John Nichols (Worcestershire cricketer)

John Ernest Nichols (20 April 1878 – 29 February 1952), sometimes known as Jack Nichols, was an English professional sportsman who played cricket and association football. As a first-class cricketer he played five matches for Worcestershire County Cricket Club between 1902 and 1904, as well as making one first-class appearance for a Minor Counties representative side in 1912. He also played Minor Counties Championship cricket for Norfolk and Staffordshire County Cricket Clubs and was an influential cricket coach.[1]

John Nichols
Personal information
Full name
John Ernest Nichols
Born(1878-04-20)20 April 1878
Acle, Norfolk
Died29 February 1952(1952-02-29) (aged 73)
Thorpe Hamlet, Norwich, Norfolk
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1898Norfolk
1902–1904Worcestershire
1907–1914Staffordshire
1921–1931Norfolk
FC debut21 July 1902 Worcestershire v Sussex
Last FC29 July 1912 Minor Counties v South Africans
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 6
Runs scored 45
Batting average 5.00
100s/50s 0/0
Top score 13
Balls bowled 48
Wickets 0
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match
Best bowling
Catches/stumpings 3/–
Source: Cricinfo, 8 November 2022

As a footballer, Nichols spent time contracted by Bolton Wanderers and Bury and played professionally at Football League Second Division level for Loughborough F.C. He served in the British Army during World War I.

Early life

Nichols was born at Acle in Norfolk in 1878 and was brought up at Wymondham, where his father, also John, was a publican and the groundsman of the town's sports ground, Kings Head Meadow.[1][2] He played cricket for the town's cricket club and is first known to have played for Norfolk in 1898, appearing in two Minor Counties Championship matches as well as a match against Yorkshire's Second XI.[2][3][4]

Football career

Nichols played football for the amateur Norfolk County F.A. side before joining Bolton Wanderers in 1896, although he did not play a first-team match for the side. He played for Loughborough in 1898–99, making his debut in an FA Cup tie against Mansfield Town in October 1898 and his league debut later in the same month in a Second Division fixture against Blackpool. He played a total of 13 matches for the side, scoring three goals, before joining amateur side Loughborough Corinthians in January 1899.[5]

Nichols spent the following season contracted at Bury but did not play a competitive match for the side. It is possible that his football career was curtailed after breaking his leg.[5]

Pre-war cricket

After spending time on the playing staff at Lancashire in 1898,[3][5] Nichols made his first-class debut for Worcestershire in a County Championship match against Sussex at New Road, Worcester in July 1902, scoring seven runs and not taking a wicket in his four overs.[4]

Before making his Worcestershire debut, Nichols had played at Stourbridge Cricket Club since 1900 and for Worcestershire Club and Ground from 1901.[lower-alpha 1] He had also played for the county's Second XI earlier in 1902. Three first-class appearances in 1903, including opening the batting in two matches, saw him score a total of 19 runs during the season. He made his final appearance for Worcestershire the following season, making his highest first-class score of 13 against Yorkshire at Sheffield.[4]

By 1907 Nichols was playing Minor Counties cricket for Staffordshire where he "had considerable success" in the years before World War I.[3] He appeared regularly for the side from 1909 until the war, playing in 69 Minor Counties Championship matches, scoring two centuries and taking wickets each season.[4] In 1912 he was selected for the Minor Counties representative side to play against the touring South Africans in a first-class match at County Ground, Stoke-on-Trent, scoring six runs―his final first-class appearance.[lower-alpha 2][4] In his six first-class appearances he scored a total of 45 runs and did not take a wicket.[1]

Military service

Nichols enlisted in November 1914 and served in the 2/8th (Liverpool Irish) Battalion of the King's (Liverpool Regiment). He rose to the rank of Company Sergeant Major and was discharged in April 1918, invalided out of the service.[5][6]

Later cricket career

Following the war he became a cricket coach. Michael Falcon, Norfolk's captain and dominant player of the era, identified Nichols whilst he was coaching at Bishop's Stortford College. Nichols was recruited by Falcon, and from 1921 until 1931 he played regular Minor Counties cricket for Norfolk, becoming the county's professional.[lower-alpha 3][3][9] The Norfolk side of the time was considered strong enough by The Cricketer to be close to first-class standard,[lower-alpha 4] and Nichols was an important element of the side: in 1922 he took 39 wickets and scored 433 runs as Norfolk finished runners-up in the Minor Counties Championship, narrowly losing the final challenge match of the season to Buckinghamshire at the County Ground, Lakenham in Norwich.[lower-alpha 5][11] As one of the Norfolk side's most talented cricketers he had to play as a wicket-keeper at times as none of the county's other players were capable of keeping wickets effectively to the bowling of Falcon, an extremely fast bowler at Minor County level, even at this stage in his career.[12]

