Bruce Murray (cricketer)
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Batting | Right-hand bat | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Legbreak | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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National side | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Years | Team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1958-59 to 1972-73 | Wellington | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Cricinfo |
Bruce Alexander Grenfell Murray (born 18 September 1940, in Johnsonville) played 13 Tests for New Zealand as a right-handed opening batsman.
Cricket career
Murray played his first first-class match at the age of 18 for Wellington against Central Districts at Wellington in 1958-59, scoring 49 in the first innings. After several seasons in the Plunket Shield, he was selected for New Zealand's non-Test tour of Australia in 1967-68, where he scored 351 runs at an average of 43.87. He made his Test debut shortly afterwards against India in Dunedin, scoring 17 and 54. In the first innings of the Second Test in Christchurch he scored 74, putting on 126 for the first wicket with Graham Dowling to set New Zealand on the path to its first Test victory over India; he also took four catches in the match.
He toured England in 1969 and India and Pakistan in 1969-70. His highest Test score, 90, and another four catches, helped New Zealand to its first Test victory over Pakistan in a low-scoring match in Lahore in 1969-70; the day after the Test he scored 157 in three and a half hours for the New Zealanders against the BCCP President's XI in Rawalpindi.[1] His only higher first-class innings had come in the previous season for Wellington against Otago in Dunedin, when he scored 213 out of a total of 392 for 5 declared.
Along with his contemporaries in the New Zealand team Bryan Yuile and Vic Pollard he would not play cricket on Sundays for religious reasons. The later careers of the three were therefore curtailed by the widespread introduction of Sunday play in the early 1970s. In 1967 he wrote a pamphlet, The Christian and Sport.[2]
He is one of just three players to have taken a Test wicket without conceding a run, giving him a bowling average of 0.00. In the Third Test in Wellington in 1968 he bowled 6 balls and dismissed the Indian opener Syed Abid Ali.[3]
Later career
After his retirement from cricket, Murray continued his teaching career, teaching at Tawa College near Wellington, then at Naenae College in Lower Hutt, where he became principal in 1981, before becoming principal at Tawa College from 1989 to 2002.[4] He has written a number of books, especially since his retirement, including several about the Tawa district.
Notes
- ^ Wisden 1971, pp. 862-863.
- ^ "National Library of New Zealand Catalogue". Retrieved 27 July 2012.
- ^ "New Zealand v India in 1967/68". CricketArchive. Retrieved 12 July 2007.
- ^ "Tawa College History". Retrieved 27 July 2012.