Background
A tiny man at just 157 cm tall, he was born in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn and was a specialist left-hand batsman who occasionally bowled right-arm wrist spin.
cricketer Australian-rules footballer
A tiny man at just 157 cm tall, he was born in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn and was a specialist left-hand batsman who occasionally bowled right-arm wrist spin.
Schneider showed precocious talent as a schoolboy player and was selected for his first-class debut as a 17-year-old while attending Xavier College, Melbourne. Batting at number eight, he contributed 55 runs to Victoria"s (then) world record total of 1059, against Tasmania. Despite this promising start, Schneider had to wait two years for another opportunity and he eventually relocated to Adelaide in 1926 when it became obvious that he was not going to get a regular place in the strong Victorian batting line-up.
Schneider was also a noted football player and he joined the Norwood Football Club on his move to Adelaide.
He then scored another 520 runs (at 5200) the following season to earn selection for the Australian second team that toured New Zealand in the autumn of 1928. He had a successful tour (averaging 4685) and appeared likely to break into the Test team in the coming years.
However, he collapsed while horse riding during the latter stages of the New Zealand tour, the first signs of the illness that took his life later in the year. He died of leukaemia, before the next cricket season commenced, at Kensington Park, South Australia, only three weeks after his 23rd birthday.
Schneider played 20 first-class matches, scoring 1509 runs (at 4867) and taking 10 wickets (at 3550).
He made six centuries, the highest of which was 146 for South Australia against New South Wales at the Sydney Cricket Ground in January 1927. Schneider holds the runs record for the Xavier College First XI. During his four seasons in the firsts (1921, 1922, 1923, 1924) he made 1642 runs including seven centuries. Schneider also holds the wickets record for the Xavier First XI, having taken 139 wickets.