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Frank Tyson

Frank Tyson
Personal information
Full name Frank Holmes Tyson
Born (1930-06-06)6 June 1930
Farnworth, Lancashire, England
Died 27 September 2015(2015-09-27) (aged 85)
Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia
Nickname Typhoon Tyson
Batting style Right-handed batsman
Bowling style Right-arm fast
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 377) 12 August 1954 v Pakistan
Last Test 18 March 1959 v New Zealand
Domestic team information
Years Team
1952–1960 Northamptonshire
Career statistics
Competition Tests First-class
Matches 17 244
Runs scored 230 4103
Batting average 10.95 17.09
100s/50s 0/0 0/13
Top score 37* 82
Balls bowled 3452 38173
Wickets 76 767
Bowling average 18.56 20.89
5 wickets in innings 4 34
10 wickets in match 1 5
Best bowling 7/27 8/60
Catches/stumpings 4/– 85/0
Source: CricketArchive, 26 April 2009

Frank Holmes Tyson (6 June 1930 – 27 September 2015) was an England cricketer of the 1950s, who also worked as a schoolmaster, journalist, cricket coach and cricket commentator after emigrating to Australia in 1960. Nicknamed "Typhoon Tyson" by the press, he was regarded by many commentators as one of the fastest bowlers ever seen in cricket and took 76 wickets (18.56) in 17 Test matches. Tyson has the seventh lowest bowling average in Test cricket for bowlers who have taken 75 wickets, and no bowler since Tyson has taken more than 20 wickets at a lower average. In 2007 a panel of judges declared him Wisden Leading Cricketer in the World for 1955 due to his outstanding tour of Australia in 1954–55 where his 28 wickets (20.82) was instrumental in retaining the Ashes. Tyson coached Victoria to two Sheffield Shield victories and later coached the Sri Lankan national cricket team. He was a cricket commentator for 26 years on ABC and Channel Nine.

Tyson's mother was Violet Tyson (born 1892) and his father worked for the Yorkshire Dyeing Company, but died before his son was selected for England. As a boy he played cricket with his elder brother David Tyson, who served in Australia during the war and at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Middleton, where he practised his run-up on the balcony. Unusually for a professional cricketer in the 1950s Tyson was a university graduate and studied English literature at Hatfield College in the University of Durham. He was a qualified schoolmaster and used to read the works of Geoffrey Chaucer, George Bernard Shaw and Virginia Woolf on tour. Instead of sledging batsmen he quoted Wordsworth: "For still, the more he works, the more/Do his weak ankles swell". He completed his National Service in the Royal Corps of Signals in 1952 as a Keyboard Operator and Cypher. Sportsmen were generally retained on headquarters staff and he played cricket for his platoon, squadron, regiment, area command and the Army. He served at the Headquarters Squadron 4 Training Regiment where he controlled the movements of men transferring in and out of Catterick, but not very well. He abhorred guns and when he took his rifle training he made sure that he always missed the target. In 1952–53 he worked felling trees, which John Snow regarded as an excellent exercise for developing the muscles of a fast bowler and attended Alf Gover's East Hill Indoor School for cricketers. In 1954–55 Gover covered the Ashes tour as a journalist and advised Tyson to use the shorter run-up from his league cricket days, which proved to be a turning point in the series.


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