Alan Knott

Alan Knott
Personal information
Full name Alan Philip Eric Knott
Born (1946-04-09) 9 April 1946
Belvedere, Kent, England
Nickname Knotty, Flea
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right arm off spin
Role Wicket-keeper
Relations James Knott (son)
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 437) 10 August 1967 v Pakistan
Last Test 1 September 1981 v Australia
ODI debut (cap 8) 5 January 1971 v Australia
Last ODI 6 June 1977 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1964–1985 Kent
1965–1977 MCC
1969–1970 Tasmania
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 95 20 511 317
Runs scored 4389 200 18105 3260
Batting average 32.75 20.00 29.63 16.13
100s/50s 5/30 0/1 17/97 0/6
Top score 135 50 156 65
Balls bowled 104
Wickets 2
Bowling average 43.50
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match n/a n/a
Best bowling 1/5
Catches/stumpings 250/19 15/1 1211/133 343/54
Source: Cricinfo, 14 November 2007

Alan Philip Eric Knott (born 9 April 1946 in Belvedere, Kent)[1] is a former Kent County Cricket Club and English cricketer, as a wicket-keeper-batsman.

Knott was educated at Northumberland Heath Secondary Modern School. He played for the England Test side between 1967 and 1981, and was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1970. He was particularly known for his habit of conducting limbering-up exercises at any inactive moment during a match. His major strengths as a batsman were the sweep and the cut.

On 6 September 2009, Alan Knott was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame,[2] and in 2013 he was named in Wisden's all-time Test World XI.[3]

Career

Inspired by his father, he made his Kent debut in 1964 at the age of 18. He joined a long list of Kent-created wicket-keeper-batsmen.

He gained his first Test cap at the age of 21, having been named Cricket Writers' Club Young Cricketer of the Year in 1965. When he made his debut, it was against the Pakistani tourists in 1967. Batting at number 8, he made a duck in his first Test, at Trent Bridge, but didn't concede a single bye in the match. He made 28 in the second match, but didn't make the starting eleven for the 1967–68 tour of the West Indies, as Jim Parks was initially preferred. However, for the fourth and fifth matches of the series, he was picked again. In the first of those, he made his first Test half-century, a score of 69 not out, and he once again excelled at wicket-keeping.

In the winter of 1968/69, again against Pakistan, he confirmed his position as England's premier wicketkeeper-batsman. He made two 50s in the series, including a score of 96 not out at Karachi when the match was prematurely ended by a pitch invasion by Pakistani fans, denying him a well-deserved hundred.

In 1970, he was Wisden's Cricketer of the Year. County captain Colin Cowdrey said:

I think he is the most gifted and dedicated cricketer one could ever wish to play with, never satisfied with his performance and always seeking for a little more perfection.

In the 1970–71 series in Australia he was instrumental in England regaining The Ashes, taking five catches and stumping Doug Walters in the decisive Seventh Test in Sydney. In the following series against New Zealand he finally made his maiden Test century, 110 at Auckland, having missed the first match of the series, so that Bob Taylor could take the gloves as a reward for patience as reserve keeper on the four-month combined tour. Knott did not miss a Test until 1977, making a sum of five centuries and twenty-eight 50s in that time.

He has the distinction of once scoring 7 runs from a single delivery in Test cricket, off Vanburn Holder in the Fourth England v West Indies Test at Headingley in 1976. Knott took a quick single to extra-cover where Bernard Julien fielded and overthrew the wicket-keeper. Knott and Tony Greig ran two overthrows before Andy Roberts, fielding at square-leg, retrieved the ball and threw it past the stumps at the bowler's end and over the long-off boundary for four more runs.

Knott helped England win the Ashes in England in 1977 but had been persuaded by England colleague Tony Greig to join Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket. This effectively put his England career on hold as the 'Packer players' were banned from Test cricket. When he returned to Tests after the end of World Series Cricket in 1980, he had very little success against a mighty West Indian side, averaging 5.14 in the series. He did not play in the tour of the West Indies that immediately followed, but was picked for the final two Tests of the famous 1981 Ashes series. Fittingly for one of England's greatest players, he ended his last Test against Australia at The Oval, with a score of 70 not out and an England series win.

He was replaced as England wicket keeper by Bob Taylor on two occasions – when he went to World Series Cricket, and when he retired. Knott retired from all cricket in 1985, at the age of 39. He then mentored his son James Knott and Jack Russell.

In the ICC Test Player Batting Rankings,[4] he was:

Knott was known for his idiosyncratic behaviour on the field. His trademarks included always keeping his shirt collar turned up to protect him from the sun; his sleeves rolled down to safeguard his elbows when diving; and, after a tip from former Northamptonshire and England wicket-keeper Keith Andrew, warming his hands with hot water before going on the field. According to Bob Taylor, Knott preferred strong-backed gloves with full webbing and plenty of padding in the palms, wearing two pairs of Chamois inners with strips of plasticine across the palms.[5]

He now lives in Cyprus.[6][7]

In the October 2004 edition of The Wisden Cricketer magazine he was voted as the wicket-keeper in "England's Greatest post-war XI" receiving votes from 20 of the 25 panellists.

His son, James, has also played first-class cricket for Surrey and Minor counties cricket for Cambridgeshire and Bedfordshire.[8]

See also

References

External links

Preceded by
John Edrich
England ODI Captain
1976
Succeeded by
Tony Greig
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