Ashley Mallett’s cricket ambition was to take 100 Test wickets, a feat he achieved in his 23rd Test for Australia. Generally regarded as the best off-spinner and gully fieldsman Australia has produced, Ashley runs Spin Australia, an international spin bowling coaching program. As consultant spin bowling coach to the Sri Lankan Cricket Board, Ashley has established a Spin Bowling Academy in Colombo, coaching the nation’s coaches on the art of spin and guiding the nation’s best spinners from the Under-13s to the Test squad. The author of 24 books, Ashley is working on a new biography, the story of Jeff Thomson, arguably the fastest bowler to draw breath.
One of a Kind the
DOUG
WALTERS
Story
Also by Ashley Mallett
Rowdy
Spin Out
100 Cricket Tips
Master Sportsman Series
Cricket: Don Bradman, Doug Walters, The Chappells, Geoff Lawson,
Kim Hughes, Dennis Lillee, Rod Marsh, Allan Border
Soccer: John Kosmina
Tennis: Evonne Cawley
Australian Rules Football: Mark Williams, Wayne Johnston, Robert Flower,
Tim Watson
Trumper: The Illustrated Biography
Clarrie Grimmett: The Bradman of Spin
Bradman’s Band
Eleven: The Greatest Eleven of the 20th Century
The Black Lords of Summer
Chappelli Speaks Out
First published in 2008
Copyright © Ashley Mallett 2008
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act.
Allen & Unwin
83 Alexander Street
Crows Nest NSW 2065
Australia
Phone: |
(61 2) 8425 0100 |
Fax: |
(61 2) 9906 2218 |
Email: |
info@allenandunwin.com |
Web: |
www.allenandunwin.com |
National Library of Australia
Cataloguing-in-Publication entry:
Mallett, Ashley, 1945-
One of a kind : the Doug Walters story / author, Ashley Mallett.
ISBN: 978 1 74175 029 4 (pbk.)
Subjects: Walters, Doug, 1945--Anecdotes. Cricket--Australia--Anecdotes.
Cricket--Australia--History. Cricket players--Australia--Anecdotes. Cricket
players--Australia--Biography. Cricket players--Australia--History.
796.358092294
Set in 13/16 pt Centaur MT by Bookhouse, Sydney
Printed and bound in Australia by Griffin Press
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Preface: Meet Doug Walters
1 |
A legend like Doug |
2 |
The Big Smoke |
3 |
I’m in the army now |
4 |
Just the ticket |
5 |
A bumper harvest |
6 |
Indian summer |
7 |
Springbok whitewash |
8 |
Changing of the guard |
9 |
The agony |
10 |
The ecstasy |
11 |
A touch of Bradman |
12 |
A Test in ashes |
13 |
Sworn to secrecy |
14 |
Packer really did care |
15 |
Happy ending |
16 |
Don’t ‘bag’ the cap |
Endnotes
My thanks to the following: Eddie Barlow, Dr Donald Beard, Richie Benaud, Fred Bennett, Big Sid, Allan Border, Brendan Bracewell, John Bracewell, Sir Donald Bradman, Sir Ron Brierley, Kevin ‘Crazy’ Cantwell, Bruce Carter, Greg Chappell, Ian Chappell, Mike Coward, Sir Roden Cutler, Alan Davidson, Ed Devereaux, Ross Edwards, Stephen Fry, Lance Gibbs, Trevor Gill, Neil Harvey, David Hookes, Ray Illingworth, John Inverarity, Terry Jenner, Ray Johnston, Thomas Keneally, Dennis Lillee, Alan McGilvray, Rod Marsh, Keith Miller, Clayton Murzello, Norman O’Neill, Kerry Packer, Len Pascoe, Wayne Prior, Viv Richards, Ray Robinson, Paul Sheahan, Norman Tasker and Jeff Thomson.
A special thank you to Caroline Walters for copying myriad articles from the stacks of cuttings about Doug which May Walters and Caroline had collected for him; to Doug’s mum, May, for her words on Doug’s early years; and to Freddie (Doug himself) who was ever the fine host during our taping sessions at his home in Sydney, in Colombo and at his favourite watering hole, the Great Northern Hotel, Chatswood.
