored 113 and 180 in consecutive innings against Surrey and Glamorgan before failing to pass single figures in his next three innings before the deciding match 8 Harvey made 36 as Australia made 275 batting first England then took a 31 run lead and Harvey was out for only one in the second innings as the hosts won the Ashes 1 0 after 19 years in Australian hands 14 Harvey scored 346 runs at 34 60 for the series in a low scoring series this placed him second behind captain Lindsay Hassett 365 runs at 36 50 66 Harvey failed to pass 41 in the four first class matches remaining after the Tests With the retirement of Hassett at the end of the season Harvey was to bear more responsibility in the batting line up In recognition of his performances during the summer during which he scored 2040 runs at 65 40 he was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year 2 The next highest Australian aggregate and average was 1433 at 51 17 by Miller and the second most prolific centurymaker was Hassett with five 67 Harvey returned to Australia and played in the 1953 54 season which was purely domestic 15 He scored 639 runs at 42 60 including a century against New South Wales and four fifties He had a few near misses during the season he scored 97 against Queensland in two matches and made 88 against South Australia 8 The 1954 55 season saw England tour Australia and Harvey scored 98 in three innings in warm up matches against the visitors 8 He struck 162 in the First Test in Brisbane after Australia were sent in helping to compile 8 601 to set up an innings victory 68 Between Tests he scored 59 and 34 not out for Victoria against the Englishmen 8 This was followed by a low scoring Second Test in Sydney when Australia were 4 77 needing 223 to win on a poor wicket against the lethal pace of Frank Tyson and Brian Statham The express Tyson was bowling with the help of tailwind and the slips cordon were over 50 m behind the bat Harvey stood firm while Tyson scattered the stumps of his partners and he farmed the strike ruthlessly protecting the tailenders and counter attacking the England fast bowlers relying on the cut shot and clipping anything on his pads through the leg side 69 Schoolboys watching the game leaned over the fence to beckon the boundaries towards them 70 Last man Bill Johnston came in at 9 145 with 78 runs still required but protected by Harvey he only had to face 16 balls in 40 minutes and they almost produced an unlikely Australian victory 4 Harvey continued to attack the bowling and he hooked Tyson over fine leg s head for four 69 Together Harvey and Johnston they had added 39 for the last wicket and halved the runs required At this point the Australian pair were confident Harvey and Johnston felt that Tyson was about to run out of energy and that their prospects would improve when Hutton would have been forced to change bowlers in the near future 71 However it was not enough and England won by 38 runs when Johnston gloved a Tyson delivery down the leg side to the wicket keeper 71 Harvey had played what many observers thought was the greatest innings of his life a defiant unbeaten 92 exactly half of the Australian innings of 184 in which no other batsmen reached 15 4 From there on Harvey s series was unproductive failing to pass 31 in the six innings of the final three Tests Australia s form slumped along with that of Harvey losing the next two Tests and the series 3 1 Harvey ended with 354 runs at 44 25 for the series 14 Despite this he continued to productive in the other first class matches and was by far the most productive batsman in the 1954 55 Australian season accumulating 1100 at 47 83 runs ahead of Les Favell s 663 72 He scored a pair of 62s in a 36 run win over New South Wales 95 and 66 against Queensland and 82 and 47 in a match for a Tasmania Combined XI against England 8 This was followed by a tour in early 1955 to the West Indies the first by an Australian team Harvey began with two consecutive centuries scoring exactly 133 in both the First and Second Tests at Kingston and Port of Spain respectively The matches ended in an innings victory and draw to Australia respectively In a low scoring match in Georgetown Harvey scored 38 and 41 as Australia took a 2 0 lead Another half century in the drawn Fourth Test followed before Harvey scored the second double century of his career 204 in the Fifth Test in Kingston in just over seven hours of batting 53 His 295 run partnership with Colin McDonald was the foundation of a Test total of 8 758 setting up an innings victory for Australia He totalled 650 runs at 108 33 for the series 14 For the entire tour he scored 789 runs at 71 73 8 After the tour Arthur Morris retired leaving Harvey as the most experienced batsman of the team Harvey had also expunged his demons that he experienced against Ramadhin and Valentine in the previous series Of the spin duo only Ramadhin was able to dismiss Harvey on one occasion 73 The 1955 56 Australian summer was another purely domestic season Harvey had a successful campaign with 772 runs 55 14 8 He struck 128 and 76 against a New South Wales team composed mainly of Test players but Victoria s arch rivals hung on for a draw with three wickets in hand He added two further centuries and a 96 and all of these innings came in the span of a month in which he amassed 612 runs 8 Struggles in 1956 EditThe 1956 Ashes tour to England was a disappointment for Harvey individually as well for the Australians collectively It was an English summer dominated by off spinner Jim Laker and his Surrey teammate Tony Lock who repeatedly dismantled the tourists on dusty spinning pitches