You Might Not Remember... J W Fletcher

You Might Not Remember... J W Fletcher

In the latest in our occasional series on aspects of the Club's history, James Rodgers recalls the unusual career of an unusual man...

JW Fletcher followed Tom Garrett onto the Association Ground (the SCG) on 3 March 1894. He was resuming a career with the Sydney University Cricket Club that had begun and apparently ended 16 years previously.

How did a 46 year old come to play in a side, in this first season of ‘Electoral Cricket’,  that included  eight undergraduates half his age?

The depression of the 1890s forced Fletcher to close his school, Katoomba College, and to reinvent himself as a barrister now living in Sydney and once more available to answer Garrett’s call to play for his old Club.

Since arriving in Australia in 1875, Fletcher had been a schoolmaster at Oaklands in Mittagong,  Headmaster of Coreen College, firstly  at Bondi and then Katoomba, a cricketer with four clubs, University, the Alberts, IZingari and Paddington, and a passionate instigator of Football (Soccer) in Australia.

During his previous season with University, in 1877-78, he made runs regularly and reliably (128 at 21.3). On unpredictable wickets and with rough-hewn implements, he played patiently  with an admirably straight bat. He kept wickets and occasionally bowled his ‘underhand slows’, although the writer of the Club’s 13th Annual Report admonished him for bowling no balls at practice from 18 yards.

After this one season with University, Fletcher transferred to the Albert Club, batting low in the order and bowling occasionally. In November 1881, he scored 39 against his old club, and in University’s rapid innings of 328, he was given the ball as an afterthought. In 8 overs of varied bowling, he took 6 for 36 including the wickets of three Test players. Admittedly, Sam Jones and Reginald Allen  had put on 231 for the 1st wicket before Fletcher was summoned to the bowling crease  with his underarm lobs, but Jones hit a catch to mid off,  Allen was caught and bowled and then Garrett, Teece, Powell and Wright all succumbed to catches from Fletcher’s erratic offerings. There is record of him playing in Hobart in January 1881 for ‘EW Wallington’s XI’ against Hobart Town in a two day match when he made 23 and kept wickets. In December 1882, an unlikely selection placed him in the ‘NSW Squad’ for the Intercolonial game against Victoria in Melbourne. He was not selected in the eleven.  In January 1884, he was chosen to play for NSW against the Australian team that was about to leave for England; but he withdrew from the side before the match began, and did not come close to the NSW side again.             

During the 1880s, Fletcher continued to play intermittently for the Alberts but he was increasingly unavailable because of school commitments.

Forward to March 1894.

This was the first season of ‘Electoral Cricket’ but while other clubs’ players represented their electorates, University’s players were permitted to play for the University even though their connections with the institution may have been tenuous. So, when Tom Garrett called Fletcher into the team, he joined eight undergraduates and two other veterans. RC Allen, aged 35, was making his only appearance for the Club for the season. He had played one Test Match in 1886-87 and had been playing for University since 1876. Tom Garrett was also 35. He had played for University since 1873 when he was 15 years old and he had since  played 19 Test Matches. Fletcher, a graduate but not from Sydney University, was an elderly 46 years of age.

In this three day game played over three Saturdays, play was delayed by wet weather until 4pm on the first day. Paddington batted first ‘to the delight of the Varsity men.’ Harrie Wood took 5 cheap wickets. Garrett took 3. Fletcher took 2 catches and Paddington was dismissed for 62. When play continued on 10 March, University resumed  0 for 2  but was all out 54 as Sweetman(6-27) was irresistible. Fletcher, batting at eight, made just 3 but this was fifth highest score in a dismal innings. In conditions that favoured batting on the third Saturday, Paddington made 9-314. Garrett who bowled 39 productive overs (5-84) threw Fletcher the ball but his five overs cost 30 without success and he had played his first and last game in ‘Grade’ cricket.

In November 1893, Fletcher had been admitted to the NSW Bar after his Blue Mountains school was a victim of the depression of the 1890s. For one school term he returned to his original profession when he served as ‘locum tenens’ at the Shore School in North Sydney but for 16 years he was then a police magistrate in various NSW country towns until he retired in 1914 and lived in Neutral Bay where he died in 1918, seemingly forgotten and unrecorded by  his first and last cricket club, Sydney University.

