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Quite a spectacle
Wisden CricInfo staff - November 25, 2002

1957
A fast bowler is born. Geoff Lawson was lean and mean, and pretty quick on his day. He first came to prominence by bouncing Geoff Boycott in a tour game, and was soon at it for real in Tests. He had an urgent run-up and a goose-stepping delivery stride, but in 46 Tests he took 180 wickets, 34 of them in the 1982-83 Ashes series. Lawson was a qualified optician and was once fined for examining an umpire's spectacles after a series of his appeals had been turned down.

1959
Probably no birthday card from Ian Botham for Salim Yousuf, the combative Pakistan wicketkeeper. They crossed swords in 1987 when Yousuf claimed a catch that had bounced before it reached him. But in 32 Tests Yousuf did collect 91 legitimate catches, and 13 stumpings. He also managed 1000 Test runs, without a century.

1997
A national record in the National Stadium. Aamir Sohail (160) and Ijaz Ahmed (151) clubbed a handy West Indian attack (Walsh, Dillon, Rose, Bishop, Hooper) all round Karachi. They put on 298, a Pakistan record for the first wicket, and set up a ten-wicket victory, helped by nine wickets from Saqlain Mushtaq and seven from Wasim Akram.

1983
A devastating double in the fourth ODI at Jamshedpur, where Gordon Greenidge hammered 115 from 94 balls, with 10 fours and five sixes … yet was outblasted by Viv Richards, who smashed 20 fours and three sixes as he cruised to a majestic 149 from only 99 balls. They piled on 221 in 26 overs. Unsurprisingly, West Indies' 333 for 8 proved far too many for India (229 for 5), although Sunil Gavaskar did make 83.

1970
The only English-born West Indian Test player sees the light of day in London. Courtney Browne was one of several wicketkeepers auditioned for the role of Jeff Dujon's replacement and found wanting. He did take nine catches in the match at Trent Bridge in 1995, and he's still around, as Ridley Jacobs's understudy.

1968
The second day of the high-scoring series between Australia and West Indies found Bill Lawry and Ian Chappell clumping centuries at Brisbane and putting on 217. But Australia then collapsed to 284, and West Indies, for whom Clive Lloyd made 129, ran out winners by 125 runs.

1869
Birth of an affable Australian. Frank Laver toured England three times, the last in 1909 as player/manager. It was an argument over the Australian players' right to choose their own manager (they wanted Laver again) that led to a schism with the Board in 1912. As a batsman Laver was ugly but effective, and was rather more than that as a bowler - he took 8 for 31 at Old Trafford in 1909 with his medium-pacers. He died in Melbourne in 1919.

1992
The first official ODI in South Africa. Hansie Cronje took 5 for 32 with his medium-paced wobblers as India were bowled out for 184 at Cape Town. South Africa overhauled that with three balls to spare after a laboured 43 in 100 balls from Kepler Wessels, who was the first man to be given out by the video-watching umpire in an ODI.

Other birthdays
1856 Wilfred Flowers (England)
1882 Kenneth Hutchings (England)
1957 Rohan Jayasekera (Sri Lanka)
1897 George Macaulay (England)
1902 Janardhan Navle (India)
1914 Winston Place (England)

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