Talk:Brian Close

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is undergoing a featured article review to ensure that it meets the standards of a featured article. Please add a comment to assist the process and/or be bold and improve the article directly. If the article has been moved from its initial review period to the Featured Article Removal Candidate (FARC) section, you may support or contest its removal. When the review is complete, a bot will update the article talk page.
Featured article star Brian Close is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Wikipedia community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do.
Main Page trophy This article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page as Today's featured article on May 12, 2005.
March 23, 2005 Featured article candidate Promoted
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography. For more information, visit the project page.
Featured article FA This article has been rated as FA-Class on the project's quality scale. [FAQ]
This article is supported by the Sports and games work group.
cricket ball Click here for information about how the WikiProject assesses notability
Brian Close is part of WikiProject Cricket which aims to expand and organise information better in articles related to the sport of cricket. Please participate by visiting the project page for more details.
Featured article FA This article has been rated as FA-Class on the quality scale.
Mid This article has been rated as mid-importance on the importance scale.
WikiProject on Football The article on Brian Close is supported by the WikiProject on Football, which is an attempt to improve the quality and coverage of Association football related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can visit the project page; if you have any questions about the project or the article ratings below, please consult the FAQ.
Featured article FA This article has been rated as FA-Class on the quality scale.
Low This article has been rated as Low-importance on the importance scale.
This article is supported by the England task force.
Peer review This Everydaylife article has been selected for Version 0.5 and subsequent release versions of Wikipedia. It has been rated FA-Class on the assessment scale (comments).
Wikipedia CD Selection Brian Close is either included in the Wikipedia CD Selection or is a candidate for inclusion in the next version (the project page is at WPCD Selection). Please maintain high quality standards, and if possible stick to GFDL images. However, if you can improve the article, please do so!

Contents

[edit] Gentlemen and players

What a great article. I think that the relationship between gentlemen and players ('Close replied with "Thank you, Billy". Yet in those days, that was a mistake') needs a brief explanation here. --Theo (Talk) 23:13, 25 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Thank you for your comments. I've added some words of explanation of Players and Gentlemen - though there's a whole article itself on that subject if anyone wants to give it a bash, jguk 10:59, 26 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Wow ! Brilliant stuff.

Tintin (Talk)

Jguk,

You may also find this interesting . It would also be nice to add the story that is referred there, of Close's reaction when someone was caught off Close's head.

Tintin April 15, 2005



[edit] Richie Benaud at Old Trafford, 1961

Jguk,

The Close article contains this passage :

Then Ted Dexter and Peter May got out in quick succession to Benaud, who was pitching his leg spin googlies in the rough outside the right handers' off stump (that is, the part of the wicket furthest away from where the batsman is standing). This brought Close to the crease. It was the last day of the Test, and the captain, May, was still asking his players to go for the runs. The rough into which Benaud was pitching was on Close's legside, Close being a left-hander.

I am not sure about Close's case, but in the case of Dexter and May, Benaud was bowling from around the wicket and pitching the ball outside the leg stump. May was bowled round the legs trying to sweep one that pitched a long way outside the leg. Trueman received cricticism for 'creating' the rough patches that Benaud exploited.

Did Benaud use the roughs outside both the stumps or is this an oversight ?

There is a mention in the section about Close's captaincy that his 7/6/1/0 record is the best by someone who captained in more than two Tests. Lord Hawke has a perfect win record in the four Tests that he captained. That needs to be modified.

Tintin1107 20:42, 11 May 2005 (UTC)

I may have misremembered the details of Close's dismissal against Benaud and the events before it (which was written shortly after I read Close's comments on it in his autobiography). Please feel free to correct it as appropriate. On your second point, I think played 7 won 6 drawn 1 is better than played 4 won 4 - though I accept some may disagree, jguk 19:44, 12 May 2005 (UTC)
Thanks. But first we may have to confirm the specifics of Close's dismissal.

Re. captaincy, agree that it is a matter of opinion. My complaint was about the specific phrase "the best record of any England captain who has captained in more than 2 Tests." The two Tests looked like a reference to Walter Read's captaincy (2 matches, 2 wins) as was mentioned in 'History of Test Cricket 1890-1900)'. Maybe it is better to leave it slightly vague like 'arguably the finest captaincy record' or something, instead of qualifying with 'more than 2 tests'.