specifically tailored to their cater for them 74 The tour started poorly for Harvey In five innings in the first three weeks he scored only 36 runs at 7 20 and this included a ten wicket defeat at the hands of Laker and Lock s Surrey 8 75 It was Australia s first loss to a county side since 1912 Harvey began to run into some form after that scoring 45 against Cambridge University before the match against the Marylebone Cricket Club MCC which fielded a virtual England Test team in what was effectively a dress rehearsal for the Tests Harvey made 225 in Australia s 413 and the hosts made 9 203 to draw the match 8 However he was unable to replicate this form in the Tests 14 In the First Test at Nottingham Harvey scored 64 and three in a rain affected draw 75 He then made a duck and ten as Australia took the series lead in the Second Test at Lord s Despite Australia s success Harvey was having an extended run drought he had made only 23 runs in three weeks 8 Then came the two Australian capitulations against Laker and Lock in the Tests Harvey made 11 as Australia were bowled out for 143 and forced to follow on in the Third Test played on a turning pitch at Headingley He then contributed 69 of 140 in the second innings of the Third Test at Headingley 76 when the rest of the team struggled to deal with Laker and Lock who spun England to an innings victory 4 It was the first time Australia had suffered an innings defeat in a Test since 1938 15 However Harvey was unable to repeat his defiant form over the next three weeks 8 The Fourth Test in Manchester was the low point when Harvey managed a pair falling both times to Laker who took a world record 19 wickets Australia were routed by an innings in what is known as Laker s match to concede the Ashes 2 1 14 The debacle at Old Trafford was part of a three week trough during which Harvey scored only 11 runs including three consecutive ducks in a 17 day period that yielded not a solitary run 8 Harvey then returned to productivity with 145 against Warwickshire and added a further half century in the remaining matches He also took 5 57 in an innings to help set up a seven wicket win over the Minor Counties although the match was not first class 8 Harvey compiled 197 runs at 19 70 in five Tests with two half centuries It was by far his most unproductive summer in England with 976 runs at 31 48 Such was the dominance of the Laker Lock led attack that Harvey was Australia s fifth highest runscorer in the Tests and fourth in the first class matches 77 78 On the return to Australia the team stopped on the Indian subcontinent to play their first Tests on Pakistani and Indian soil respectively 15 In a short tour the four Tests were the only fixtures 8 Harvey failed to pass double figures in a one off Test against Pakistan in Karachi the first between the two countries Moving to India he scored 140 in the drawn Second Test in Bombay scoring runs all around the ground 79 Due to injuries and illness to many of the bowlers the Australians were unable to dismiss their hosts twice In the final match Australia were in trouble after taking a 41 run first innings lead In the second innings they were struggling on a sticky wicket caused by flooding but made 69 out of 9 189 in the low scoring Third Test in Calcutta to help Australia to a 2 0 series win 80 He ended with 253 runs at 63 25 for the series 14 His performances on the subcontinent were marked by his aggressive footwork in moving down to meet the pitch of the ball 61 After seven months away the Australians returned home 81 Senior player and vice captaincy EditAs expected the Australian team s leaders Ian Johnson and Keith Miller retired from cricket after the tour Harvey replaced Johnson as Victorian captain and was the logical choice as successor to the Test captaincy as the most experienced member of the team 48 Tests 82 83 Queensland s captain the veteran paceman Ray Lindwall was no longer an automatic Test selection However both Harvey and Benaud had been criticised for their attitude towards Johnson in an official report to the board about the 1956 tour 84 Harvey was surprisingly overlooked for the captaincy which went to Ian Craig who had replaced Miller as New South Wales skipper Craig was only 22 and had played six Tests he had yet to establish himself in the team After several disappointing results against England the selectors chose a youthful team Harvey was named vice captain to Craig for both the 1956 57 non Test tour of New Zealand and the 1957 58 Test tour to South Africa 79 85 Australia s two new leaders featured in a dramatic game during the season the first tied match in Sheffield Shield history played at the Junction Oval in Melbourne New South Wales chasing 161 to win slumped to 7 70 when Craig suffering tonsillitis defied medical orders left his hospital bed and came out to bat A partnership of 75 with Richie Benaud took them to within 16 runs of victory but another collapse left the scores tied 8 The day after the captaincy announcement the Harvey led Victorians met Craig s New South Welshmen at the SCG in the last match of the Shield season 86 Harvey admitted to being irked by the board s snub and felt that it was because of his blunt nature 86 The men were cordial at the toss and Craig sent the Victorians in to bat At the same time Victorian batsman Colin McDonald hit a ball into his face and broke his nose while practising as Harvey and Craig went out to toss 86 Harvey asked for a gentleman s agreement to allow a substitute for McDonald Craig refused citing the importance of the match This evoked a rare angry response from Harvey according to Benaud Playing