My thanks, too, to my wife and editing consultant, Christine.
Len Pascoe directed me towards country and western songster Ian Quinn who included his song ‘A Legend Like Doug’ in his latest album, River or the Road (Ringbark Records). Thanks to Ian Quinn and Anita Ree for allowing me to use the lyrics in this book. I even grabbed the title of the song as my heading for Chapter one.
Deceased
I have always said I would hate to tour in an Australian side that didn’t include Doug Walters. That wasn’t just because of his match-winning batting, his almost freakish ability to take a wicket when a dangerous partnership was building or his brilliant all-round fielding. Doug’s impish humour and ability to keep a team loose with his dressing-room pranks contributed greatly to team spirit, morale and having an enjoyable time. And if you want someone to write about the off-field side of Walters’ character, there’s noone better qualified than his one-time team-mate Ashley ‘Rowdy’ Mallett, who was often on the receiving end when the ‘Dungog Dasher’ was devising his antics . . . like the occasion in Durban at the Old Kingsmead ground in 1970.
We were taking a pounding from a strong South African side after an extremely draining three-month tour of India, but that hadn’t dulled Walters’ ultra-active brain. It was an old dressing-room with wooden floors, wire-fronted lockers and bench seats that lifted up so you could store extra cricket gear. Mallett insisted on walking around in his cricket socks despite the fact that it was easier to score a splinter from the floor than runs against the South African attack. Seizing his opportunity, Walters regularly tossed his cigarette butts in Mallett’s path and each time the clumsy off-spinner had to do a military two-step to avoid treading on the fag end of a lighted Rothmans filter.
Eventually Mallett, in taking an elaborate side-step, stumbled backwards, his legs hitting the bench seat and causing him to sit down with a thud. Normally this wouldn’t have been a problem, as he was right in front of his own locker, but Rowdy wasn’t the tidiest cricketer and he’d left his boots on the bench with the sprigs upturned. His backside no sooner landed on the spikes than Mallett was leaping into the air as though he was trying to catch a lofted Eddie Barlow cut shot. Unfortunately, his second landing was right on one of Walters’ strategically placed butts, which caused him to leap backwards again, this time setting him down perfectly on the sprigs of the other upturned boot.
I can’t remember what disaster befell his next landing, as I was rolling around on the floor laughing in the company of half a dozen other Australian players. For all I know Walters may have even been rolling about on one of his own lighted butts.
It may sound like a childish schoolboy prank but you must remember people used to crack up watching the Three Stooges and this was every bit as funny and it wasn’t scripted.
This and many other episodes like it mightn’t have been as hilarious if Walters wasn’t such a likeable person and, just as importantly, a great player. I use the word ‘great’ advisedly on the basis that if it describes Sir Donald Bradman then it’s difficult to apply the term to any other batsman. Consequently, many people would be surprised I use the word in describing Walters. There was a valid reason.
On three occasions Walters scored a Test century in a session and also repeated the feat in an international match against a Rest of the World team. Other than Bradman, I can’t think of another batsman who has surpassed that amazing feat and, as captain of a player with such extraordinary match-winning qualities, you tend to appreciate his contribution.
Typical of Walters he couldn’t ‘just’ score a Test century in a session like Bradman or Sir Garfield Sobers or Victor Trumper; he somehow contrived to add extra drama to the occasion. As this story unfolds you’ll better understand Walters’ flair for the dramatic.
I can’t think of a better subject for a book than Walters, nor anyone more qualified to write about one of cricket’s great characters than Ashley Mallett. They broke the mould when Doug Walters came on the scene and thank heavens they had the good sense to wait until after his arrival.
Ian Chappell
Sydney, 2008
Over the years Doug has been showered with adulation, but it’s all water off a duck’s back. Whether he got a hundred or a duck, Doug remained the same. In Australia Doug Walters is a constant: a national treasure like the Opera House or the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Cricket fans embraced him as one of their own, for here was a national batting hero who did the sort of stuff they did: he drank and he smoked, he had a bet and a laugh. They loved it when, in 1977, news broke that before his 250 for Australia against New Zealand at Christchurch, he spent the previous night in the hotel bar with a team-mate. The little right-hander with the gap-toothed smile drank all night and batted all next day, hitting his highest Test score. Youngsters loved Doug’s cricket for his red-blooded strokes and his obvious enjoyment: ever on the attack and win; lose or draw he always sported that famous grin.