If this was all that he ever did, JW Fletcher could be said to have led a full life. But that’s not all.

Firstly, he had been born in London on 11 May 1847 and christened John Walter Rolt Fletcher. But Fletcher was his mother’s surname (Harriett Amy Fletcher 1823-1904) and Rolt was his father’s surname (Sir John Rolt, 1804-1871, Member of Parliament and Attorney General for England). JWR Fletcher was born out of wedlock, product of a brief liason between the unmarried Harriett and John Rolt who was then married to Sarah Bosworth. At some stage, JWR Fletcher  dropped Rolt from his name and he seems to have had little to do with his father. His mother married James Bathurst. JW Fletcher was well educated firstly at Redhill School in Surrey and then Cheltenham Grammar School before he went up to Pembroke College Oxford University in 1865, aged 17. He majored in History and graduated with a class 2 degree, BA, in 1869 and MA (for which he paid rather than studied for) in 1871. In 1867, he was admitted to Inner Temple beginning pupillage as a barrister. At Oxford, he was a one-mile runner, earning his blue for Athletics, and he played cricket for ‘an Oxford XI’ (not the 1st XI) in minor matches.

Secondly, in 1877, soon after arriving in Australia, JW Fletcher married Anne Marian Clarke (1851-1936) who had been born in Dublin. She eventually managed her husband’s boarding school at Katoomba. They had six children. It was Anne Fletcher who, in 1883, embroidered a red velvet bag with a design created by the Yorkshire-born artist, William Blamire Young (who later taught at Katoomba College). This velvet bag contained the urn presented to Ivo Bligh’s English cricket team following their victor over Australia in 1882-83. The urn contained the ashes of a bail, presented to Bligh at ‘Rupertswood’, home of Sir Williamand Lady Janet Clarke. A letter from Ivo Bligh to Anne Fletcher is still at Lords along with the legendary ‘Ashes’.

One of John and Anne’s sons was john William Fletcher (1884-1965), who, like his grandfather Sir John Rolt, was a parliamentarian, member for Port Curtis in Queensland from 1920 to 1923. While the SUCC Report of 1878 had predicted incorrectly that John Walter Fletcher would be an intercolonial player, John William did represent his State. In 1909-10, he played three games for Queensland, twice against NSW and once against Victoria. In his second game, in Sydney, he made a stylish 47 but his other five innings produced only 50 runs and the game against Victoria in Brisbane in February 1910 was his last first class game (and Bert Ironmonger’s first, in a career that lasted until 1936 when he was aged 55). He was appointed OBE in 1941.

Of John and Anne’s daughters, one, Nora Kathleen, worked in England and France during World War 1 in charge of the first batch of Red Cross nurses, matron in chief of the British Red Cross. She was awarded the CBE in 1920. Another daughter, Anne Judith (1886-1971), was a well-known photographer with studios in George St in Sydney.

But, thirdly, John Walter Fletcher is known as ‘the father of Football in Australia’. Philip Mosely has written a significant history of ‘Soccer in Australia 1880-1980’ and a biographical sketch of John Walter Fletcher. Mosely reports that on 3 August 1880, Fletcher was elected honorary secretary of the committee set up to form an ‘Association Rules’ football club. He then arranged for the first match to take place eleven days later. Mosely writes:

‘Although others had been involved in the foundation years of soccer in Australia, Fletcher stands central to the key developments.’

On Saturday 14 August 1880, on Parramatta Common, the first organised game was played between a team representing The King's School Parramatta and ‘The Wanderers’. When the Western Sydney Club joined the A League in 2012, it was named ‘The Wanderers’. In 1999, John Walter Fletcher was inducted into the Football Hall of Fame.

He’s cap number 25 among SUCC 1st Graders and the oldest 1st Grade debutant in Grade cricket for SUCC.

And in May this year, we mark 170 years since his birth.

James Rodgers

 

Milestones Monday

Milestones Monday

First Grade stormed into the Final with a hard-fought but conclusive victory over Parramatta.  It will be the eighth time Sydney University has appeared in a First Grade final.

