Harold Monaghan

Harold Monaghan
Personal information
Full name Harold Wyatt Monaghan
Born (1886-10-07)7 October 1886
Karori, Wellington, New Zealand
Died 15 October 1958(1958-10-15) (aged 72)
Levin, New Zealand
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Right-arm medium-pace
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1905-06 to 1910-11 Wellington
1913-14 Canterbury
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 15
Runs scored 354
Batting average 18.63
100s/50s 0/0
Top score 47 not out
Balls bowled 2765
Wickets 59
Bowling average 20.49
5 wickets in innings 2
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 7/50
Catches/stumpings 7/0
Source: Cricket Archive, 1 September 2014

Harold Wyatt Monaghan (7 October 1886 15 October 1958) was a New Zealand first-class cricketer and a clergyman in the Anglican Church.

Cricket career

Monaghan made his first-class debut for Wellington in 1905-06, when in two matches he took 14 wickets at an average of 9.71,[1] including 5 for 42 and 4 for 53 in his second match against Auckland, when he opened the bowling with Ernest Upham.[2] He took 7 for 95 when Wellington played Melbourne Cricket Club later in the season, and was selected to play for New Zealand later in the same tour, but took only one wicket, that of Warwick Armstrong. Both matches were non-first-class.[3]

His 1906-07 season consisted of two matches for Wellington against the touring MCC. In the first match he took 7 for 50 in the first innings.[4] He continued to play for Wellington until 1910-11.

He moved to Canterbury for the 1913-14 season, forming an opening-bowling partnership with George Wilson that enabled Canterbury to win all four of their Plunket Shield matches. Monaghan took 14 wickets at 17.92 in the Shield.[5] In the match against Auckland he scored 46 and 39, taking part in two batting partnerships with Wilson of 83 (for the tenth wicket) and 59 (for the ninth), as well as taking 2 for 46 and 3 for 73.[6]

The former New Zealand captain Thomas Cobcroft thought that, apart from the Australian Tom McKibbin, Monaghan was the most difficult bowler he ever faced: "just as you had made your stroke to drive him, his ball would swing and drop suddenly. A great pity for New Zealand cricket that this promising bowler went out of the game so early."[7] Monaghan was 27 when he played his last first-class match.

Clerical career and personal life

Educated at Wellington College, where he was head prefect in 1904,[8] and Victoria University, he was Archdeacon of Timaru and of Rangitikei.[9]

He wrote three books:

He and his wife Jessie had five children.[11] Their sons David, also a cricketer,[12] and Gerald died on active service in World War Two.[13][14]

References

External links

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