Doug hails from Dungog, dairy farm country in the middle of the Hunter Valley some 200-odd kilometres north of Sydney. There he learnt to bat on his homemade ant-bed pitch, defending a kerosene tin which stood in front of the old wood-walled, corrugated tin-roofed dunny. He milked cows and he could spin a milk can. But just like Don Bradman, who had an uncannily similar country upbringing, Doug immediately shone with the bat on the Test stage. And it wasn’t long before he was labelled the ‘new Bradman’.
Doug hit a century in both of his first two Test matches. He batted instinctively and he stuck to his way of doing things. With a fabulous eye and his hand–eye coordination as good as anyone who has ever pulled a boot on for the Australian Test team, it’s not hard to see that there was a lot of Bradman in Doug’s cricket. Sometimes his bat came at the bowler at a funny angle, but the bowler was rarely smiling as Doug would cane anything remotely short, or full or wide. Four times he hit a century in a session in first-class matches, and three of those occasions were Test matches. And in December 1974 he hit an amazing century in a true ‘Bradman-like’ innings.
Doug was known for his love of pranks. Throughout his long career he found ways to harass and annoy his team-mates with all manner of mischief. But this only adds to the fact that he is one of the great characters of the game. Who else would hold his 60th birthday party in the front bar of a suburban hotel?
Doug was the most observant cricketer I struck on the field of play. He always casually told anyone within earshot from his spot at third slip that his wife had just arrived and was sitting in number 10 seat, row 14 of the southern stand. It shouldn’t surprise anyone that in August 2007 Doug and Caroline Walters celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary.
Country and Western singer Ian Quinn has penned a song about Doug, entitled ‘A Legend like Doug’, and in this book I wanted to give a close look at the man as well as the legend. Doug talked candidly to me about both life and cricket and throughout the book I’ve tried to include as much as possible: his thoughts on modern-day players; the need to scrap the Under-19s; his belief in compulsory National Service; our Test selectors ‘giving away Test caps’; his thoughts on the ‘conspiracy’ which saw him, and other high-profile people, press-ganged into the army at the height of the Vietnam War; and the emergence of China as a cricket power.
Some time back, Doug was addressing a group of about thirty youngsters. In his coaching address, Doug stressed the need for everyone involved in the game to dress neatly. He would say, ‘Boys, we look like a cricketer.’ At the session he noted one youngster to be well attired: immaculate creams, clean shoes and shirt tucked in, and another not so well dressed: a youngster with his shirt hanging out, hair all over the place, shoelaces undone . . .
He asked both boys to stand up and then he addressed the group.
‘Now boys,’ Doug began, ‘can you notice the difference between these two boys?’
A boy was almost beside himself in the group, thrusting his hand skywards and Doug invited him to respond.
‘Yes, Mr Walters, I know . . . one of them is black!’
Whether it was on the cricket field, speaking at a show, playing a prank, or shuffling cards, Doug always had an ace up his sleeve. For me, and for millions of Australians, Kevin Douglas Walters is undoubtedly one of a kind.
Ashley Mallett
We just looked at each other . . . It was a magic moment. Looking back, I have one regret about the night. I didn’t drink in those days, but I would have liked to have pulled up at a pub and had a beer with Dad. He loved his beer alright, but he celebrated with me over a cup of tea instead.
The Doug Walters story is brimming with thrills, spills and endless laughs. Doug had more than a fleeting brush with sporting genius: there was a boyish enthusiasm about his batting and that touch of magic was never far away. Such Doug Walters magic held the nation in collective awe on December 1974. At tea on the second day of the match against England, Doug was three not out. At stumps he was unconquered on 103. Doug had ‘done a Bradman’, scoring 100 in a session. It was his second Test century in a session. His first was at Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, in the Third Test of the 1972–73 series in the Caribbean. Ian Chappell regards that innings as the best Test century he had seen against a turning ball on a treacherous spinning wicket. Doug’s amazing century in Perth was entirely different. A lightning-fast wicket with extraordinary bounce never deterred Doug as he hooked and pulled and drove his way towards the last ball of the day. He was on 97 when the ungainly, gangly England fast bowler Bob Willis bustled in to bowl that all-important final delivery. The wicket was providing steep, though consistent, bounce and carry to England’s interminable Jack-in-the-box—the bending, stretching, annoying, wicketkeeper Alan Knott. Willis’ penultimate ball of the day was predictably short. It rose like a striking brown snake, but Doug was ready to pounce.
