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Palfreyman

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10-597: Palfreyman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Brent Palfreyman (born 1945), Australian former first-class cricketer David Palfreyman (born 1966), English actor, musician, songwriter and poet George Palfreyman (1893–1936), American college football coach Nigel Palfreyman (born 1973), Australian rules footballer Stewart Palfreyman (born 1948), former Australian rules footballer Thomas Palfreyman (died c. 1589), English author and musician [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with

20-411: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Brent Palfreyman Brent Avis Hardcastle Palfreyman (born 20 January 1945) is a former Australian first-class cricketer who played for Tasmania . He was born at Hobart in 1945. Palfreyman never played Sheffield Shield cricket, his six first-class appearances all came against foreign touring sides. On his first-class debut against

30-598: The 1992 Cricket World Cup , Palfreyman was the match referee for a match between Australia and Zimbabwe in Hobart. Palfreyman was also a successful Australian rules footballer , who played in the Tasmanian Football League for Sandy Bay . A forward, he was the TFL leading goal-kicker in 1969 with 51 goals and again in 1970 with 67 goals. He was a member of the 1971 Sandy Bay premiership team which in 2007

40-589: The Marylebone Cricket Club in 1966, Palfreyman was bowled by David Brown for six and didn't bat in the second innings. He also went for 34 from four overs of medium pace bowling in the first innings and took a catch to dismiss David Allen . He had to wait another five years to represent Tasmania again at first-class level and it was once more against the touring MCC. In the first of two matches, he fell victim to Peter Lever then Derek Underwood , for 3 and 20 respectively. His second appearance

50-417: The surname Palfreyman . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Palfreyman&oldid=1259018370 " Category : Surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description

60-583: The Indian spinner. Later in the week he made another appearance against the World XI, this time for the Combined Tasmanian outfit and he made 22 in his only innings. His last summer of first-class cricket was in 1972/73 when he represented Tasmania against Pakistan. The Tasmanians bowled first and Palfreyman went for 41 runs off his seven overs but threw the ball which ran out Talat Ali . When it

70-512: The time of his debut, aged 16 years, he was the world's youngest Test player. He became the first nightwatchman to score a century when he hit 101 against England at Lord's in 1962. This was his only century in Test cricket, and it was also the first century by a Pakistani in England. A slow left-arm bowler, Nasim-ul-Ghani is the youngest person to take five wickets in a Test innings. He

80-540: Was for a Tasmania Combined XI but the match was ruined by rain and only 47 overs were possible, although he managed to catch to dismiss Colin Cowdrey . The following summer he was picked in the Tasmanian team to play the World XI. Against a bowling line-up consisting of players to the calibre of Gary Sobers , Tony Greig and Bishan Bedi , Palfreyman made his highest first-class score of 30 before being dismissed by

90-508: Was his turn to bat, Palfreyman was dismissed by Intikhab Alam for a duck, with the Pakistani finishing with his career best figures of 8-54. After Tasmania followed on, Palfreyman yet again lost his wicket to a spin bowler, this time Nasim-ul-Ghani for one run. In addition to his first-class career, Palfreyman played two limited overs matches for Tasmania in the national One Day Competition , both quarter finals which Tasmania lost. At

100-626: Was inducted into the Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame . His brother, Stewart Palfreyman , played for Geelong . Palfreyman, an accountant, went into cricket administration after ending his playing career and has served as the chairman of the Tasmanian Cricket Association . Nasim-ul-Ghani Nasim-ul-Ghani (born 14 May 1941) is a former Pakistani cricketer who played in 29 Test matches and one One Day International between 1958 and 1973. At

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