One-Test wonder

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. In cricket, a one-Test wonder is usually a cricketer who is only selected for one Test match during his career and never represents his country again (not necessarily due to poor performance).[1][2][3] The term may derive from "one-hit wonder", which is used to describe singers who have only one hit song.[citation needed]

As of September 2006, there had been 377 one-Test wonders.[4] Some of the best performances by one test wonders are:

  • Andy Ganteaume, who scored 112 for the West Indies in his only Test innings in 1948, and so has the highest test batting average of all time.[5]
  • Rodney Redmond is the only other player to have scored a century in his only Test, scoring 107 and 56 while opening the batting for New Zealand in 1973;[6]
  • West Indian Vic Stollmeyer, brother of Jeff Stollmeyer, is the only player to have recorded a score in the 90s in his only Test; no other one-Test wonder has scored more than 80.[7]
  • Stuart Law scored 54 not out in his only Test innings for Australia, leaving him without a Test average.[8]
  • Gobo Ashley took 7 for 95 for South Africa in the first innings of his single Test in 1889,[9]
  • Charles Marriott recorded match figures of 11 for 96 (5 for 37 and 6 for 59) in his only match for England in 1933.[10][11] No other bowlers have taken more than five wickets in an innings, or ten wickets in the match, in their only Test.[12]
  • Among wicket-keepers, Indian player Rajindernath made four stumpings in his only Test, but was not called on to bat.[13]

About one in eight Test cricketers are only picked once.[1] Occasionally, one-Test wonders have been recalled to Test cricket after a gap of several years. One example was Ryan Sidebottom, who was recalled for his second Test in 2007 after his debut in 2001.[14] Coincidentally his father, Arnie Sidebottom, was a one-Test wonder.[15]

Darren Pattinson is an unusual one-test wonder in that he played a single test for England, while his brother James Pattinson had a more successful Test career with Australia.

As of May 2007, fourteen one-Test wonders have also played in a single One Day International for their team.[12]

More rarely, the term may refer to a player who has played in more than one Test, but was very successful only once. Examples include the bowlers India's Narendra Hirwani,[16] and Australia's Bob Massie,[17] both of whom took eight wickets in each innings of their debut matches, but then failed to live up to their early promise.

The term is also used in rugby.[18]

References

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External links