with ten men Benaud said that Harvey proceeded with a certain amount of anger to play one of the best innings I have seen in Sheffield Shield He made 209 and later forced New South Wales to follow on In the end the match was drawn and Harvey was unable to deny New South Wales the title 87 Harvey said that his first double century for Victoria gave me as much pleasure as any innings I had ever played 79 He finished his only season as Victorian captain by leading the Shield averages with 836 runs at 104 50 88 His other substantial scores were 108 more than half the team total and 53 in an innings loss to Queensland 125 and 66 not out in a win over against South Australia and 115 in the return match against Queensland 8 In a selection trial he led Harvey s XI to a seven wicket win over Lindwall s XI scoring 31 and 61 not out 8 The New Zealand tour was regarded as a test of Craig as a leader Wicket keeper Barry Jarman said that Craig had to do it himself I wasn t so dumb that I couldn t see the senior players didn t give him much support 86 The senior players resented his surprise selection as captain but he gained favour by defying a management imposed curfew which was later scrapped 89 Harvey was unable to maintain his form from the Australian season after crossing the Tasman to face the New Zealanders He scored 129 runs at 25 80 including an 84 as Australia won the third and final match to take the series 1 0 8 Outside the international matches Harvey was productive and he totalled 460 runs at 46 00 for the tour 8 Some players remained resentful of Craig s dubious elevation ahead of Harvey during the 1957 58 tour of South Africa but appreciated that he had not promoted himself and that he was fair and open to input from teammates 90 On the tour Harvey broke a finger at catching practice and missed the early tour matches 91 After it healed Harvey returned for a match against a South African XI in a virtual dress rehearsal for the Tests He scored 173 as the tourists crushed their hosts by an innings 8 However he broke the same finger again and missed the First Test 91 ending a run of 48 consecutive Test matches 92 He returned for the remaining Tests and scored 68 in the Third Test to help to force a draw 93 after Australia had conceded a 221 run first innings lead 8 but apart from that he had a disappointing series failing to pass 25 and finishing with 131 runs at 21 83 14 Despite the disagreement as to whether Craig was deserving of the captaincy the team proceeded smoothly without infighting 94 Prior to the Fifth Test Craig wanted to drop himself due to poor form which would have made Harvey captain 94 Peter Burge the third member of the selection panel and a Harvey supporter 90 was comfortable with this but Harvey relinquished his opportunity to seize the leadership by ordering Burge to retain Craig When the vote was formally taken Harvey and Burge outvoted Craig who was still offering to drop himself 94 The Tests aside Harvey continued to score regularly in the other games and ended with 759 first class runs at 50 60 with two centuries and five fifties 8 The team under Craig and Harvey labelled the worst to leave Australian shores went home 3 0 victors in the five Test series 95 Move to New South Wales and non captaincy EditAfter returning from South Africa Harvey embarrassed the Board of Control when he frankly discussed his financial situation during a television interview He revealed that the players earned only 85 per Test and that he was almost broke despite being an automatic selection for Australia Ten years of making time for cricket had disrupted his working life so he was contemplating a move to South Africa the homeland of his wife Iris Consequently Harvey received a job offer to work as a sales supervisor for a glass manufacturer in Sydney so he moved to New South Wales and gave up the Victorian captaincy 92 96 As a new player to NSW he was behind vice captain Richie Benaud in the state s pecking order despite being the Test vice captain ahead of Benaud Fatefully Craig was unfit for the start of the 1958 59 season due to the after effects of hepatitis 4 This left the Australian captaincy open again Harvey started the season strongly and scored 326 runs in his first three innings This included 160 against Queensland and 149 for his new state against the touring England team of Peter May 8 In this match Benaud had captained New South Wales and the hosts had the better of the play They took a 214 run first innings lead and May s men when 6 356 when time ran out 8 Harvey was appointed to captain an Australian XI in a warm up match against the touring Englishmen indicating that the selectors were considering him for the Test captaincy 97 Harvey scored a duck and 38 and the Australians lost heavily by 345 runs on a wicket with a crater 8 97 Therefore Benaud was made Australian captain ahead of Harvey 4 62 As Benaud s deputy Harvey helped materially in Australia s surprise 4 0 series victory to reclaim the Ashes Harvey s form was modest though He scored 296 runs at 42 29 with more than half coming in one innings a brilliant 167 in the Second Test at Melbourne more than half his team s 308 8 which helped secure an eight wicket victory in the match Otherwise a 41 in the Fourth Test was the only other time he passed 25 in the series 14 Outside the Tests he scored 92 in the second match of the season between New South Wales and England and ended the season with 949 runs at 49 95 8 It was season of two halves in the latter two months he scored only 339 runs 8 During the 1959 60 season Australian undertook an arduous tour of the subcontinent with three