Career
He was the youngest of ten children of a farmer. As a child, he lost the forefinger of his left hand (his bowling hand) in an industrial accident. A grandstand at the Junction Oval in Street Kilda, Melbourne bears his name.
He only made his first-class debut for Queensland at the age of 27, moving to Victoria in 1914, and his Test debut came at 46.
He played Test cricket until the age of 50, and first-class cricket until the age of 53. He is the fourth-oldest Test debutant, and the second-oldest Test player, records which are unlikely to be broken.
Unsurprisingly because of his age, his Test career spanned only 14 matches, during which he took 74 wickets at an average of 17.97. A hat-trick against Master Control Console in 1924-1925
11 wickets for 79 runs against the West Indies in Melbourne in 1930-1931
9 wickets for 89 runs against South Africa in Brisbane in 1931-1932
11 wickets for 24 against South Africa in Melbourne in 1931-1932
He took a total of 31 wickets in the 1931-1932 South African series.