Soon afterwards, he joined Smethwick Cricket Club and played for its third team. Cricket career 1888 to 1894 īarnes's career began in 1888 when he was fifteen and played for a small club which had a ground behind the Galton Hotel in Smethwick. In 1957, he was asked to present a handwritten scroll to Elizabeth II to commemorate her visit to Stafford. Even into his nineties, his skill as an inscriber of legal documents was still in demand. Outside cricket, Barnes worked as a clerk in a Staffordshire colliery until 1914, and later at Staffordshire County Council, where he became skilful in calligraphy. His father did not play much cricket and Barnes was the only one of three brothers who ever "touched a bat or ball". He was the second son of five children whose father, Richard, lived nearly all of his life in Staffordshire, working for 63 years at the Muntz Metal Company which was based at Selly Oak in Birmingham. In his wider career from 1895 to 1934, he variously represented several clubs in each of the Bradford, Central Lancashire, Lancashire and North Staffordshire leagues.īarnes was born on 19 April 1873 in Smethwick, Staffordshire. He played exclusively for Saltaire Cricket Club in the Bradford League from 1915 to 1923. He had two phases playing for his native Staffordshire in the Minor Counties Championship from 1904 to 1914 and from 1924 to 1935. Instead, he preferred league and minor counties cricket for mostly professional reasons. In 1913–14, his final Test series, he took a world record 49 wickets in a Test series, against South Africa.īarnes was unusual in that, despite a very long career as a top-class player, he spent little more than two seasons in first-class cricket, briefly representing Warwickshire (1894 to 1896) and Lancashire (1899 to 1903). In 1911–12, he helped England to win the Ashes when he took 34 wickets in the series against Australia. In Test cricket, Barnes played for England in 27 matches from 1901 to 1914, taking 189 wickets at 16.43, one of the lowest Test bowling averages ever achieved. He was right-handed and bowled at a pace that varied from medium to fast-medium with the ability to make the ball both swing and break from off or leg. Sydney Francis Barnes (19 April 1873 – 26 December 1967) was an English professional cricketer who is regarded as one of the greatest bowlers of all time.
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