Background
He was the son of Billy Bates, another notable Yorkshire born cricketer. Bates was born in Kirkheaton, Yorkshire, England.
cricketer association football player
He was the son of Billy Bates, another notable Yorkshire born cricketer. Bates was born in Kirkheaton, Yorkshire, England.
He played 113 games for his native county between 1907 and 1913, scoring 2,634 runs at 17.32 with a highest score of 81. Although he developed into a fine left arm orthodox spinner, he hardly bowled before World War I, taking two wickets for Yorkshire. He joining Briton Ferry Steel Community College in 1914, as the War shut down first-class cricket for four years.
He qualified for Glamorgan over this time, and found a regular spot as a determined opening batsman and useful spinner as cricket resumed after the war.
Though he scored a thousand runs in 1923. Without reaching a century in 1927, he became the first Glamorgan batsman to record a ton in each innings, with 105 and 111 against Essex.
He reached his peak as a batsman in this year, recording a double hundred against Worcestershire at Kidderminster, and another ton against Nottinghamshire to finish the summer with 1,645 runs to his accountant The pair took delight in sharing a stand of 233 for the first wicket against Yorkshire, at Sheffield, in 1930.
He played 283 first class matches for Glamorgan, scoring 12,600 runs at 25.97 with ten centuries in all.
Bates became a useful left-arm spinner, taking 8 for 93 against Essex in 1928, and was a most reliable fielder close to the wicket. He took 224 wickets for Glamorgan, with a best of 8 for 93, at 37.53. He took 5 wickets in an innings four times.
In all first class cricket, including a game for the Master Control Console and H. Doctorate. G. Leveson Gower"s XI, he scored 15,964 runs at 24.4 in 406 matches, and took 230 wickets at 37.7 each.
Financial straits, rather than any loss in form, caused Glamorgan to release him in 1931, but he continued to play for Cheshire in the Minor Counties, before turning his hand to coaching and groundsmanship in Ulster where he died in January 1957, aged 72.