Wallis Mathias

Wallis Mathias
Cricket information
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
International information
National side
Career statistics
Competition Tests First-class
Matches 21 146
Runs scored 783 7520
Batting average 23.72 44.49
100s/50s -/3 16/41
Top score 77 278*
Balls bowled 24 1090
Wickets - 13
Bowling average - 40.92
5 wickets in innings - -
10 wickets in match - -
Best bowling - 2/4
Catches/stumpings 22/- 130/-
Source: Cricinfo, 13 June 2016

Wallis Mathias (February 4, 1935 – September 1, 1994) was a Pakistani cricketer who played in 21 Tests from 1955 to 1962. A Catholic, he was the first non-Muslim cricketer to play for Pakistan.[1]

The son of a porter at the Karachi Gymkhana Club,[2] Mathias was a stylish right-handed middle-order batsman. He made three half centuries in his Test career, all of them against West Indies. In the Second Test against West Indies in Dacca in 1958-59, he top-scored in each innings with 64 and 45, as Pakistan won a low-scoring match by 41 runs.[3]

He was also a gifted slip fielder with exceptional reflexes, whose "great skill was to make hard chances look simple".[4] According to Imtiaz Ahmed, the Test wicket-keeper at the time, he was Pakistan's first good slip fielder, who "changed the atmosphere in the slip cordon", which previously had been the domain of players "who did not want to run".[5]

He was a prolific run scorer in Pakistani domestic cricket. After he returned from the tour of England in 1962, in the next four years he made 1357 runs in 13 matches at an average of 113.08,[6] including his career-best score of 278 not out for Karachi Blues against Railways Greens in 1965-66.[7] Four years later he joined the newly formed National Bank cricket team and became their first ever captain, playing for them until 1976-77 and later coaching the side. In 146 first-class matches he made 7,520 runs, average 44.49, including 16 centuries. He held 130 catches, 22 in Tests. He was a popular captain and a much respected man.

Mathias died of a brain haemorrhage in 1994, aged 59.

References

  1. Wisden. Engel, Matthew, ed. Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, 132nd edition (1995 ed.). London: John Wisden & Co Ltd. p. 1388.
  2. Omar Noman, Pride and Passion: An Exhilarating Half Century of Cricket in Pakistan, OUP, Karachi, 1998, p. 94.
  3. Pakistan v West Indies, Dacca 1958-59
  4. Wisden 1995, p. 1388.
  5. Quoted in Omar Noman, Pride and Passion, p. 95.
  6. Wallis Mathias batting by season
  7. Karachi Blues v Railways Greens, 1965-66
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