and five Tests against Pakistan and India respectively 15 Prior to the trip Harvey made 112 in the second innings to help Lindwall s XI defeat Benaud s XI by seven wickets 8 In Dhaka East Pakistan now in Bangladesh Harvey made 96 on a matting pitch over rough ground in the First Test mastering the medium pace of Fazal Mahmood while his teammates struggled to score 4 In the course of the innings Harvey had to overcome a fever dysentery and physical illness which forced him to leave six times to recompose himself Gideon Haigh called it one of his most dazzling innings 98 Described by Benaud as one of the best innings at Test level 99 it set up an Australian win During his stay at the crease his partners contributed 48 runs while seven wickets fell 80 Harvey s innings allowed Australia to score 225 in reply to the hosts 200 Harvey then made 30 in the second innings to help ensure an eight wicket win 8 100 After scoring 43 in the first innings the second Test in Lahore came down to a run chase for Australia with Harvey and Norm O Neill seemingly on schedule to win before time ran out However the Pakistani fielders began to waste time in an attempt to foil an Australian victory They swapped the cover and midwicket fielders very slowly whenever the left and right handed combination of Harvey and O Neill took a single and changed the batsman on strike To counter this Harvey deliberately backed away from a straight ball and let himself be bowled throwing his wicket away for 37 This allowed Benaud to come in and bat with O Neill so that the two right handed batsmen would give the Pakistanis no opportunity to waste time by switching the field 99 101 Australia won the match with minutes to spare Harvey scored 54 and 13 not out in the drawn third Test at Karachi Australia took the series 2 0 but would not win another Test in Pakistan until 1998 Harvey ended the series with 273 runs at 54 60 14 In India Harvey scored 114 out of Australia s 468 in the First Test at Delhi setting up an innings victory for Australia On a pitch conducive to spin at Kanpur for the second Test Harvey was given a rare opportunity to bowl and he took the wicket of the Indian captain Gulabrai Ramchand In addition he scored 51 and 25 the second highest Australian score in each innings in a low scoring match but India won to square the series with off spinner Jasu Patel taking 14 124 102 Harvey hit 102 in a drawn third Test in Bombay and took his third and final Test wicket A G Milkha Singh in the fourth Test at Madras He ended the series with 356 runs at 50 86 a significant contribution to Australia s 2 1 triumph 14 99 International twilight Edit Neil Harvey 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 14 In the last years of his Test career Harvey struggled making 876 runs at 33 69 in three Test series 14 At the start of the 1960 61 season there was little indication of this In his first five innings for the summer Harvey hit 135 against Queensland 80 and 63 for an Australian XI against the touring West Indies 229 against Queensland and 109 for New South Wales against the Caribbean team 8 However his form tapered away during the thrilling 1960 61 home series against the West Indies which included the first tie in Test history Harvey was ineffective apart from a score of 85 in the second innings of the Third Test which Australia lost He then missed the Fourth Test due to injury 14 He struggled in the Tests scoring only 143 runs at 17 88 8 but prospered against the Caribbean tourists in the tour matches scoring 326 runs at 81 50 8 Overall he totalled 849 runs at 56 60 for the season 8 Harvey began his final tour to England in 1961 and Benaud s regular absences due to a shoulder injury allowed him to lead Australia for a third of the tour matches This included most of the first month of the tour Benaud hurt his shoulder in the first match against Worcestershire and spent most of the next three weeks either not bowling or travelling to London away from his men for specialist treatment 103 At one stage Australia were left with only 10 men on the field when Benaud excused himself and his replacement succumbed to illness requiring an Englishman to stand in 104 Harvey scored 474 runs at 47 40 in eight matches leading up to the Tests including centuries against Lancashire and Glamorgan 8 It seemed that Harvey would captain Australia in a Test for the first time with Benaud s shoulder still problematic but the captain declared himself fit 104 Harvey then made 114 in the drawn First Test at Edgbaston 14 This helped Australia take a 321 run first innings lead and put them in control of the match but the hosts batted for the remainder of the match to stave off defeat 8 Benaud s shoulder prevented him from bowling more than nine overs 105 The injury forced Benaud out of the next Test meaning that Harvey finally captained Australia at the highest level in the Second Test at Lord s with Davidson carrying an injury and wicketkeeper Wally Grout with a black eye 106 This meant that Australia s two best bowlers were injured although Davidson agreed to play 107 Played on a controversial pitch with a noticeable ridge running across it which caused irregular bounce it was one of the great Test matches known as The Battle of the Ridge 108 Davidson took 5 42 and bruised many of the English batsmen with the irregular bounce as the hosts were bowled out for 205 109 Australia then replied with 339 in large part due to Bill Lawry s 130 during which he sustained many blows 110 In the second innings Harvey s captaincy moves proved to be highly productive He gave the new ball to Graham McKenzie a young paceman playing