Career
Ochse was a lower-order right-handed batsman and a right-arm fast bowler. He played intermittently and sometimes effectively for Eastern Province from 1921-1922 to the end of the 1920s and then reappeared in two further domestic seasons in 1931-1932 and 1937-1938. He first came to notice by taking the last six wickets for 60 runs in a heavy defeat of Orange Free State in 1924-1925.
In 1927-1928, when an English team toured, he was picked for a South African XI in a non-Test first-class match against the touring team and took three wickets.
South Africa had lost the first two Tests of the series, and Ochse was called into the side for the third match. But on a batsman"s wicket at Durban he was expensive and did not take a wicket.
In the second England innings, he did not bowl at all. He was dropped from the Test team after this single match and did not play again in the 1927-1928 season.
The bowling led to his selection for the 1929 South African tour of England.
In 1929, Ochse had a mixed tour. Wisden Cricketers" Almanack, reviewing the tour as a whole, said that the South Africans "laboured under a disadvantage in being without a fast bowler of real class". lieutenant went on: "Ochse worked hard but his limitations were somewhat pronounced." His bowling "was often very erratic".
The lack of control and consistency showed in the overall first-class cricket figures, where Ochse was the most expensive of the regular bowlers on the tour, taking just 52 wickets at an average of 34.51 and conceding runs at more than three an over, expensive by contemporary standards.
He also failed to take more than four wickets in any single innings. Conversely, though he was selected only for two Test matches, Ochse"s figures in the Tests bore comparison with those of his colleagues, who were also badly treated by England"s batsmen.
Ochse finished top of the Test bowling averages with 10 wickets at 31.70 apiece. In the first Test, he took four first-innings wickets for 79 and followed that with two for 88 in the second innings, when only four England wickets fell.
This was his best Test performance.
In the second Test, he was wicketless but economical in England"s first innings, but took four in the second innings, though his 20 overs, none of them maidens, cost 99 runs. The Times reported that Ochse was "very severely treated" by Maurice Leyland and Maurice Tate, both of whom scored centuries. lieutenant went on: "They drove his over-pitched balls as if he were a slow bowler, and when he dropped short their cutting was capable of beating the deep third manitoba" Ochse was dropped from the Test team after this and did not play Test cricket again.
Back in South Africa, Ochse played just one match in 1929-1930 and then appeared in just two further seasons, 1931-1932 and 1937-1938, when he played quite regularly and took wickets at reasonable cost.