During his innings of 42 against Parramatta on the weekend, Nick Larkin passed 1000 runs for the Club in all formats of the game this season.  Including the Kingsgrove T20 matches, he has now scored 1017 First Grade runs this season at an average of 67.80.  It's the second time in his career that he has reached 1000 runs in a First Grade season; he hit 1055 in 2013-14.

Ben Joy enjoyed an outstanding afternoon on Sunday, carving three sixes and two fours in his unbeaten 31, which put the game beyond Parramatta's reach and carried him past 500 runs for the Club, a feat which took only ten years to accomplish.  He followed up with his second five-wicket haul in First Grade and the best figures of his First Grade career, 5-9 from four overs.  He has moved up to become the 13th highest wicket-taker in the Club's history, with 365 wickets, just one behind leg-spinner Chris Elder.

Devlin Malone took his 50th wicket for the Club when he held onto a skied return catch from Parramatta's Tim Ward.  It's an outstanding performance to reach that milestone inside his first season for the Club.

 

 

Seeking all Trivia Wizards!

Seeking all Trivia Wizards!

Last chance for those with a love of their trivia to pick up their tickets to our annual Chairman's Trivia Night to be held on Thursday 23rd March from 7.30pm.

With 10 teams already booked in, the competition, and more importantly the laughs, will be fierce. James Crowley's team will return to defend its 2016 title. Who can topple them this year?

Also returning is the famous Grandstand Burger and Beer combo, included with your entry fee of $25 per person or table of six for $150.

With our 1st and 3rd Grade sides still in the hunt for premiership glory, we hope that you will all get along to share in the excitement of finals fever.

Also, don't forget that the 100 Club Members Draw will take place at the Trivia Night, so you only have 48 hours to purchase your ticket.

Up for grabs is an overnight package for two at Jonah's including flights with Sydney Seaplanes (valued at $1,660), a $600 food and beverage gift card to Dedes Waterfront Group venues, and an Apple Series 2 Nike+ Watch (valued at $579). Great return on just a $100 investment.

Click here to book your Trivia Night tickets online.

Click here to purchase your 100 Club tickets online.

Milestones Monday

Milestones Monday

Ed Cowan's excellent double of 69 and 80 against Western Australia in Perth took him to 959 first-class runs at an average of 73.76 for the season - which made him the leading run-scorer in the Sheffield Shield, ahead of WA's Hilton Cartwright (almost 100 runs behind, with 861).  Ed achieved that feat despite being omitted from one Shield match. 

After rain prevented play in the qualifying final against Penrith, First Grade now moves forward to the semi-finals.  This will be the ninth time that University has played in a First Grade semi-final since the finals system was introduced in 1952-53.

Third Grade also progresses to the semi-finals without a ball being bowled in the qualifying final.  It will be University's 20th appearance in the Third Grade semi-finals.

Five Things We Learned from Round 15

Five Things We Learned from Round 15

1   Sydney University are the minor premiers

Unusually, there were three clubs in contention for the First Grade minor premiership on Saturday: Sydney University needed to beat Bankstown, and Bankstown needed to win while Gordon lost.  Bankstown Oval has been one of Sydney’s best and most reliable grounds for years, so it was a surprise on Saturday morning to discover a pitch that was badly affected by rain that for much of the day it seemed likely that there would be no play at all.  Eventually, the match was reduced to 21 overs a side – not the ideal way to decide who finished first in the competition but, as it happened, the setting for a gripping contest.  Bankstown’s seven for 115 seemed a little under par, with seamers Tim Ley, Tom Rogers and Liam Robertson bowling tightly and Devlin Malone (3-27) doing plenty of damage with his leg-breaks.  It took some late hitting from Brendan Smith and Jarrad Burke to make Bankstown’s total competitive.  The wonderfully consistent Nick Larkin (49) and Liam Robertson put University in control with an opening stand of 58, but then another young leg-spinner, Tom Sowden, grabbed 4-16 in a spell of four overs.  When left-armer Burke took the ball for the last over, University was seven down and needed 14 improbable runs to win.  Burke, at that point, was close to being the player of the match, having contributed 17 not out from 16 balls, four catches, and the key wicket of Robertson.  Tom Rogers worked the first ball away for a single, which gave the strike to Tim Ley (who had walked out to bat to the encouraging shout of a Bankstown spectator, “No pressure, mate!”).  No run came from Burke’s second ball: 13 needed from four.  Ley deposited the third over deep mid-wicket for six, then lashed the next straight down the ground, where it was cut off just inside the boundary.  Two runs were scored: five from two.  The nerveless Ley then smashed the fifth ball high over mid-wicket for another six to complete yet another agonizingly close game between these two sides.  It wasn’t the ideal way to decide the minor premiership, but it was certainly memorable.