in his first international series McKenzie responded by taking 5 37 Harvey brought the part time leg spin of Bob Simpson into the attack when Ray Illingworth had just arrived at the crease and moved himself into the leg slip position Illingworth edged Simpson into Harvey s hands for a duck 111 England fell for 202 leaving Australia a target of 69 112 However victory appeared to be far from certain when Australia slumped to 4 19 on the erratic surface Harvey sent Peter Burge out to attack the bowling a tactic that worked as Australia won by five wickets Burge hit the winning runs after earlier being dropped 111 The Battle of the Ridge was the only time Harvey captained Australia in a Test match 4 Despite the win Harvey was not prominent in terms of his individual contribution scoring 27 and four 14 Harvey described the win as propbably my proudest moment We really got on the French champagne that afternoon I knew it d be my only Test match as captain and being at Lord s I decided to make the best of it 111 Benaud returned for the Third Test when England levelled the series despite twin half centuries of 73 and 53 from Harvey who top scored in both innings 112 on a dustbowl in a match that lasted only three days 80 113 Harvey failed to pass 35 in the last two Tests and ended with 338 runs at 42 25 and was a significant factor in Australia s eventual 2 1 victory 4 14 62 114 In the second half of the tour Harvey added centuries against Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire and took his career best bowling fugres of 4 8 against Middlesex to help set up a ten wicket win 8 He ended his final tour for Australia with 1452 runs at 44 00 with five centuries During the season Harvey and Benaud led aggressively to force a result through attacking strategy and a determination to avoid time wasting 8 The 1961 62 was purely domestic 15 and Harvey played a full season in the Sheffield Shield as New South Wales won their ninth consecutive title 8 10 However Harvey was not prominent in the team s success and scored only 425 runs at 26 56 with two fifties for the season 8 Having stated his intention to retire at the end of the summer Harvey started his final season in 1962 63 strongly 4 He scored 83 44 and 128 not in his first three interstate innings for the season and then scored 51 21 and 63 in warm up matches against England 8 Harvey was thus selected in the series against England his last in international cricket 115 During the season Harvey applied to the Australian Cricket Board for permission to work as a journalist while also playing cricket The application was refused but Harvey wrote some bitter criticism of England captain Ted Dexter at the end of the series Following a complaint from the Marylebone Cricket Club the ACB said that it deplored Harvey s comments 116 Beginning steadily with half centuries in the first and third Tests Harvey made his 21st and final century in the fourth Test at Adelaide Scoring 154 in a drawn match at the venue where his international career began 15 seasons earlier Harvey then returned to his adopted hometown of Sydney for his farewell match With the series level at 1 1 the Ashes were still alive but the game turned into a dull draw and Harvey scored 22 and 28 He was bowled by David Allen in the final innings 8 In the two English innings he held six catches to equal the world record a reminder of his prowess as one of Australia s great all round fielders 14 Harvey retired as Australia s most capped player and a tally of runs and centuries second only to Don Bradman 4 115 Harvey made centuries in two of his last three first class matches In his last Sheffield Shield match he scored an unbeaten 231 against South Australia in less than five hours including 120 runs in one session 115 This set up a ten wicket victory 8 In his final season Harvey scored 1110 runs at 52 85 8 Style EditHarvey was regarded as a mercurial batsman of great artistry and style 4 A short man at 172 cm 5 ft 8 in he batted with aggression and was known for his timing of the ball His batting against spin bowling in particular was a crowd pleaser highlighted by his extravagant footwork in charging the bowlers 4 Harvey often charged five paces down the pitch to spinners 117 with one bowler quipping He kept coming so far along the track toward me that I thought he must want to shake my hands 1 Despite running out of the crease so much Harvey was never stumped in a Test match 1 He was of the belief that any bowling could and should be hit and he gave the impression that the balls were reaching the boundary with a minimum of power According to Johnnie Moyes the sight of his slim figure neat and trim looking always capless coming to bat brought new hope for spectators He will never prod a half volley or decline the challenge of a long hop he will go looking for the ball which he can hit for four 4 Following the retirement of Sir Donald Bradman he was seen as Australia s leading batsman noted by critics for a similar ability to change the mood of matches with his attacking play Ashley Mallett said that Harvey was Australia s best batsman since Bradman 118 This was despite the fact that he was found to have faulty eyesight 4 62 With the global expansion of cricket Harvey was the first Australian to make Test centuries in 15 different cities succeeding in a variety of conditions 117 Harvey made 67 first class centuries spread across 35 venues in six countries He scored 38 of these overseas where his average was higher He was the first batsman to score more than 10 000 runs for Australian teams at home and abroad 80 Harvey s attacking style often led to