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Ces Dacre

Ces Dacre
Cec Dacre.jpg
Cricket information
Batting style Right-hand middle order batsman
Bowling style Slow left-arm
International information
National side
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 268
Runs scored 12230
Batting average 29.19
100s/50s 24/59
Top score 223
Balls bowled 2142
Wickets 39
Bowling average 31.25
5 wickets in innings 1
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 5-35
Catches/stumpings 166/6
Personal information
Date of birth (1899-05-15)15 May 1899
Place of birth Devonport, New Zealand
Date of death 2 November 1975(1975-11-02) (aged 76)
Place of death Devonport, New Zealand
Playing position Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
North Shore United
National team
1922–1923 New Zealand 4 (2)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Charles Christian Ralph Dacre, more commonly known as Ces Dacre, was a cricket player from New Zealand who also represented New Zealand in football (soccer). He was born 15 May 1899 in Devonport, Auckland and died there on 2 November 1975. He played in the Auckland and Gloucestershire teams and was in New Zealand's first team to go to England in 1927, though no Tests were played on the tour.

Dacre played rugby union in the War years for the Railway club (a wartime combination of the Marist and City clubs). In 1917 he was involved in a breakaway movement from the club that switched to rugby league, playing matches against Ponsonby United and the City Rovers. Railway XIII merged with Grafton Athletic for the 1918 Auckland Rugby League season, though it is unknown if Dacre was still with the club.

Dacre was a hard-hitting, somewhat impetuous, right-handed middle order batsman and an occasional slow left-arm bowler, who also kept wicket a few times in a first-class career that spanned more than 20 years. An outstanding schoolboy cricketer, he made his debut for Auckland when only 15 and appeared regularly for the team until the 1927–28 season, and then again in two matches in 1932–33.

He toured Australia twice and England once with New Zealand cricket teams in the period before New Zealand played Tests. In 1927, in a strong batting side, he was a success with 1,070 runs at an average of 31.47 in the first-class matches. Though he returned to New Zealand the following winter, in 1928 he was back in England where he spent two years playing occasional cricket before becoming qualified for County Championship matches for Gloucestershire.


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