Bill Lockwood (cricketer)

Bill Lockwood
Lockwood in about 1900
Personal information
Full name
William Henry Lockwood
Born25 March 1868
Radford, Nottingham
Died26 April 1932 (aged 64)
Radford, Nottingham
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast
RoleBowler
International information
National side
Test debut17 July 1893 v Australia
Last Test13 August 1902 v Australia
Career statistics
Competition Tests First-class
Matches 12 363
Runs scored 231 10,673
Batting average 17.76 21.96
100s/50s 0/1 15/48
Top score 52* 165
Balls bowled 1,973 52,121
Wickets 43 1,376
Bowling average 20.53 18.34
5 wickets in innings 5 121
10 wickets in match 1 29
Best bowling 7/71 9/59
Catches/stumpings 4/0 140/0
Source: CricketArchive, 7 January 2013

William Henry Lockwood (25 March 1868 – 26 April 1932)[1] was an English Test cricketer, best known as a fast bowler and the unpredictable, occasionally devastating counterpart to the amazingly hard-working Tom Richardson for Surrey in the early County Championship. A capable enough batsman against weaker bowling sides who scored over 10,000 runs in first-class cricket, stronger bowling tended to show flaws in his technique.

In contrast to Richardson's consistency and strenuous work, Lockwood was never capable of long bowling spells. He bowled off a much shorter run than Richardson and tended to come down very heavily in his delivery stride. Lockwood could break back, though rarely as sharply as Richardson, but what really set Lockwood apart was his unpredictability, with extremely subtle variations of pace and pitch characterising his bowling. Frequently Lockwood would deliver a slow ball without change of action and the batsman would claim they never expected it.