Frank Lowson
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Frank Lowson England (ENG) |
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Batting style | Right-hand bat | |
Bowling type | Right-arm offbreak | |
Tests | First-class | |
Matches | 7 | 277 |
Runs scored | 245 | 15321 |
Batting average | 18.84 | 37.18 |
100s/50s | -/2 | 31/72 |
Top score | 68 | 259* |
Balls bowled | - | 30 |
Wickets | - | - |
Bowling average | - | - |
5 wickets in innings | - | - |
10 wickets in match | - | - |
Best bowling | - | - |
Catches/stumpings | 5/- | 190/- |
Test debut: 26 July 1951 |
Frank Anderson Lowson (born July 1, 1925, Bradford, Yorkshire, died September 8, 1984, Pool-in-Wharfedale, Yorkshire) was an English cricketer who played in seven Tests from 1951 to 1955.
A right-handed opening batsman from the Bradford League, Frank Lowson came late to first-class cricket and then was an instant success as an opening batsman for Yorkshire, scoring 1,799 runs in his first season, 1949, and partnering Len Hutton in the most prolific season of Hutton's career. The following year, 1950, Lowson was even better, scoring 2,152 runs and during the first half of the 1950s he continued a hugely productive partnership with Hutton, often being described as a Hutton clone.
The partnership moved into Test cricket against the South Africans in 1951. Lowson's first Test innings was 58 out of a first-wicket partnership of 99 with Hutton at Headingley, and he retained his place for the final match of the series at The Oval.
Lowson was then chosen for a gruellingly-long five month MCC tour of India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka (then called Ceylon) in 1951-52, from which he emerged with mixed reviews. Many of the leading England players of the time opted out of this tour, Hutton included.
Lowson played in four of the five Tests against India and made his highest Test score in the first match. He scored more than 1,000 first-class runs on the tour, at an average of 44 runs per innings, but could average only 18 in the Tests. Wisden's review of the tour said; "Lowson possessed more strokes and looked the most accomplished batsman on the side, but he had an unfortunate time in the Tests. His skill could not be denied and he seemed an England batsman all over, the only doubt being the question of temperament."
In fact, that tour marked the high-water mark of Lowson's career and he made only one further Test appearance, being an unsuccessful replacement for his county colleague Willie Watson at Headingley against the 1955 South Africans.
In county cricket, he did well in 1952, better in 1953 when he made his highest score, an unbeaten 259 against Worcestershire at Worcester, and then well again in 1954. But Hutton's retirement in 1955 coincided with Lowson's worst season and though he returned to form in 1956, he was injured for part of 1957 and wholly out of form in 1958.
At the end of the 1958 season, Yorkshire having endured the least successful period in its history in terms of lack of County Championship success, the Yorkshire committee and new captain Ronnie Burnet decided to go for a policy of youth and dispensed with the services of several senior players, including Johnny Wardle, Bob Appleyard and Lowson. The move was a success in that Yorkshire won the Championship the following season, 1959, but Lowson went back to the League at 33 and never played first-class cricket again.
J.M. Kilburn, the former cricket correspondent of the Yorkshire Post, summed up Lowson's career when he wrote: "He had all the attributes of a Test cricketer except, perhaps, the driving force of ambition."