Australian cricket team in England in 1956
The Australian cricket team toured England in the 1956 season to play a five-match Test series against England for The Ashes.
Australian cricket team in England in 1956 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | 7 June 1956 – 28 August 1956 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Location | England | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Result | England won the 5-Test series 2–1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||
England won the series 2-1 with 2 matches drawn and therefore retained The Ashes.
The series is most notable for off-spinner Jim Laker's 46 wickets (a record for a 5-Test series) at an average of 9.60,[1] including all ten wickets in the second innings of the fourth Test at Old Trafford, the first time this had been achieved in Test cricket. In that Test, known as Laker's Match, Laker took 19 wickets for 90 runs, still the best match bowling analysis achieved in both Test and all first-class cricket. The cartoonist Roy Ullyett summed up the summer with the picture of a dazed kangaroo in Australian strip and the ditty: Here lie the Ashes of '56, skittled by Laker for next to nix. Never forgotten, sorry you thought our wicket rotten, signed "Love from the groundstaff".[2] The second line refers to the Australian complaints that the grass had been shaved off the Old Trafford wicket to help the England spinners.[3]
Test series summary
First Test: Trent Bridge
Second Test: Lord's
Third Test: Headingley
Fourth Test: Old Trafford
v |
||
Fifth Test: The Oval
v |
||
References
- Test Bowling Figures for England, 1956 Ashes
- Peter Arnold, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of World Cricket, p75, W.H. Smith, 1986
- E.W. Swanton (ed), The Barclays World of Cricket, p296, Collins, 1986
Annual reviews
Further reading
- Bill Frindall, The Wisden Book of Test Cricket 1877-1978, Wisden, 1979
- Chris Harte, A History of Australian Cricket, Andre Deutsch, 1993
- Ray Robinson, On Top Down Under, Cassell, 1975