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Jim Parks, Jr.

Jim Parks
Personal information
Full name James Michael Parks
Born (1931-10-21) 21 October 1931 (age 85)
Haywards Heath, Sussex, England
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right arm leg break
Role Wicket-keeper
Relations Jim Parks, Sr. (father)
Bobby Parks (son)
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 375) 22 July 1954 v Pakistan
Last Test 5 March 1968 v West Indies
Domestic team information
Years Team
1949–1972 Sussex
1973–1976 Somerset
Career statistics
Competition Test FC LA
Matches 46 739 132
Runs scored 1,962 36,673 2,832
Batting average 32.16 34.76 26.22
100s/50s 2/9 51/213 1/13
Top score 108* 205* 102*
Balls bowled 54 3,837
Wickets 1 51
Bowling average 51.00 43.82
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match n/a
Best bowling 1/43 3/23
Catches/stumpings 103/11 1,087/94 113/7
Source: Cricinfo, 1 October 2009

Jim Parks (born James Michael Parks, 21 October 1931, Haywards Heath, Sussex, England) is an English former cricketer. He played in forty six Tests for England, between 1954 and 1968. In those Test, Parks scored 1,962 runs with a personal best of 108 not out, and took 103 catches and made 11 stumpings.

The cricket writer, Colin Bateman, commented "Parks was a gifted batsman and a most effective wicketkeeper". Bateman added "although he never suggested he was in the same class as Godfrey Evans before him or Alan Knott after, Parks had safe hands and was a good stopper".

He came from a cricketing family. His father Jim Parks senior was a prolific all-rounder for Sussex, and played once for England in 1937.

Parks was an attacking batsman, athletic fieldsman and a spin bowler who made his first-class debut for Sussex in 1949. By 1958, and with Sussex struggling for a reliable stopper, Parks made a successful switch to wicketkeeping.

Parks describes the unusual circumstances in which he first began keeping wicket:

"It came about by accident. I didn't keep wicket at the start of my career. I was a specialist batsman. A couple of years after that, Sussex were playing against Essex in a Championship game at Chelmsford, when our wicketkeeper, Rupert Webb got injured. There we were in the Chelmsford dressing room before the start of play and we suddenly realised we've got no wicketkeeper. Robin Marlar, the Sussex captain, looked at me and said "You're doing it". I didn't have any kit and so had to borrow Essex keeper Brian Taylor's gloves."

Prior to that, in 1954, Parks had been picked, purely as a batsman, for one Test against Pakistan at the age of 22. He made little impact and had to wait until early in 1960 to score an unbeaten century, batting at number seven, to help England gain a draw and clinch the series whilst touring the West Indies. He then remained England's first choice wicket-keeper through to the mid 1960s. In the 1965-66 Ashes series he made 290 runs (48.33) and hit his fair share of boundaries, but a missed stumping off Peter Burge in the Second Test cost England a chance of regaining the urn.


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