John Santall
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John Santall England (Eng) |
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| Batting style | Right-handed batsman |
| Bowling type | Right arm medium |
| First-class record | |
|---|---|
| Matches | 8 |
| Runs scored | 117 |
| Batting average | 9.75 |
| 100s/50s | 0/0 |
| Top score | 36* |
| Balls bowled | 180 |
| Wickets | 2 |
| Bowling average | 62.00 |
| 5 wickets in innings | 0 |
| 10 wickets in match | 0 |
| Best Bowling | 2-29 |
| Catches/Stumpings | 2/0 |
| First class debut: 7 June 1930 Last first class game: 8 July 1930 Source: CricInfo |
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John Frank Eden Santall, sometimes known as Jack Santall (3 December 1907 - 24 May 1986) was an English cricketer who played eight first-class matches for Worcestershire, all in the space of just over a month in 1930.
Santall was never a conspicuous success with the county: in 13 innings he only thrice reached double figures (his best being the unbeaten 36 he hit against Lancashire), and with the ball he never added to the 2-29 he took in the first innings of his debut against Essex; the first of his two victims was Stan Nichols and the other Joe Hipkin.
After such a failure, Santall walked away from cricket, instead turning his attentions to ice-skating, in which sport he proved good enough to turn professional; he also worked as a skating instructor.[1]
Santall was born in King's Heath, Birmingham; he died at the age of 78 in Bournemouth.
Two of John's relations had long careers with Warwickshire: his father Sydney took more than 1,200 wickets before the First World War, coaching the club and acting as county historian[1], while his brother Frederick scored more than 17,000 runs for them between the wars.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Obituary, The Cricketer, May 1987.