Nichols remained a mainstay of the county side throughout the 1920s. He scored 533 runs and took 28 wickets in 1925, including his only century for the side―a score of 127 against Staffordshire, made at the age of 47.[4][13] He played into his fifties, making his final Minor Counties appearances for the side in 1931 before retiring as a player.[14][15] He continued to coach the side until 1938, and in 1932 took a Norfolk side to play a match against Wymondham, his first club side.[2] In 100 Minor Counties Championship matches for Norfolk he scored 3,263 runs at a batting average of 24.35 runs per innings and took 224 wickets at a bowling average of 19.55 runs per wicket.[lower-alpha 6][14] In 1927 he returned a bowling analysis of seven wickets for 14 runs from 12.2 overs against Leicestershire Second XI.[16] Nichols also played for Norfolk in tour matches against the West Indies in 1923 and 1928, the New Zealanders in 1927―scoring a half-century at the age of 49―and the South Africans in 1929.[4][17]

As well as coaching the Norfolk side, Nichols worked as a cricket coach at Bracondale School, a small private school in Norwich. The Edrich brothers attended the school,[lower-alpha 7] and Nichols was involved in their coaching. He was described in Geoff Edrich's obituary as an "exceptional cricket coach"[18] and was considered influential, along with Michael Falcon, in developing the career of Bill Edrich.[lower-alpha 8][19]

Nichols stood in one first-class match as an umpire, the 1924 fixture between Minor Counties―although the side was selected by Norfolk and included seven of the county's players―and the touring South Africans played at Lakenham.[4][21] He also umpired in Norfolk matches during the period after his retirement.[22]

Nichols died at the age of 73 at Thorpe Hamlet in Norwich in February 1952.[lower-alpha 9][1][4]

Notes

  1. Club and Ground sides consisted of players who were on the playing staff for the county side, so Nichols would likely have held a professional contract as early as 1901.
  2. This was the first time a Minor Counties representative side had played a first-class match. The side played a total of 45 first-class matches, generally against touring international sides, with the final match taking place in 1994.
  3. Norfolk normally employed a professional cricket on a paid contract to play for and coach the side. Nichols was not always the only professional employed by the side at the time.[7][8]
  4. Discussions were held about elevating Norfolk to the County Championship―the major first-class cricket competition in England. The county club decided not to pursue first-class status, although opinions were divided about whether to do so. During the 1920s, Pelham Warner, an influential figure in the organisation of cricket in the country, suggested a plan whereby either Norfolk or Buckinghamshire might be added to the Championship.[8][10]
  5. Because not every side played each other, the two sides which finished top of the Minor Counties Championship table played a single challenge match to determine the Minor Counties Champion. Norfolk headed the table, but lost the challenge match by eight runs.
  6. The figures given by CricketArchive vary slightly from those provided by Hounsome who used Norfolk's own records in determining statistical figures.
  7. Five of the contemporary Edrich family played cricket at first-class level: brothers Brian, Eric, Geoff and Bill as well as their slightly younger cousin John. All were educated at Bracondale. Bill and John played Test cricket for England.
  8. Bill Edrich made his Norfolk debut in 1932 aged only 16. He went on to play 39 Test matches for the England cricket team and 571 first-class matches, most of them for Middlesex.[19][20]
  9. Both CricInfo and CricketArchive give Thorpe, Norwich as Nichols' place of death. This could be Thorpe Hamlet or Thorpe St Andrew. At the time Thrope St Andrew was separated from Norwich and considered a village, so Thorpe Hamlet has been considered the more likely location. The two places border each other.

References

  1. John Nichols, CricInfo. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  2. Yaxley P (2012) Anniversary of special cricket match at Wymondham's Kings Head Meadow, Eastern Daily Press, 2012-08-30. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  3. Hounsome p. 187.
  4. John Nichols, CricketArchive. Retrieved 2022-11-08. (subscription required)
  5. Nichols John Image 1 Bolton Wanderers 1896, Vintage Footballers. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  6. John Ernest Nichols | Service Record, Football and the First World War. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  7. Hounsome, pp. 192–193.
  8. Norfolk County Cricket Club History, Norfolk County Cricket Club. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  9. Musk, p. 61.
  10. Hounsome, pp. 189–190.
  11. Hounsome, pp. 188–189.
  12. Musk, p. 68.
  13. Hounsome, p. 191.
  14. Hounsome, p. 196.
  15. Musk, p. 73.
  16. Leicestershire Second XI v Norfolk in 1927, Scorecard, CricketArchive. Retrieved 2007-08-23. (subscription required).
  17. Hounsome, p. 286.
  18. Geoff Edrich, The Daily Telegraph, 2004-01-10. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  19. Musk, p. 98.
  20. Bill Edrich, CricInfo. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  21. Hounsome, p. 285.
  22. Hounsome, p. 197.

Bibliography

  • Hounsome K (2015) A Game Well Played: a history of cricket in Norfolk. Norwich: Hounsome. ISBN 978-0-9932296-0-2
  • Musk S (2010) Michael Falcon: Norfolk's Gentleman Cricketer. Cardiff: The Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. ISBN 9781905138883
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.