criticism that his batting was risky 4 with England captain Len Hutton feeling that he played and missed too much while dour all rounder Trevor Bailey quipped I wonder how many runs Harvey would make if he decided to stop playing strokes with an element of risk about them 79 Harvey was nevertheless happy to continue his flamboyant strokeplay 79 However as Harvey progressed in seniority he eschewed his hook shot and played more conservatively for his team s sake He typically evaded bouncers by tilting his head rather than ducking the ball 79 Although Harvey started as a wicketkeeper at school he became a highly regarded cover fielder and later in his international career became an agile slips catcher He bowled off spin from a three to four pace approach on rare occasions taking only three wickets in his Test career 2 4 Away from the field Harvey had a quiet and unassuming manner in complete contrast to his dynamic batting and his aversion to smoking and drinking set him apart from the prevailing cricket culture of his period 2 Harvey was known for his respect for umpiring decisions and for never appealing for leg before wicket when he fielded in the slips 92 When not travelling overseas on cricket tours Harvey played baseball in the winter for the Fitzroy Baseball Club He was twice named in the Australian baseball team but the team was named only for the distinction accorded on the players that is they never competed Harvey s fielding abilities were regarded by Wisden as the finest outfielder in the world during his career As a baseball infielder Harvey developed a half round arm throw its speed and accuracy caused many batsmen to be run out while attempting a run 2 Ray Robinson said that Harvey s throw was arrow like in accuracy and that as a versatile fieldsman this ball hawk takes top place 117 His baseball training also influenced his habit of catching the ball above head height with which he rarely dropped catches This was based on the theory that the fielder need never take his eyes off the ball and if it were to bounce out of his hands he would have time to attempt to grab the rebound Harvey also covered ground quickly and possessed an efficient method of picking up and returning the ball 2 From late 1958 when Norm O Neill made his Test debut until Harvey s retirement in 1963 the duo formed a formidable pairing in the covers helping to restrict opposition batsmen from scoring in the region 13 Later years EditHe was an Australian selector from 1967 to 1979 4 Immediately after his appointment he was embroiled in controversy during the First Test against India at Brisbane in 1967 68 The Queensland Cricket Association wrote to the board complaining that Harvey who was the selector on duty at the Test had missed two hours of play He had been at a race meeting at the invitation of the QCA president The ACB gave Harvey a talking to Despite this he retained his position at the next annual election with Queensland s Ken Mackay failing to gain a seat on the selection panel 119 From 1971 onwards Harvey was the chairman of selectors 115 It was a tumultuous period in Australian cricket where captain Bill Lawry was acrimoniously sacked in the middle of the 1970 71 series against England after a dispute between players and Australian officials 120 Lawry was not informed of his fate and learned of his omission on the radio when he was still one of Australia s most productive batsmen The dispute was the genesis of the pay dispute which led to the formation of World Series Cricket in 1977 and generated a mass exodus of players This resulted in the recall of Bob Simpson after ten years in retirement at the age of 41 to captain the Test team 121 Following the rapprochement between the establishment and the WSC players Harvey left the selection panel The WSC representatives felt that Harvey s anti WSC comments made him prejudiced against the selection of former WSC players 122 After returning from South Africa in 1950 Harvey was offered a job in captain Lindsay Hassett s sports store Harvey accepted immediately because sports stores gave more flexible arrangements for leave to play cricket 6 Harvey was sponsored by Stuart Surridge to use their cricket equipment He was paid 300 a year but nevertheless lived at home and shared a bedroom with his brothers Brian and Ray until he married due to poverty He used the same cricket uniforms for more than five years 123 Harvey s career extended into a successful business Har V Sales which distributed tupperware kitchen and cosmetic products 115 124 In later life he was known for his blunt and critical comments towards modern players believing the cricket in earlier times to be superior After Steve Waugh s team set a world record of consecutive Test victories Harvey named three Australian teams that he thought to be superiors saying no far from it in response to the suggestion that Waugh s men were the best team in history He attributed the wins to weak opponents stating No I don t think they re up to the world standard they were years ago and that the 1980s West Indies team were far superior 125 He also criticised the Australian team for publicly praising the skills of their opponents believing that they did so to aggrandise their statistical performances against teams he considered to be weak 126 In 2000 he was named in the Australian Cricket Board s Team of the Century and criticised modern day batsmen noting that players in earlier eras had to play on sticky wickets saying these guys who play out here are a little bit spoilt in my opinion They play on flat wickets all the time and they grizzle if the ball does a little bit off