Background
Hallebone was born in East Coburg, a suburb of Melbourne, to Dorothy Jessie (née Renshaw) and Edward Stephen Hallebone.
Hallebone was born in East Coburg, a suburb of Melbourne, to Dorothy Jessie (née Renshaw) and Edward Stephen Hallebone.
He finished the season having played in all 15 matches, although his 17 innings yielded only two half-centuries.
He went to school in Geelong, attending Geelong High School before going on to Geelong College, where he played both cricket and football, for his final two years. During the 1948-1949 season, Hallebone began playing for the South Melbourne Cricket Club in the Victorian grade cricket competition. In his second season, however, he led South Melbourne"s batting aggregates, with 459 runs from 13 matches.
Against Northcote in December 1951, during the 1951-1952 season, Hallebone scored 179 runs out of a team total of 359.
Less than two weeks after that innings, he was named twelfth man for Victoria"s Sheffield Shield match against Queensland. Later in the season, in February 1952, Hallebone was named in the state team for a non-Sheffield Shield match against Tasmania, which had first-class status.
Aged 22 on debut at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, he came in sixth in Victoria"s first innings, and scored 202 runs before being dismissed by Noel Diprose. Hallebone became the second Victorian (after Sam Loxton), the third Australian (after Norman Callaway and Loxton), and the seventh player overall to score a double century on his first-class debut.
Despite their performances, both Hallebone and Maddocks were dropped from the team for Victoria"s next Sheffield Shield match, against South Australia, owing to the return of several Victorian players from the Australian national team
Hallebone first played Shield cricket during the 1952-1953 season, and by the 1953-1954 season had established himself as one of Victoria"s top-order batsmen, playing in every match. In that season, he scored 563 runs to place third for runs scored for his team, behind Ray Harvey and Colin McDonald. Hallebone"s total included two centuries, both against Queensland – 108 runs in the home fixture at the MCG, and then 143 not out in the away fixture at The Gabba.
The second innings, which included six sixes from the bowling of Mick Raymer, was well received by the Brisbane Courier-Mail, which described him as "a mixture of Ken Mackay at his dourest and Richie Benaud at his brightest".
Late in the season, Hallebone also scored 99 against the touring New Zealand team that was on its way back from a Test series in South Africa. During the 1954-1955 Shield season, which was reduced to a single round-robin format, with only four matches per team, Hallebone scored only 44 runs from Victoria"s first three games, and was dropped for the final match.
The next season, he played only twice, against Queensland and New South Wales, in what were the last matches of his first-class career. In December 1955, he left Australia for eight months to gain business experience in England and the United States.
Hallebone, who was 26 at the time of his last state game, finished his career with a first-class batting average of 41.10, having scored 1,192 runs.
He continued playing grade cricket for South Melbourne until the 1965-1966 season, retiring at the age of 36.