Bob Crockett
Robert Maxwell Crockett (1863 in
Crockett umpired a total of 32
Crockett was inspired to take up cricket umpiring at the age of 25 by the brave deeds of "Dimboola Jim"
In 1900/01 in the match between
In the first Test match of the 1903/04 season, Australia was recovering from a first-innings deficit of 292 and was 2 for 191 when Clem Hill on 51 attempted a fifth run from an overthrow. In a close situation, Crockett gave him run out. Hill was adamant that he had made good his ground, and as he walked off the crowd began to chant "Crock, Crock, Crock". The English captain, Pelham Warner, threatened to take his players off unless the commotion stopped. The Australian captain, Monty Noble, who was next man in, apologised to Warner and insisted that play continue. As a consequence of this incident there was a call for tighter control of crowds at matches.
In 1907/08 Crockett refused to signal a boundary after a fieldsman deliberately kicked the ball into the fence to prevent the striker taking a single and retaining the strike at the end of the over, thus protecting a batsman of lesser ability. Crockett ruled that the kick was against the spirit of the game.
In 1926, at the tea interval of a match, admirers presented Crockett with a cheque for £1,043 (A$2,086). He is reputed to have thanked them, looked at his watch, announced it was time to resume play, and returned to the wicket without a sign of sentiment.
After his retirement at the age of 63 due to failing eyesight, he began making cricket bats at Shepherds Flat, near his birthplace, from willow cuttings sent in 1903 by English Test captain Archie MacLaren who had recently toured Australia. Legend has it that only one cutting of the six sent survived the journey, but grafted to a river willow, its progeny flourished. By the 1920s, bats made from Australian wood were shaped and sold under the R M Crockett label. The company made 5,000 bats annually, until its demise in 1956 when it was swallowed by Slazenger. The family who bought the Crockett farm continues the tradition, both as tree growers and bat shapers, and have developed a cricket ground and tourist facility on the site.
Crockett died of heart failure at his home, aged 72. At his death he was described as a "cricket bat manufacturer". He was married and had three adult children.
See also
- Australian Test Cricket Umpires
- List of Test umpires
References
- ISBN 0-207-15468-6)
- ISBN 0-207-15596-8)
- ISBN 0-340-28796-9)
- Moyes, A. G., Australian Cricket: A History, Sydney, Angus & Robertson, 1959.