His bat met the ball bang in the middle—the bittersweet sound of willow on leather like the crack of a stock whip—which sent the ball soaring like a jumbo jet at take-off. All eyes were on that little red sphere which seemed to take on a life of its own, careering like a cannon ball, barely getting above 3 metres but easily clearing the boundary rope just in front of square-leg. The ultra-conservative Ross Edwards stood agape at the other end, marvelling at Doug the legend, the man he had been scolding just seconds before to ‘play sensibly . . . be there for tomorrow . . . don’t do anything silly’.
Walters ignored Rosco’s pleas for him to simply hang on in that final over—Doug was always going to trust his own attacking nature. Any red-blooded Australian batsman, who had an eye like a stinking fish, was immensely strong in the forearms, and could hook and pull like a thrashing machine, would never have allowed that Willis delivery to pass unpunished. The ball simply had to GO . . .
Even before this epic knock, Doug Walters was well on his way to becoming a true legend of the game. In 1968–69 in Australia, Doug had a Bradman-like average of 116 against the West Indians. In just four Tests he scored 699 runs, including a record 242 and 103 in the Sydney Fifth Test match. As a Test player Doug was hero to thousands of admirers, yet his image of himself never changed—he was an uncomplicated bloke who was one of the mob. What endeared him to his fans was his matter-of-fact, down-to-earth attitude to life, which remains unchanged. With Doug there are no pretensions: he’s a bloke’s bloke, who lives life to the full, and throughout his cricket career Doug loved a beer, a smoke, a bet and a bat, not necessarily in that order. The only difference is that these days he limits his batting to the odd charity match and shows kids at coaching classes how to cut, pull and drive.
As a teenage teetotaler, Doug scored a century against England at the Gabba in his debut Test match. He followed up that ton with another one in the Melbourne Second Test match, never forgetting advice from the burly Queensland batsman, Peter Burge, who told him to bat instinctively and to always take the attack to the bowler. Peter strode down the track and said to me: ‘Bradman once told me the only way to defend properly is to attack sensibly.’1
Doug had his first beer at the age of twenty and he started smoking during his two-year stint in the army. Doug doesn’t care what people think of his smoking and drinking, but he takes care not to smoke inside, at home or in a restaurant. The only people Doug Walters ever ‘offended’ were his opponents on the cricket field, especially the bowlers. Doug belted the hell out of some of the greatest bowlers to have drawn breath. But all opponents, including those defeated bowlers, were always welcome to join Doug for a beer and a smoke at day’s end.
There is not a hint of pomp or ceremony about Doug, yet fame has thrust him in the limelight: he has chatted with the Queen Mother at Clarence House; collected his MBE from NSW Governor Sir Roden Cutler at Government House in Sydney; dined with Queen Elizabeth and Princess Anne on the Royal yacht Britannia on Sydney Harbour; and in 1982 he took tea one morning with Australian cricket’s version of the ‘Royal Couple’ at the Kensington Park, home of Sir Donald and Lady Jessie Bradman.
Doug toured England four times (1968, 1972, 1975 and 1977); Ceylon (Sri Lanka), India and South Africa (1969–70); the West Indies (1973); and New Zealand (1974 and 1977). Doug’s legendary status rose in February, 1977 at Christchurch. There he hit 250 against New Zealand at Lancaster Park after a long night at the hotel bar with Gary Gilmour. Next day both men cleared the cobwebs quickly and settled down to hit a record seventh wicket partnership of 217 in 187 minutes, with Gilmour hitting his maiden Test century, 101. Statistically, Doug Walters played 74 Test matches, hitting 5357 runs, with fifteen centuries at an average of 48.26. He also took 49 wickets at 29.08 runs apiece, plus 43 catches. Doug proved to be one of our most amazing international sporting heroes, yet he never forgot his roots or lost the common touch. His cricketing life was full of thrills and he thrilled those who saw his brilliant batting, partnership-breaking medium pace bowling, and sure hands at slip and brilliant fielding at cover point. But, according to Doug, all of this combined cannot compare to being named in the Test team for the first time. It was his dream, his ambition, even as a child. And he always believed he would make it, no matter how doubtful some of his teachers seemed to be.
