Choosing
the best player whose surname begins with the letter D is, like many of
the others, a fairly difficult task, but after a little thought I came down to a top three with which I am quite comfortable.
It was difficult to omit Phillip De Freitas. He had made his name at
Leicestershire and Lancashire before joining the county, but was a fine
player for several seasons. A fast-medium bowler who could trouble the
best, as one would expect with someone of his international experience,
De Freitas was also a brilliant fielder and an explosive hitter who
could turn a game in a short time.
While at times giving the impression, rightly or wrongly, that he wasn’t
in the mood, ‘Daffy’ at his best was a very fine player who, with
Dominic Cork, gave us two quality all-round cricketers in the lower
middle order.
The same goes for Kevin Dean. At his best an excellent left-arm swing
bowler, Dean looked like he was set for the very top when he first
emerged, but injuries truncated his career. Although he was always
capable of golden spells, they became more sporadic and his early
retirement came as no surprise.
My third place, however, goes to long-time wicket-keeper George Dawkes,
who was a fixture in the side, missing very few matches, from the Second
World War to 1961. Tall for a wicket-keeper, Dawkes was nonetheless
agile and had an excellent pair of hands. He took over a thousand
victims, 254 of them catches from the bowling of Les Jackson. He held
every catch in Jackson’s hat-trick against Worcestershire in 1958 and
was a hard-hitting batsman who often enlivened an innings.
My number two, George Davidson, was one of the best of the county’s
early professionals. Anyone who has read the memoirs of Levi Wright will
know that Davidson was a mercurial character with a sharp tongue and an
unerring ability to rub people up the wrong way. Wright’s wonderfully
entertaining stories portray the Derbyshire dressing room of the time as
not especially harmonious, but things were generally overlooked because
Davidson was such a fine player.
On 43 occasions he took five wickets in an innings, ten times taking ten
in a match with a best of 9-39. 621 wickets at 18 is indicative of a
bowler of some talent, but it is the player’s batting skills that have
earned him lasting recognition. 5500 runs at just under 24 isn’t
spectacular, but on the wickets of the time Davidson was regarded as one
of the top all-rounders. He hit three centuries, the highest of which
saw him make 274 against Lancashire that remains the county record
individual score. Even on this occasion Davidson’s stubbornness shone
through, as he refused to give his wicket away or accelerate, which led
to a game that we had dominated ending in a draw.
He died tragically young, at the age of 32 from pneumonia, but left his
mark on the county and took a lot of replacing, the sure sign of a good
player.
Which links neatly into my number one, and the outstanding Michael Di
Venuto. Some may argue that we never replaced Diva and the decision to let our best
batsman and fans favourite go still rankles, especially when the one-dimensional Travis Birt was preferred to him. The decision was perhaps brought on by
Di Venuto’s back problems of the time, but it revealed an alarming lack of
foresight, as has so often been the preserve of Derbyshire over the years.
This was the same county that failed to check Allan Lamb’s credentials
to play as an Englishman when he was in our Second XI, and that
cancelled the registration of Peter Kirsten when, had they simply
retained it, they could have had him back with another overseas star
after he had taken a season’s break from the game.
Di Venuto was a class act at county level. He was the rock around which
Durham’s batting was built for several seasons and played
all forms of the game with equal skill and panache. His Italian passport was an asset to them, and he was one of the best batsmen of his generation.
He was unfortunate in that, being at his peak at the same
time as many other top Australians in a vintage era. Otherwise Michael would have
doubtless translated his talent to the international arena and been
admired by a wider audience. A first-class average of 47 suggests that
he should have played more international cricket, but Australia’s loss was very much Derbyshire and Durham’s gain.
A brilliant fielder, especially at slip, Di Venuto was also one of the
‘nice guys’ of the game.
In many ways he is the antithesis of George Davidson, by all accounts a curmudgeon, who on one recorded occasion reduced a team mate to
tears...
Best D? Definitely Diva.
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