2   Gordon finds ways to win

Good sides win games that they seem likely to lose, and Gordon seems to have discovered that knack this season.  When Wests’ James Shepherd grabbed two wickets inside his first two overs, Gordon was 2-3, and missing both its strongest performer of the season, Mason Crane (on duty for NSW) and last season’s O’Reilly Medallist, Charlie Stobo.  But Elliot Richtor (56) and Tym Crawford (67) lifted the total to respectability and Richtor (4-42) and Matt Junk (3-29) strangled Wests’ reply.  The eventual winning margin – 75 runs – belied how close the game was at critical stages, but Gordon has become used to winning, and knew how to apply pressure at the crucial moments.  Its reward is a home qualifying final against Sydney this weekend.

3   Whatever happens now, Parramatta has had a great season

It was a memorable weekend for Parramatta, who clinched a First Grade semi-final place for the first time in decades, and followed up on Sunday with only the second Poidevin-Gray title in its history. 

Needing to win in First Grade to clinch a semi-final place, Parramatta suffered an early setback when Brenton Cherry fell to the second ball of the game.  But two familiar Parramatta names, Will Affleck (64) and Adam Turrell (55) – whose fathers both played for the club – pushed the total to seven for 242.  Turrell was ferocious, scoring his runs from only 25 deliveries, with five sixes.  Scott Copperfield bowled Anthony Adlam with the first ball of Mosman’s innings, and Mosman never really recovered, losing eight wickets for 50 runs and limping to a sorry total of 101.  The highly consistent Ben Martin was again the pick of the bowlers.  Only Tim Ward and Owen Simonsen backed up for the Poidevin-Gray final the following day, when Ward’s 95 was the backbone of Parramatta’s innings.  Parramatta’s attack included three Third Graders (Michael Sullivan, Matthew Giumelli and Liam Lofts), a Green Shield player (Jacob Workman) and a Fourth Grader (Gabriel D’Angelo) but the enduring appeal of Poidevin-Gray is the way it enables exactly those sorts of players to take on opponents with more exalted reputations.  The game was probably decided when D’Angelo (who went wicketless in his previous Fourth Grade game) removed St George captain Jonathan Rose, a First Grade century-maker this season.  The only real disappointment of Parramatta’s weekend was a loss in Seconds, which cost the side a semi-final place. 

4   Monty remembered where he put it

Monty Panesar hasn’t had the most spectacular of seasons for Campbelltown-Camden.  He’s maintained his enthusiasm and his effort, and has done a lot of valuable work coaching.  There just haven’t been all that many wickets – only 15 in his first 16 matches, at a cost of 39 runs each.  But on Saturday, he gave a reminder of how he became the most successful English left-arm spinner in recent years, capturing 6-24 from 9.3 beautifully-controlled overs against Northern District.  Pansear’s effort limited Northern District to a modest total of 222, despite a sparkling innings from Andrew Harriott, whose 91 from 96 balls included no fewer than seven sixes.  Northern District was out of the running for the finals, but needed the win to claim the club championship (after starting Round 15 in fourth position).  Campbelltown batted solidly, but was always behind the rate it needed, especially when Chris Green, back from his Pakistani T20 stint with the Qalanders, had the ball.  In the end, Campbelltown ran out of overs with 13 runs still needed, and the club championship heads back to Waitara for the first time this century.