I used to tell my teachers that I didn’t have to do my homework because ‘I am going to play Test cricket for Australia’. My English teacher [Ray Johnston] and my Maths teacher [John Gateley] at Dungog High School told me, ‘You’ll never make it Doug. You’ll never play Test cricket. You have to hand your homework in like everyone else.’
So I guess those two guys were my greatest inspirations because they told me that I couldn’t do what I had dreamed of doing and I went all out to prove them wrong.
Ray Johnston retired from teaching a few years back and lives in Dungog. He well remembers the young Doug Walters. ‘Doug and I began at Dungog Central School together in the same year, 1958. He did his Intermediate Certificate in 1960 and he was a pretty good student.’
Ray then corrected himself. ‘Well, you could say Doug did as much as he needed to do to get through. As his English teacher I noted that he had a good command of the language. His written expression was good and I reckon he used the dictionary to a great extent to write a story. He had neat handwriting.’2
What was Doug like at school?
‘Quiet,’ Ray mused. ‘But really he was as he is now, almost exactly the same. Only thing is in those days he didn’t drink and smoke. Otherwise little has changed with him. Quietly spoken, laid-back . . .’
And what does Ray say of Doug’s claim that he, along with fellow teacher John Gateley, told the young Doug Walters that he wouldn’t make it in Test cricket?
Ray replied, ‘Frankly, I cannot remember saying anything of the sort. I think it’s something Doug made up.’3
Who indeed would want the world at large to learn that he had once told the schoolboy Doug Walters, who grew up to be one of Australia’s greatest batsmen and a true legend of the game, that he wouldn’t make Test cricket?
Time can fade our memories. But anyone who knows Doug Walters will tell you that he has the memory of an elephant. He doesn’t forget. I’ll give you an example of his incredibly accurate memory. In 1968 I was with Doug at London’s Waldorf Hotel when he ordered a ham and tomato toasted sandwich. But there was a problem, said the hotel staff. The toaster was on the blink. So Doug had to do without his toasted sandwiches for the duration of his stay. In 1972 I was in a room of the same hotel in London when he ordered toasted ham and tomato sandwiches. The staffer told Doug they couldn’t do toasted sandwiches. ‘Jeez,’ said Doug, ‘haven’t you fixed that bloody toaster yet?’
Whenever Doug returns for a visit to Dungog, he invariably looks up Ray Johnston (sadly John Gateley passed away six years ago) and his first words as they order their first beers are along these lines: ‘Thanks, Ray, I would never have made it if you two guys hadn’t told me I’d never make it.’
But Doug was never arrogant in his ambitions. Leading up to the then quaintly called Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) match and during it, he was being hailed as the newest batting star in the land; the newspapers were full of his being ‘certain’ of Test selection. Having hammered the cream of the England attack against MCC at the Sydney Cricket Ground in the lead game to the first Test in Brisbane, Doug had this nation of sports lovers hoping that his name would be among the players chosen for the First Test. He had had a good double, 129 and 39, but he had his own doubts and fears, and he tried not to think too much about all the talk.
On the last night of the MCC match, I packed my bag and walked out of the SCG with Dad, who had come down from the country to watch the game. And the Test team was being named that night. Dad was expecting me to get picked in the twelve, but I was certain I wouldn’t be selected and was concerned about how disappointed Dad was going to be. We were driving home in the Mini when the team was announced. Dad stopped the car and we listened to the announcement.
It was 30 November 1965 and Doug’s life was about to be changed forever. As he listened with his father, the Australian team was announced, with the captain and vice-captain named first, followed by the other ten players in alphabetical order: B. Booth (NSW—captain); W. Lawry (Victoria—vice-captain); P. Allan (Queensland); P. Burge (Queensland); W. Grout (Queensland); N. Hawke (South Australia); G. McKenzie (Western Australia); P. Philpott (NSW); I. Redpath (Victoria); T. Vievers (Queensland); D. Walters (NSW) . . .