the pitch and whatever But we had to put up with that and going to assert his opinion that the current players would be no match 127 Harvey was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2000 in the first annual induction of two players since the inaugural ten members were announced in 1996 128 In 2009 Harvey was one of the 55 inaugural inductees into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame 129 He was also inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1985 130 Harvey vociferously called for Shane Warne and Mark Waugh to be banned from cricket after it was revealed that they accepted money from bookmakers to give pitch and weather information and the ACB privately fined them He lamented the decline in player conduct in the modern era also criticising the modern advent of sledging 131 In 2002 Harvey called for Mark and Steve Waugh to be dropped from the Australian team claiming that they were a waste of space He stated Money is the only thing that keeps them playing If they earned the same money as I did when I was playing they d have retired at 34 as I did and Australian cricket would be the better for it 132 When Waugh was close to being dropped during the 2002 03 series against England Harvey wrote off a half century made by Waugh saying he s playing against probably one of the worst cricket teams I ve ever seen 133 Following the death of Arthur Morris on 22 August 2015 Harvey became the last surviving member of the Invincibles who toured England in 1948 134 Harvey received the Medal of the Order of Australia in the Queen s 2018 Birthday Honours Australia for service to cricket 135 Personal life Edit Harvey s mother and fiancee Iris Greenish in 1953 During the 1949 50 tour of South Africa Harvey met his first wife Iris Greenish At the time Greenish was only 16 years old and Harvey 21 and their relationship became the subject of controversy when her father told the media that he would object to the couple s engagement until his daughter turned 18 136 They married four years later at Holy Trinity Church in East Melbourne and had three children two sons and a daughter 11 115 Test match performance Edit Batting 137 Bowling 138 Opposition Matches Runs Average High Score 100 50 Runs Wickets Average Best Inns England 37 2416 38 34 167 6 12 15 0 India 10 775 59 63 153 4 2 59 2 29 50 1 8Pakistan 4 279 39 85 96 0 2 8 0 South Africa 14 1625 81 25 205 8 5 20 1 20 00 1 9West Indies 14 1054 43 91 204 3 3 18 0 Overall 79 6149 48 21 205 21 24 120 3 40 00 1 8Test Centuries Edit The following table summarises the Test centuries scored by Neil Harvey In the column Runs indicates being not out The column title Match refers to the Match Number of his career Neil Harvey s Test Centuries 139 Runs Match Against City Country Venue Year Result 1 153 2 India Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground 1948 Won 2 112 3 England Leeds England Headingley 1948 Won 3 178 6 South Africa Cape Town South Africa Newlands 1949 Won 4 151 7 South Africa Durban South Africa Kingsmead 1950 Won 5 100 8 South Africa Johannesburg South Africa Ellis Park 1950 Drawn 6 116 9 South Africa Port Elizabeth South Africa St George s Park 1950 Won 7 109 20 South Africa Brisbane Australia Brisbane Cricket Ground 1952 Won 8 190 22 South Africa Sydney Sydney Cricket Ground 1953 Won 9 116 23 South Africa Adelaide Australia Adelaide Oval 1953 Drawn 10 205 24 South Africa Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground 1953 Lost 11 122 27 England Manchester England Old Trafford 1953 Drawn 12 162 30 England Brisbane Australia Brisbane Cricket Ground 1954 Won 13 133 35 West Indies Kingston Jamaica Sabina Park 1955 Won 14 133 36 West Indies Port of Spain Trinidad Queen s Park Oval 1955 Drawn 15 204 39 West Indies Kingston Jamaica Sabina Park 1955 Won 16 140 47 India Mumbai India Brabourne Stadium 1956 Drawn 17 167 54 England Melbourne Melbourne Cricket Ground 1958 Won 18 114 61 India Delhi India Feroz Shah Kotla 1959 Won 19 102 63 India Mumbai India Brabourne Stadium 1960 Drawn 20 114 70 England Birmingham England Edgbaston 1961 Drawn 21 154 78 England Adelaide Australia Adelaide Oval 1963 DrawnNotes Edit Biography portal Australia portal Cricket portal Baseball portal a b c d e f Robinson p 258 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Wisden 1954 Neil Harvey Wisden 1954 Retrieved 6 June 2007 a b c Mallett p 170 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 Cashman Franks Maxwell Sainsbury Stoddart Weaver Webster 1997 The A Z of Australian cricketers Melbourne Oxford University Press pp 117 119 ISBN 0 19 550604 9 The Argus November 1950 http nla gov au nla news article23020667 a b Haigh p 21 Harte pp 388 393 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 RN Harvey CricketArchive Retrieved 14 May 2009 Perry p 227 a b Williamson Martin A history of the Sheffield Shield Cricinfo Retrieved 30 November 2007 a b c d e f Perry 2000 p 228 5th Test Australia v India at Melbourne Feb 6 10 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 5 May 2010 a b Perry 2002 p 100 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 Statsguru RN Harvey Tests Innings by innings list Cricinfo Retrieved 6 June 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k Statsguru Australia Tests Results list Cricinfo Retrieved 21 December 2007 a b c d Perry 2002 p 101 Haigh Gideon 26 May 2007 Gentrifying the game Cricinfo Retrieved 1 June 2007 a b c Matches Australia tour of England Apr Sep 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 16 July 2008 a b Worcestershire v Australians CricketArchive Retrieved 18 December 2008 Fingleton p 42 Fingleton pp 