George Pinder (cricketer), Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

George Pinder (cricketer)

English county cricketer and umpire

Date of Birth: 15-Jul-1841

Place of Birth: Ecclesfield, England, United Kingdom

Date of Death: 15-Jan-1903

Profession: cricket umpire, cricketer

Zodiac Sign: Cancer


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About George Pinder (cricketer)

  • George Pinder (15 July 1841 – 15 January 1903) was an English first-class cricketer.His birth name was George Pinder Hattersley and he was born in Ecclesfield, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England.
  • A wicket-keeper, he played for Yorkshire from 1867 to 1880, and for the All-England Eleven from 1867 to 1871.
  • He also umpired in some matches between 1873 and 1880. He was recognised as a fine wicket-keeper, his work to the fast bowlers - at a time when keepers "stood up" (i.e.
  • within arm's reach of the wicket) to fast bowling - being particularly impressive.
  • He had plenty of practice, since Tom Emmett was in the same Yorkshire side.
  • He had to deal with Emmett's famous "sostenuter", a ball pitching on the leg stump and then breaking sharply towards the off bail.
  • He was renowned for the slickness of his stumpings of batsmen.
  • When Tom Hearne was stumped off a leg-shooter he exclaimed: "I don't call that stumping; I call it shovelling of 'em in!" He is believed to have been the first keeper to dispense with a long-stop, during a North v.
  • South match in the mid or late 1870s.
  • The idea came from his captain A.
  • N.
  • Hornby.
  • Pinder was at first reluctant, but the experiment was a success.
  • On another occasion, at The Oval, Ephraim Lockwood who was fielding long-stop said: "Nay, George, I've been behind thee for twenty-three overs and had nowt to stop.
  • I'm off where there's summat [something] to do." Pinder died in January 1903 in Hickleton, Yorkshire, aged 61.

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