5   This could be the collapse of the season

At least in theory, Fairfield-Liverpool might have reached the Second Grade finals if it won its match with University of NSW on Saturday, and a few other results went its way.  Chasing 220, Fairfield reached 4-72 in 19 overs – a couple more wickets down than they might have liked, but certainly in touch with the required run rate, and one good partnership away from a positive result.  But then Tom Atallah removed Nicholas Johns, and everything came crashing down in a heap.  Medium pacer Ben Chaplin, who had been wicketless in his last three matches, plucked out four batsmen in an over – he trapped Russell Wilcoxon in front, had Jeremy Maher caught by keeper Sam McCormick, and completed his hat-trick with another lbw decision, against Nathan Smith even though, as Atallah admits, “the batsman absolutely smashed the ball into his pads.”.  Vishal Vuppalapati survived his first ball, but not the second.  Viraj Kadam, who made 30, watched all this from the other end, but then hit Brandon McLean’s first delivery straight back to him.  The last six wickets crashed without adding a single run to the total.  After taking his second wicket, Chaplin announced “I’m back!” and when asked how long it had been since he last took a wicket, replied “between 57 and 61 balls”!  Bowling full and straight, he ended the day with four for five from three overs, the kind of figures not usually seen outside the under-12s.  University of NSW finished Round 15 in second place: for Fairfield, it’s back to the drawing board.

From the Chairman

From the Chairman

In a perfect world, the First Grade minor premiership (and, potentially, the club championship) wouldn't be determined by a 21-over thrash.  As it turned out, a great effort by University's bowlers, Nick Larkin leading from the front, and Tim Ley's nerveless finishing all added up to create an indelibly memorable victory over Bankstown that clinched a well-deserved minor premiership for the most consistent side in the competition.

So, congratulations to Nick Larkin and his side for a wonderfully sustained performance since September.  But now the business end of the season begins.

Most of my strongest memories of grade cricket come from playing in finals: the intensity of the competition is unrelenting, fortunes ebb and flow, and the pressure reveals both talent and character.  It's an outstanding effort for Sydney University to have four sides in the finals: Firsts, the Third Grade juggernaut, Fourths and Metropolitan Cup.  Before the hard work of preparing for the finals begins, it's worth pausing for a moment to reflect on that achievement.  It's worth pausing, too, to congratulate Seconds on a wonderful run towards the finals, which left the side equal on points in sixth place, and eliminated only on quotient.

We finished second in the Club Championship, by merely 19 points.  We entered the last round needing to sweep Bankstown, which almost never happens, and it proved to be just beyond our grasp.  But, of course, we could have picked up those points at any other time during the season.  If the Coogee groundstaff could have given us just 25 balls more play in Round 14...

In the next three weeks, we'll see some gripping cricket and some outstanding performances.  For those of us who aren't fortunate enough to be playing, can I please ask that every Club member and supporter makes a particular effort to get to the games to lend support and help out with the dozens of little jobs that need to be done.  It isn't only how we fare on the field that defines what kind of club we are - it's also how we support each other off the field.  I look forward to detachments of the Uni Army forming at grounds all over Sydney in the next few weeks.

Max Bonnell, Chairman SUCC

 

Milestones Monday

Milestones Monday

University's extraordinary victory in First Grade on Saturday clinched the Minor Premiership for only the second time since the introduction of semi-finals to the competition in 1952-53 (the previous occasion was 2013-14).

In Second Grade, Jono Craig-Dobson improved on his career-best figures by taking a decisive 4-29 against Bankstown. 

Leading from the front with an unbeaten 67, Dave Miller passed no fewer than three milestones: 500 runs for the season, 500 Second Grade runs for the season; and 4000 career runs for the Club.

Will Hay's 82 in Second Grade carried him past 6500 career runs for the Club. 

Third Grade confirmed the Minor Premiership by blasting past Bankstown.  This is the sixth time Sydney University has ended the regular rounds as Minor Premiers in Thirds.

Kevin Jacob's excellent 68 not out in Thirds took him past 500 runs for the season and 500 runs for the Club.

Fourth Grade confirmed its place in the semi-finals, the 17th time Sydney University has reached the finals in this grade.

Vince Umbers' 73 against Bankstown in Fifth Grade was his highest score for the Club.

Ethan Clout (4-17) returned his best bowling figures for the Club as Metropolitan Cup routed George's River for only 36.  Zohirul Islam's remarkable 4-1 from ten balls wasn't, statistically, his best effort for the Club, but it's impossible not to mention.