53 55 a b c Yorkshire v Australians CricketArchive Retrieved 18 December 2008 a b Fingleton p 55 Fingleton p 56 a b c 1st Test England v Australia at Nottingham Jun 10 15 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 12 December 2007 a b 2nd Test England v Australia at Lord s Jun 24 29 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 12 December 2007 a b 3rd Test England v Australia at Manchester Jul 8 13 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 12 December 2007 a b 4th Test England v Australia at Leeds Jul 22 27 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 12 December 2007 5th Test England v Australia at The Oval Aug 14 18 1948 Cricinfo Retrieved 12 December 2007 a b MCC v Australians CricketArchive Retrieved 18 December 2008 Fingleton p 79 a b Fingleton p 96 Second Test match England v Australia Wisden Cricketers Almanack Wisden 1949 Retrieved 2 July 2008 a b Third Test match England v Australia Wisden Cricketers Almanack Wisden 1949 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Fingleton pp 145 155 Fingleton p 193 Surrey v Australians CricketArchive Retrieved 18 December 2008 a b Fingleton p 196 Fingleton p 199 Bannerman a b Fingleton p 162 a b Fingleton p 163 Perry p 246 Fingleton pp 162 163 Fingleton p 164 Fingleton p 165 Fingleton p 166 Fingleton p 170 Fingleton p 172 Perry 2002 pp 101 102 a b Perry 2002 p 102 Cashman pp 15 35 a b c d e f g h Robinson p 259 a b Haigh p 14 a b Haigh p 15 Haigh p 325 Benaud p 60 a b c d e Haigh p 327 Benaud p 66 Pollard p 61 a b Perry p 229 a b c d Pollard Jack 1969 Cricket the Australian Way p 59 a b Haigh p 328 a b c d Haigh p 79 a b Haigh p 80 Test Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1953 CricketArchive Retrieved 17 June 2009 First class Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1953 CricketArchive Retrieved 17 June 2009 Benaud pp 89 95 a b Haigh p 89 E W Swanton ed The Barclays World of Cricket Collins 1986 pp 295 296 a b Haigh p 90 Benaud p 95 Perry 2002 p 104 Haigh pp 98 101 a b Haigh p 98 Haigh p 330 First class Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1956 CricketArchive Retrieved 17 June 2009 Test Batting and Fielding for Australia Australia in British Isles 1956 CricketArchive Retrieved 17 June 2009 a b c d e f Robinson p 260 a b c d Robinson p 263 Haigh p 102 Cashman p 67 Harte pp 452 453 Haigh pp 101 103 Benaud pp 120 124 a b c d Haigh p 104 Benaud pp 125 126 Benaud p 146 Haigh p 105 a b Haigh p 108 a b Benaud p 133 a b c Robinson p 261 Benaud p 138 a b c Haigh pp 114 115 Benaud p 142 Benaud pp 147 150 a b Robinson pp 261 262 Haigh p 129 a b c Benaud pp 164 167 Haigh pp 128 129 Haigh p 130 Haigh p 333 Haigh p 159 a b Haigh p 160 Haigh p 161 Robinson p 262 Haigh p 162 Haigh pp 163 165 Haigh p 164 Haigh p 165 a b c Haigh p 166 a b Haigh p 334 Haigh p 167 Benaud pp 192 194 a b c d e f Robinson p 264 Haigh and Frith p 130 a b c Robinson p 257 Mallett p 173 Haigh and Frith p 146 Haigh and Frith p 171 Williamson Martin 16 December 2006 The end of a Victorian hero Cricinfo Retrieved 25 June 2007 Haigh and Frith p 201 Haigh p 22 Perry pp 231 232 Are Our Cricketers THAT Good Australian Broadcasting Corporation 4 December 2000 Retrieved 6 June 2007 Australia s overwhelming success robs cricket of contest Australian Broadcasting Corporation 4 December 2000 Retrieved 24 December 2004 Panel selects cricket team of the century Australian Broadcasting Corporation 18 January 2000 Retrieved 6 June 2007 Australian Cricket Hall of Fame Melbourne Cricket Ground Archived from the original on 9 June 2007 Retrieved 16 July 2007 Border Harvey Gower Underwood inducted into Hall of Fame Neil Harvey Sport Australia Hall of Fame Retrieved 25 September 2020 Scandal could turn cricket fans away Australian Broadcasting Corporation 12 April 2000 Retrieved 6 June 2007 Public back sacked Waugh British Broadcasting Corporation 14 February 2002 Retrieved 6 June 2007 Waugh bats with career on the line Australian Broadcasting Corporation 27 December 2002 Retrieved 6 June 2007 Last Invincible Neil Harvey pays tribute to dear friend Arthur Morris Fox Sports 22 August 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2023 HARVEY Robert Neil Australian Honours Search Facility Dept of the Prime Minister amp Cabinet Retrieved 12 June 2018 Haigh p 246 Statsguru RN Harvey Test matches Batting analysis Cricinfo Retrieved 14 April 2008 Statsguru RN Harvey Test Bowling Bowling analysis Cricinfo Retrieved 14 April 2008 Statsguru Neil Harvey Cricinfo 17 March 2010 References EditBenaud Richie 1998 Anything But London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 69648 6 Fingleton Jack 1949 Brightly fades the Don London Collins Haigh Gideon 1997 The summer game Australia in test cricket 1949 71 Melbourne 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 Harte Chris Whimpress Bernard 2003 The Penguin History of Australian Cricket Camberwell Australia 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 2002 Bradman s best Ashes teams Sir Donald Bradman s selection of the best ashes teams in cricket history Milsons Point New South Wales Random House Australia ISBN 1 74051 125 5 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 Bannerman Mark 12 October 2004 7 30 Report abc net au Retrieved 17 January 2014 Buggy Hugh 14 November 1950 The Neil Harvey Story nla gov au Retrieved 29 January 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neil Harvey Neil Harvey at ESPNcricinfo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neil Harvey amp oldid 1152584653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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