CHARLIE TURNER

Charles Thomas Biass Turner was a bowler who is regarded as one of the finest ever produced by Australia in the formative years of cricket in the Antipodeans. Standing at just five feet nine inches, Turner was not particularly quick, but took wickets with his accuracy, ingenious approach, and variations. With nearly 1000 First-Class wickets at a remarkable average of just under 15, he was demonstrably the leading cricketer of his time. Despite his brief career, he consistently deceived batsmen with his exceptional off-the-pitch movement. He holds the record of being the quickest bowler to reach 50 wickets. He took just six Tests to get to this amazing feat.

Charles Turner’s grandfather Robert Turner was a peasant who came from Leeds, England, and settled in Australia for business. He entered into the hospitality sector and opened many hotels. One of his hotels, the Royal Hotel, has survived a century. Robert brought his son Charles Snr along with him. Turner Jnr was born in Bathurst, New South Wales. His early adventures in first-class cricket were unsuccessful, but in 1886/87, when he moved from Bathurst to Sydney to become a banker, his skill developed to a remarkable degree with 70 first-class wickets at 7.68 runs each from just seven matches. In two games against Victoria he took eighteen wickets for 184 runs, but it was his excellence against Alfred Shaw's touring side that brought Turner acclaim in the English cricket community. In the first Test, after England were put in on a very sticky pitch, Turner took 6/15, and in the second his combined figures were 9/93.

The following year, Turner, with the Australian pitches already notorious for being difficult after rain, he had a strong season in the wet weather of a La Niña summer, his best performances outside the Test including, 10/45 versus Arthur Shrewsbury's XI; 16/79 in a second match against the same side, 11/119 versus G.F. Vernon's XI at the MCG and 5/17 in first innings for New South Wales v Victoria at the MCG.

In the English summer of 1888, along with John Ferris, Turner was prolific. However, he took 10/53 in Australia's only win in the three-Test series at Lord's and took 9/15 versus An England Eleven at Stoke-on-Trent. He showed ability as a batsman, scoring a maiden century at The Oval in the first game of the tour.

After three extremely prolific seasons, Turner could not maintain his productivity. The wickets in Australia in 1888/89 were unresponsive and Turner took only 29 wickets in six games, and even fewer the following season. However, still regarded as the best bowler for English conditions, Turner did not disappoint the selectors in 1890, taking 179 first-class wickets (215 in all games) but being unable to break England's dominance of Test cricket at the time.

In the following few Australian seasons, Turner continued to do well even if too little cricket was played for him to equal his records of the late 1880s. In the relatively dry English summer of 1893, Turner still was Australia's leading bowler with 148 wickets at 13.63, but the absence of Ferris and business commitments were slowly taking their toll on him. During this tour his speed was measured electronically at Woolwich Arsenal and timed at 81 feet per second, or 55 miles an hour.

When England next toured in 1894–95, Turner equalled Fred Spofforth's record of 94 Test wickets in the Second Test at Melbourne on 31 December 1894, two days after the England bowler Johnny Briggs. The three men briefly held the record together, but Turner missed the Third Test at Adelaide and Briggs overtook him. Briggs became the first man to claim 100 Test wickets in the Fourth Test at Sydney on 1 February 1895, Turner being the second on 4 February in his last Test match. Turner had the unique (in Test cricket) distinction of having Bobby Peel stumped for a pair on a sticky wicket in Sydney. His record in this Test series was, actually, his best since 1888, but two years later his banking business required him to move to Queensland, where he was not able then to continue playing cricket apart from one match for his benefit as late as the 1909/10 season – when he was 47 – that was not successful.

Many batsmen who played against him considered Turner without peer. He bowled right-hand medium pace with a relatively long and rhythmic run-up and a beautiful delivery that never aimed to exploit even his rather limited height of five feet nine inches (175 centimetres). He could vary his pace a great deal, and combined this with an accurate length and a sharply-turning off-break that made him very difficult on rain-affected wickets. This unplayability on treacherous pitches earned him the nickname "Terror" Turner.

However, Turner continued to do service to the game in Australia as an administrator right through the early twentieth century. He commented, notably, on how greatly the game in Australia changed after the era in which he played due to a drier climate and improved pitch preparation (and also covering of pitches in Shield matches from the 1930s), which made Australian pitches almost impossible for bowlers of his type and led to reliance on leg spin.

On 15 January 2007, Turner was named in the NSW Cricket Team All Time Twelve, as part of the celebrations of 150 years of the NSW Cricket Team. Charles Turner's ashes are now in the council chambers of Bathurst and a plaque at the Bathurst Oval recognises his services to both cricket and to Bathurst. His father Charles Turner and his father before him, Robert Turner arrived from England as a free settler from Leeds, England owned and ran several hotels in Bathurst including the Royal Hotel which still stands.

Turner worked at Joint Stock Bank and Government savings Bank. He also worked as a stock broker for some time. However, he was not successful in his cricket goods business in which he ventured later on. It went into huge losses during the 1893 depression. He hesitated in touring England to avoid facing his creditors. Turner died on the New Year’s day of 1944, aged 81 years. His ashes were not claimed until 1969. The ashes were then brought to Bathurst and were buried at Bathurst Oval ground. The nameplate over his burial place has been engraved with his brilliant First-Class record.

Charles Turner was included in an All-Time New South Wales XI on January 15, 2007. It was part of the NSW Cricket Team’s 150th anniversary. Six years later, Turner and Glenn McGrath were inducted in Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2013.