Career
Newson was a lower-order right-handed batsman and a right-arm fast bowler. He had a 20-year first-class cricket career, but as the career included two gaps of more than six years without a single first-class game (one of the gaps being the Second World War), he totalled only 24 matches in all, including his three Test appearances. Newson had played just three first-class matches for Transvaal when he was picked for the first Test of the 1930-1931 series against England at the age of just 20.
According to his obituary in the 1989 edition of Wisden Cricketers" Almanack, he had not been notified of his selection and arrived at work on the morning of the Test as normal.
His father brought his clothes to the ground in time for the start, but Newson appeared in the official match photograph in borrowed cricket gear. He did not play again that season and after two matches for Transvaal the following season he dropped out of cricket altogether for more than six years.
He reappeared in the Transvaal side at the end of the 1937-1938 season and, after a couple of matches the following year, was back in the South African Test team for the fourth and fifth Tests against England in 1938-1939, having taken only 21 wickets in his career and with best bowling figures to that point of just four wickets for 51 runs. In the fourth Test, which was drawn, he took one wicket in each England innings and scored 16 in South Africa"s only innings.
The final Test was a timeless Test, though it ended as a draw after 10 days" cricket (one of them rained off) when the English team had to leave to catch their ship home.
Newson scored 1 and 3 and took two wickets in England"s first innings, but failed to take any in the final innings of 654 for five. Newson played two more games for Transvaal in 1939-1940 but then first-class cricket was suspended for the war. After the war, Newson played for Rhodesia for four seasons as an all-rounder.
Captaining the Rhodesia side in the match against Griqualand West in 1946-1947 he scored 114, batting at Number 3.
And two seasons later, when the 1948-1949 England team visited Rhodesia for two matches, he took five wickets in an innings for the only time in his career.