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Frog in a blender
Wisden CricInfo staff - January 17, 2002

1977
Birth of the unorthodox South African spinner Paul Adams, and he probably came out with his limbs flailing over the place. He was famously described as having an action like "a frog in a blender" after bamboozling England in a tour match in 1995-96, and soon became South Africa's youngest Test cricketer. But the Aussies neutralised him a year later and he has never really recovered. In 34 Tests he has taken only one five-for, and that in defeat. In fact the closest Adams came to winning a Test was that delirious last-wicket partnership of 73 with Dave Richardson against England at Cape Town. He is now well down the pecking order behind Nicky Boje and Claude Henderson.

1883
The first Test hat-trick by an Englishman. Round-arm offspinner Billy Bates was the man, dismissing Australia's Percy McDonnell and the two Georges, Giffen and Bonnor, with consecutive deliveries. England went on to win the match at the MCG by an innings and 27 runs, the first innings victory in a Test. They had Bates to thank: he took seven wickets in each innings, and had the remarkable match figures of 59.2-28-102-14, seven of which were out bowled.

1980
A monumental effort from Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev gave India their first series victory over Pakistan for 27 years. In the fifth Test at Madras, Gavaskar batted seven minutes short of ten hours for 166, while Kapil added a thumping 84 to match figures of 11 for 136. India romped home by 10 wickets to take an unassailable 2-0 lead with one to play.

1983
Despite the ultimate anti-pinch-hitting innings from Graeme Fowler - a 21-ball duck on debut - England smashed New Zealand by eight wickets in the World Series match at Sydney. The run-scoring duties were taken up by Chris Tavaré, who even hit a six in his highest ODI score of 83, and Allan Lamb, who merrily cracked his only international hundred in Australia. The pair sealed an eight-wicket win with an unbroken partnership of 190.

1967
The Test debut of one Michael John Procter. He soon found his range too, taking 3 for 27 and 4 for 71 as South Africa comfortably won the third Test against Australia at Durban by eight wickets. But the political situation in South Africa restricted him to seven caps, in which time he amassed 41 wickets at a sensational average of 15.02. He went on to have a long, successful career with Gloucestershire, and ended with 1417 first-class wickets at an average of 19.

1968
Birth of the first Grenadian to play Test cricket. Junior Murray was better than most of the would-be successors to Jeff Dujon, especially with the bat - he once hit an 88-ball Test hundred, against New Zealand at Wellington in 1994-95, and has been picked without the gloves as a Test opener - but he has not played for West Indies since Ridley Jacobs took over the wicketkeeping duties with such success in South Africa in 1998-99.

1908
Birth of a rare breed - a Scottish legspinner. Ian Peebles was born in Aberdeen but played for Oxford University, Middlesex, and then for England in 13 Tests between 1927 and 1931. He famously dismissed Don Bradman for 14 at Old Trafford in 1930 after giving him what the Wisden Almanack described as "a most unhappy experience". Peebles later became cricket correspondent of the Sunday Times, before dying in Buckinghamshire in 1980.

Other birthdays
1911 Cyril Merry (West Indies)

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