Tintin1107 20:02, 12 May 2005 (UTC)

mmm, thinking about it, I was probably forgetting about Lord Hawke when I wrote that bit. Also the Indian and Pakistani sides were pretty weak at the time - anything other than a comprehensive victory would have been bad - but they still needed beating, jguk 11:50, 13 May 2005 (UTC)

[edit] References

Got a couple of references to Dexter/May dismissals, courtesy a messageboard :

"Suddenly the position changed completely. Benaud, bowling round the wicket and pitching into the rough of Trueman’s footholds, brought such a collapse that in twenty minutes to tea England virtually lost the game. After getting Dexter caught at the wicket, Benaud bowled May round his legs, had Close, following one drive for 6, caught at backward square leg and bowled the solid Subba Row." - Wisden 1962.

"Brian took a real hammering from the press, who accused him of throwing away his wicket and the Ashes along with it. Again, it showed how suspect their understanding of the game was. What they should have done was condemn Peter May who, when Benaud was bowling leg spinners round the wicket, played down the offside and was bowled round his backside. The ball hit his leg stump and Peter was so amazed that he just stood there, rooted to the spot......Brian Close was dropped for the next Test, and so was I. They held me responsible for causing the rough patches which Benaud used to get some life out of the plumb wicket. I hadn't even bowled from that end - it was Ted Dexter and Jack Flavell. But any excuse would do." - Ball of Fire, FS Trueman.

Tintin1107 20:22, 12 May 2005 (UTC)

This one is my fault, I am afraid, from my copyedit here. I was trying to make sense of "Dexter and May got out in quick succession to Benaud, who was pitching in the rough" and "The rough into which Benaud was pitching was on Close's legside, Close being a left-hander". My mistake. -- ALoan (Talk) 12:21, 16 May 2005 (UTC)

[edit] The age is buried

The interesting fact about him being the youngest is claimed at the openning but the facts are burried way down the body of information.

I recommend that this fact should detailed with prominence and not buried as a passing fact in the lower portion of this document.

As my journalism lecturer at University once said to me - "If it is good enough to get a mention at the top then it also deserves to be followed up at the top too".

Cheers

Phil

Please feel free to edit the article in the way you suggest. Kind regards, jguk 18:59, 12 May 2005 (UTC)

Decent grammar would put it that he WAS the youngest etc. Who do give a poo?

He IS still the youngest to play for England, jguk 11:48, 13 May 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Football Career

There needs to be a section devoted to his professional football career to ensure that Close isn't just remembered for Cricket only.

I'm not doing it - I don't know much about football!

--One Salient Oversight 11:23, 12 May 2005 (UTC)

Close's professional football career did not last long and he played just a handful of first team games. That's why it's not mentioned in too much detail. Kind regards, jguk 18:49, 12 May 2005 (UTC)


Close had a very dimented childhood He had a what?

UPDATE - Sentence added at top of story to include his age

[edit] Images

I have just tagged two of the images in this article. Image:Brian Close.jpg is certainly not a promotional photo according to the definitions on Template:Promophoto and Wikipedia:Publicity photos, so I've marked it "No license". Image:Brian Close - Small pic.jpg is also probably not a promotional photo, but I couldn't find the source for it, so I marked it "No source". Both of these photos are now liable to be deleted in one week, unless someone can come up with a valid source and copyright for them.

Stephen Turner (Talk) 09:10, 1 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Ambidextrous?

I recall my father, an avid cricket fan, telling me when I was a kid that Brian Close could bat left and right handed and that as a golfer he played left handed, got his handicap down to scratch, then played right handed and got down to scratch that way too. Any of this verifiable? --ukexpat 18:37, 1 May 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Two bits of trivia

Close has the highest first-class runs aggregate of anyone who never scored a double century. He is the only man with a career highest score of 198. I don't know if these are worth putting in the article.Brianboulton (talk) 23:40, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Football

Close played only a handful of league games as a footballer. He was signed by Arsenal but according to the Rothams Book, did not appear for the first team.JimBakken (talk) 14:57, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Second XI

Close was captain of Yorkshire's Colts XI which played in the Yorkshire League. (see A Sidebottom's book for some anecdotes)Fieldgoalunit (talk) 22:16, 19 March 2008 (UTC)