Tich Freeman

Tich Freeman
Personal information
Full name Alfred Percy Freeman
Born (1888-05-17)17 May 1888
Lewisham, London, England
Died 28 January 1965(1965-01-28) (aged 76)
Bearsted, Kent, England
Nickname Tich
Height 5 ft 2 in (1.57 m)
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right arm leg break
Role Bowler
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 222) 19 December 1924 v Australia
Last Test 17 August 1929 v South Africa
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1914 1936 Kent
Career statistics
Competition Tests FC
Matches 12 592
Runs scored 154 4,961
Batting average 14.00 9.50
100s/50s 0/1 0/4
Top score 50* 66
Balls bowled 3,732 154,312
Wickets 66 3,776
Bowling average 25.86 18.42
5 wickets in innings 5 386
10 wickets in match 3 140
Best bowling 7/71 10/53
Catches/stumpings 4/ 238/1
Source: CricketArchive, 8 April 2016

Alfred Percy Freeman (17 May 1888 – 28 January 1965), known as Tich Freeman, was an English cricketer. A leg spin bowler for Kent County Cricket Club and England, he is the only man to take 300 wickets in an English season,[1] and is the second most prolific wicket taker in first class cricket history.[2]

Career

Freeman's common name comes from his extremely short stature - he was only five feet two (158 centimetres) tall. However, his stocky build and strong fingers gave him great bowling stamina, and he hated being taken off. His height gave his deliveries a low trajectory that was difficult for batsmen to reach on the full toss. This meant batsmen who did not play with a straight bat, or who lacked good footwork, rarely lasted long against him. Freeman relied chiefly on a leg-break that pitched on middle-and-leg, so that batsmen had to play at it, and a top-spinner that was notoriously difficult to detect and brought him hundreds of wickets; the googly he used sparingly. His bowling grip was somewhat unorthodox for a leg spinner: being such a small man with small hands, he gripped the ball between thumb, middle and index fingers rather than the orthodox leg break grip between the palm, index finger and ring finger.

Freeman, two of whose brothers played for Essex, played club cricket during the early 1910s and was engaged by Kent in 1914. After success with the Second Eleven, he was picked for the county side regularly late in the season, but World War I then halted county cricket for several years. Figures of 7 for 25 against Warwickshire showed Freeman's promise, and when cricket resumed in 1919 he developed rapidly. He took 60 wickets in a short season in 1919, 102 in 1920, 166 in 1921 and 194 in 1922. He was named a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1923 and took 17 for 67 on a rain-affected pitch against Sussex in 1922.

In 1924, Freeman's bowling for the Players (6 for 52 in the first innings) against the Gentlemen earned him a place in the MCC tour to Australia. However, owing to the rock-hard pitches and the superb footwork of Australia's batsmen, Freeman proved expensive in the two Tests in which he was selected. Freeman continued to dominate Kent's bowling in the following three years, but was only modestly successful against South Africa in 1927-1928.

However, 1928 was Freeman's most successful year: he set his record of 304 first-class wickets, and took 22 wickets in three Tests against the West Indies (plus 9 for 104 against them for Kent). In 1929 Freeman took 22 wickets in two Tests against South Africa, but their batsmen's mastery over him in the Fifth Test, when he did not take a wicket in 49 overs and conceded 169 runs, meant that this Test was his last. Yet, between 1930 and 1933 Kent so depended upon Freeman's bowling that he took 951 County Championship wickets - over 55 percent of Kent's total - for only 15.21 runs each. Among his best performances in these years were:

Freeman even did well against the 1930 Australians, taking 5 for 78, but he was never selected for a home Ashes Test. He averaged as little as 11 runs per wicket against Leicestershire, but more than 26 against the strong Surrey batting lineups.

In 1934 and 1935, although he was still the leading wicket-taker in England, Freeman fell away gradually. His average rose from around 15 to over 21 runs per wicket, and he was rarely as successful as before when the ground helped him or against weak batting - though his work rate still earned him many wickets. In early 1936, Freeman was again strong, and he took 70 wickets in the first fourteen matches. But his performance deteriorated thereafter, with only 33 wickets in the next fourteen games, so that Kent did not engage him for 1937. Freeman played for Walsall in the Birmingham And District League for a few years after that. He was granted life membership of MCC in 1949. After retirement Freeman opened a chain of sports retail shops in partnership with his old Kent team mate Jack Hubble. He christened his retirement cottage "Dunbowlin'".[1]

Records

The many bowling records he holds include:

Second only to Wilfred Rhodes in his aggregate of first-class wickets, Freeman accumulated his in little more than half as many matches.[2]

References

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