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Louis George Duffus (13 May 1904 in Melbourne, Australia – 24 July 1984 in Johannesburg, South Africa) was a South African cricketer who became the country's most respected writer on the game.[1]

Louis Duffus
Louis Duffus

Life and career


Duffus was educated in Johannesburg, where he gained a Bachelor of Commerce degree. He was a fine athlete and baseballer, as well as a cricketer. A right-handed batsman and occasional wicketkeeper, he played in five first-class matches for Transvaal between 1923/24 and 1934/35.[2]

He quit his junior accountancy position in Johannesburg in 1929 to accompany the South African cricket team on their tour of England in the hope of earning enough money from freelance reporting to pay for the trip.[3] He was so successful that by the time he returned to South Africa he was employed as a full-time sports journalist.[4] Thereafter, until South Africa were barred from Test cricket some forty years later as a result of apartheid, he hardly missed a Test match in which they were involved. He covered more than one hundred in all.[1] His Wisden obituary described him as "conscientious, generous and very fair, with a delightful manner and a nice turn of phrase".[1]

During the 1935 South African tour of England he was summoned from the press box to field as a substitute against Glamorgan. He caught Dyson at slip, which helped in ensuring the tourists' victory in front of a large Swansea crowd.[5] He was proud that Wisden mentioned this in its match report. He had not been far from selection for the touring party, having played in a trial match in the previous December.

He served as a war correspondent in the Mediterranean for the duration of World War II.[1][5] He compiled and edited Volume 3 of the official history of South African cricket, covering the years from 1927 to 1947. He also wrote on rugby union, tennis, golf and women's hockey, among other sports.[5] He was the sports editor of the Johannesburg Star.[1]

He was married in Winchester, England, in 1932.[6] He achieved a degree of fame in the medical world in 1970 when, though a haemophiliac, he had a hip operation in Oxford.[5]


Bibliography



References


  1. "Obituaries in 1984", Wisden 1985, p. 1192.
  2. "Louis Duffus". CricketArchive. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  3. Louis Duffus, Cricketers of the Veld, Sampson Low, Marston & Company, 1946, pp. 1–8.
  4. Duffus, Cricketers of the Veld, p. 55.
  5. Michael Melford, "Louis Duffus", The Cricketer, Winter Annual 1984, pp. 56–57.
  6. Duffus, Cricketers of the Veld, p. 98.





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