Charlie Llewellyn

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Charlie Llewellyn
Slow left-arm wrist-spin
International information
National side
Test debut2 March 1896 v England
Last Test12 August 1912 v England
Career statistics
Competition Tests First-class
Matches 15 267
Runs scored 544 11,425
Batting average 20.14 26.75
100s/50s 0/4 18/52
Top score 90 216
Balls bowled 2,292 45,372
Wickets 48 1,013
Bowling average 29.60 23.41
5 wickets in innings 4 82
10 wickets in match 1 20
Best bowling 6/92 9/55
Catches/stumpings 7/– 175/–
Source: Cricinfo, 20 April 2019

Charles Bennett "Buck" Llewellyn (29 September 1876 – 7 June 1964) was the first non-white South African Test cricketer. He appeared in 15 Test matches for South Africa between 1895 and 1912, and played in English cricket as a professional for Hampshire between 1899 and 1910.[1][2]

Life and career

Born out of wedlock in

slow left-arm wrist-spin
delivery as part of his arsenal) and a great fielder, particularly at mid-off.

While the racism of late nineteenth-century South Africa had led to other leading non-white players being omitted from representative sides, Llewellyn's ability to pass himself off as white in some cases (

Transvaal
on 13 April 1895, where he took four wickets. While now accepted as a cricketer, Llewellyn would be referred to as "coloured" throughout his career and there are reports of his race-related mistreatment by other South African players.

Duly impressed with his cricketing skill, selectors chose him in a Natal side against

England at Johannesburg
on 2 March 1896, aged 19 years and 155 days.

Llewellyn failed to take a wicket in this first Test and was promptly omitted from the remainder of the series but responded by performing impressively in the 1897–98 and 1898–99

Currie Cups, which led to his recall to the national team for the first Test of the 1898–99 series against England
. Llewellyn impressed by taking five wickets but was surprisingly left out of the second Test.

At the end of the 1898–99 series Llewellyn, perturbed by the actions of the selectors and seeking financial security, left South Africa to play for English county side

In 1902–03 Llewellyn returned to South Africa to play in the three Test series against Australia. He scored 90 in the First Test, his highest Test score, as well as taking nine wickets for the match. Llewellyn took ten wickets in the second Test and six in the third to top the series bowling average at 17.92; a remarkable achievement considering Australia won the series 2–0.

Llewellyn continued to shine for Hampshire, capped by his selection as one of

Wisden's Five Cricketers of the Year in 1910, his last year at Hampshire. He then toured Australia with the South African team, where his bowling served as fodder for Victor Trumper, before returning to England in 1911 to join club side Accrington,[5] thereby becoming the first Test cricketer to play in the Lancashire League.[3]

In 1912, South Africa brought him out of first-class retirement to play in the Triangular Tournament, scoring 75 in the first Test against England at Lord's and a further half-century against Australia at Lord's.

Llewellyn retired from Test cricket after the triangular tournament, having played 15 Tests (five against England and ten against Australia), scored 544 runs at 20.14 and 48 wickets at 29.60. He however continued to star in league cricket, finally retiring in 1938 at the age of 62.

Llewellyn broke his thigh in 1960, affecting his movement for the remainder of his life and died in Chertsey, Surrey in 1964, aged 87. Even after his death, Llewellyn remained a controversial figure, as Llewellyn's daughter, resident in England, in 1976 publicly contested claims that he was not white, stating that his mother had been an English-born white woman.[4]

Llewellyn's legacy as the first non-white South African Test cricketer remains large. During the apartheid period he was used to show that non-white cricketers could perform as well as their white counterparts, while modern day commentators have pointed to the erratic selection of Llewellyn for South Africa throughout his career as the result of prejudice due to his skin colour.

While Llewellyn was the first non-white South African Test cricketer, it was not until Omar Henry took the field against India in November 1992 that South Africa had its second.

References

  1. ^ "Charlie Llewellyn". Cricinfo. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Charlie Llewellyn". CricketArchive. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  3. ^ a b Sengupta, Arunabha (26 September 2016) [26 September 2014]. "Charles 'Buck' Llewellyn: Arguably South Africa's first non-white Test cricketer". Cricket Country. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  4. ^
    ESPN Cricinfo
    . Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  5. Lancashire League Cricket
    . Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  • Merret, C. (2004) "Sport and Race in Colonial Natal: C.B. Llewellyn, South Africa’s First Black Test Cricketer", The Cricket Statistician,
    Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians
    , Winter 2004, No. 128, Nottingham.

External links