Mandy Mitchell-Innes

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mandy_Mitchell-Innes an entity of type: Thing

Norman Stewart "Mandy" Mitchell-Innes (7 September 1914 – 28 December 2006) was an amateur cricketer for Somerset, who played in one Test match for England in 1935. Between 1931 and 1949 Mitchell-Innes played 132 first-class matches, appearing 69 times for Somerset, and 43 times for Oxford University. In these matches he scored 6,944 runs, including 13 centuries and a top score of 207. He was well-regarded for the grace of his batting, but his cricket career was limited by both hay fever and his overseas work commitments. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mandy Mitchell-Innes
rdf:langString Mandy Mitchell-Innes
rdf:langString Norman Stewart Mitchell-Innes
rdf:langString Mandy Mitchell-Innes
rdf:langString Monmouthshire, Wales
xsd:date 2006-12-28
rdf:langString Calcutta, India
xsd:date 1914-09-07
xsd:integer 3664298
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rdf:langString South Africa
xsd:gMonthDay --06-15
xsd:integer 1935
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xsd:date 1914-09-07
rdf:langString England
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xsd:date 2006-12-28
rdf:langString Norman Stewart Mitchell-Innes
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rdf:langString Somersetshire will be captained by three amateurs in rotation, N. S. Mitchell-Innes in May, J. W. Seamer in June and part of July and G. E. S. Woodhouse for the rest of the season.
rdf:langString —Manchester Guardian, 1948
rdf:langString https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/0/658/658.html CricketArchive
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xsd:integer 1931 1934 2014
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rdf:langString
rdf:langString Norman Stewart "Mandy" Mitchell-Innes (7 September 1914 – 28 December 2006) was an amateur cricketer for Somerset, who played in one Test match for England in 1935. Between 1931 and 1949 Mitchell-Innes played 132 first-class matches, appearing 69 times for Somerset, and 43 times for Oxford University. In these matches he scored 6,944 runs, including 13 centuries and a top score of 207. He was well-regarded for the grace of his batting, but his cricket career was limited by both hay fever and his overseas work commitments. Mitchell-Innes made his debut for Somerset while he was still a schoolboy at Sedbergh School in 1931. He subsequently went to Oxford University and appeared in the annual match against Cambridge in each of his four years. His total of 3,319 first-class runs is a record for the Oxford University team, and he is regarded as one of the best university cricketers ever. After completing each year at Oxford, he returned to play for Somerset. He played his best years of cricket while at university, passing 1,000 runs in the season during three of his four years there. After graduating from university, he joined the Sudan Political Service and missed the 1938 cricket season entirely. He was only available for Somerset during periods of leave thereafter, often playing for around four to six weeks. In 1948, he was one of three players to captain Somerset when the county struggled to appoint anyone on a permanent basis. He played his last first-class matches in 1949. Mitchell-Innes left the Sudan Political Service in 1954, and became the company secretary at Vaux Breweries. Upon the death of Alf Gover in October 2001, he became England's oldest surviving Test cricketer until his own death in December 2006, when the distinction passed to Ken Cranston.
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rdf:langString Right-arm medium, fast
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