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Full name Paul Antony Gibb
Born July 11, 1913, Acomb, York
Died December 7, 1977, Guildford, Surrey (aged 64 years 149 days)
Major teams England,Scotland,Cambridge University,Essex,Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Other Umpire
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
100
50
6s
Ct
St
Tests
8
13
0
581
120
44.69
2
3
0
3
1
First-class
287
479
33
12520
204
28.07
19
51
425
123
Bowling averages
Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
8
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
First-class
287
269
161
5
2/40
32.20
3.59
53.8
0
0
Career statistics
Test debut
South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Dec 24-28, 1938 scorecard
Last Test
Australia v England at Brisbane, Nov 29-Dec 4, 1946 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class span
1934 - 1956
Profile
Paul Anthony Gibb, who died suddenly at Guildford on December 7 at the age of 64, was a cricketer who should be judged by the figures he achieved. It would have needed a shrewd critic to discern, when watching him play a long innings, that he was more than a determined and solid University and County batsman. Never did one catch a glimpse of that spark of genius which normally marks the Test player. The figures tell a very different story. In his first innings for Yorkshire he made 157 not out. For his four University matches he averaged 54, making a century in his last year and in the previous year being stupidly run out for 87. His average for his eight Tests was 44.69. In his first, against South Africa, he scored 93 and 106; in the final Test of that series 120. In the first Test after the War, against India, he made 60 and helped Hardstaff to add 182 badly needed runs for the fifth wicket. In his early days a tendency to overdo the hook was often fatal, but once he had conquered this it was indeed a problem to get him out. He was quite happy to rely on his immensely strong back play and to let the runs come at their own rate: his patience seemed inexhaustible. Two Gibbs on a side could have been difficult and three intolerable: one often invaluable.
With his wicket-keeping it was different: not even his best friends would have claimed that he was anywhere near the best of his day. Yet after playing purely as a batsman for Cambridge in his first year while S. C. Griffith, a far better performer, kept and keeping himself in his second year when Griffith was injured, in his third year he was given the preference completely and Griffith did not play at all. This aroused considerable criticism, but not as much as when in the next season, Ames being injured, Gibb was selected for the third and fourth Tests over the heads of a number of better keepers including Arthur Wood, who was almost always preferred to him by Yorkshire. In fact the third Test was completely washed out by rain and by the fourth Gibb was injured and so had to wait for the South African tour that winter before actually taking the field for England.
On that tour he was second-string to Ames, but in 1946 he kept in the first two Tests against India and the following winter in the First Test in Australia, before on each occasion making way for Evans.
To summarise his career, he was in the XI at St Edward's, Oxford, played for Cambridge from 1935 to 1938 and for Yorkshire from 1935 to 1946. After returning that winter from Australia, he was seen no more in first-class cricket until 1951 when he appeared for Essex as a professional, the first cricket blue ever to turn professional. Though now no longer a candidate for Tests, playing for Essex for six seasons he made a thousand runs in four of them, besides proving a serviceable keeper. He dropped out of the Essex side in 1956 and from 1957 to 1966 was a first-class umpire. At the time of his death he had for some years been a bus-driver in Guildford.
P. A. GIBB
CAREER FIGURES
Season
Matches
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
100s
50s
Average
Catches
Stumpings
In England
1934
1
2
0
16
9
0
0
8.00
0
0
1935
15
24
2
539
157*
1
1
24.50
16
5
1936
15
27
4
485
51*
0
1
21.08
16
5
1937
17
33
3
780
113
1
5
26.00
17
10
1938
24
37
3
1,658
204
4
8
48.76
24
19
1946
16
25
2
692
104
1
5
30.08
9
7
1951
29
46
0
1,330
141
4
6
28.91
49
12
1952
37
56
2
1,519
132
1
8
28.12
70
17
1953
31
52
3
1,342
138
1
6
27.38
67
17
1954
23
39
2
934
131
2
1
25.24
42
5
1955
31
58
5
1,223
77
0
5
23.07
52
11
1956
5
9
0
145
43
0
0
16.11
4
3
In South Africa
1938-39
12
17
0
738
120
2
3
43.41
10
1
In Australia
1946-47
9
14
1
199
37*
0
0
15.30
10
1
In Jamaica
1935-36
3
5
1
126
58
0
1
31.50
2
0
In India
1937-38
12
18
3
349
136*
1
0
23.26
21
1
1953-54
13
17
2
445
154
1
1
29.66
11
9
Totals
293
479
33
12,520
204
19
51
28.07
420
123
*Signifies not out
TEST CAREER
Tests
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
100s
50s
Average
Catches
Stumpings
v South Africa 1938-39
5
8
0
473
120
2
2
59.12
0
0
v India 1946
2
3
0
84
60
0
1
28.00
2
1
v Australia 1946-47
1
2
0
24
13
0
0
12.00
1
0
Totals
8
13
0
581
120
2
3
44.69
3
1
CENTURIES (19)
157*
For Yorkshire v Nottinghamshire at Sheffield, 1935.
113
for Cambridge University v Hampshire at Basingstoke, 1937.
136*
for Lord Tennyson's Team v WISCA and Gujarat at Ahmedabad, 1937-38.
204
for Cambridge University v Free Foresters at Cambridge, 1938.
141
for Cambridge University v Northamptonshire at Cambridge, 1938.
133
for Cambridge University v Glamorgan at Swansea, 1938.
122
for Cambridge University v Oxford University at Lord's, 1938.
120
for England v South Africa at Durban, 1938-39.
106
for England v South Africa at Johannesburg, 1938-39.
104
for Yorkshire v Warwickshire at Edgbaston, 1946.
141
for Essex v Kent at Blackheath, 1951.
118
for Essex v Nottinghamshire at Clacton, 1951.
138
for Essex v Northamptonshire at Northampton, 1951.
107
for Essex v Yorkshire at Brentwood, 1951.
132
for Essex v Northamptonshire at Northampton, 1952.
138
for Essex v Middlesex at Westcliff, 1953.
154
for Commonwealth Team in India v Assam Governor's XI at Jorhat, 1953-54.