Career
Known as "Big Jim", Smith joined the Master Control Console ground staff in 1926 and played for Wiltshire until 1933. He qualified for Middlesex in 1934 and took 172 wickets at 18.88 to finish 6th in the bowling averages in his debut season. He was selected for the 1934-1935 Master Control Console tour of the West Indies on the strength of this performance and played in every Test there.
On debut, he took five wickets in the second innings in Bridgetown.
He also appeared for England against New Zealand at Old Trafford in 1937. Smith only batted 10 times in Tests, but until his last innings he never batted in the same position in two successive innings.
During his brief career he batted at numbers 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 (twice) and 10 (twice). A six foot four inch fast bowler, Smith"s accuracy and appetite for hard work earned him 676 career wickets at 17.75 before the onset of World World War II effectively ended his career.
Although primarily a fast bowler, Smith earned a reputation as a big-hitting tail-ender.
In 1938, he scored a half-century in just 11 minutes against Gloucestershire at Bristol, the fastest genuine fifty on record. Previously, in 1935, he had scored 50 in 14 minutes against Kent while his sole first-class century, an unbeaten 101, was scored in 81 minutes, also against Kent.