They stopped the car by the side of the road, trying to comprehend the enormity of it all. Ted Walters was overwhelmed, ecstatic and rightly proud, but for Doug, it was all a bit too much to absorb—getting picked in the Test team was every Aussie kid’s sporting dream:
‘D. Walters’ . . . I couldn’t believe it. I honestly thought they’d name the twelve players and I would miss out. It’s a bit hard on a young bloke, I can tell you, when they read names out in alphabetical order and your name starts with a W. I could take you to the exact spot in town where I heard the news. It was right outside the Darlinghurst Post Office, just down from Taylor Square. Dad and I were both overcome and we hardly exchanged a word between us. We just looked at each other, both choked with emotion. It was a magic moment. Looking back, I have one regret about the night. I didn’t drink in those days, but I would have liked to have pulled up at a pub and had a beer with Dad. He loved his beer alright, but he celebrated with me over a cup of tea instead.
Sadly, poor health prevented Ted Walters getting to Brisbane to watch his son play in his First Test match, but he was able to listen to the radio broadcast and watch snatches of play on television.
During that match Doug expected to carry the drinks, but the Victorian pace-man Alan Connolly was named twelfth man and Doug got his chance. With Australia four wickets down for just over 100, Doug joined the stoic Bill Lawry. Wily England off-spinner Fred Titmus was bowling with good rhythm and gaining considerable turn. Doug met the first good length in the middle of his bat. Although he had only pushed the ball back to the bowler, Doug’s face lit up. And his smile got bigger and bigger as he watched the rocking motion of the bowler. Titmus cradled the ball in both hands as he moved in. He had a classical sideways action, spending lots of time on his front foot. He rocked back and forth, spun the ball appreciably at times and was unerringly accurate.
But Doug had ‘seen’ it all before. He had watched Titmus’ action for years: the family would gather around a roaring fire in their lounge room, and they would all listen intently to the wireless as the Test series in England was being fought out.
You could say I was taught the game of cricket by Alan McGilvray . . . The commentators, Alan McGilvray, John Arlott and Brian Johnston, were terrific. Their commentary gave you every minute detail about a player. They described my heroes—Len Hutton, John Edrich, Peter May, Colin Cowdrey, Ted Dexter, Fred Trueman, Tony Lock, Jim Laker, Alec Bedser, Richie Benaud, Alan Davidson, Neil Harvey, Garfield Sobers, Wes Hall, Lance Gibbs and Rohan Kanhai.
Alan McGilvray was indeed the voice of cricket in Australia. He covered Don Bradman’s 1948 ‘Invincibles’ tour of England for the Australian Broadcasting Commission. And he was fiercely Australian. McGilvrary was clever. He could paint a word picture so clearly you were transported to the very arena where the action he described was being played out. In those days, McGilvray was the ball-by-ball caller and he had an off-sider: the expert commentator. Once it was Vic Richardson, then Lindsay Hassett, then Norman O’Neill.
In backyard Test matches with his brothers Warren and Terry, and sister Colleen, Doug would emulate the actions of all the English bowlers. When Doug played these backyard Test matches, he says he simply had to do as his heroes did:
If Alan Davidson came on to bowl, you bowled as Davo bowled, left-handed. John Edrich was a left-hand batsman, so you had to bat the way John batted as an England opener. Ray Lindwall was a fast bowler, so you raced in and bowled as fast as you could. When Richie Benaud was bowling, you bowled leg-breaks. I could ‘see’ through the radio the blokes who hitched their pads or fiddled with their box.
Doug’s fertile mind was able to conjure up a picture so vivid, he had all the England bowlers in his head. He felt he knew all their mannerisms, all their little tricks of the trade. In his mind’s eye he had ‘watched’ them closely. Just as Don Bradman was his own sports psychologist, Doug was living the visualisations that many elite athletes today think to be a modern form of sporting mental awareness. So there he was at the Gabba in his First Test, reading Titmus like an old favourite book; tracking every aspect of his craft, every Titmus verb and adjective; every consonant, every twist and turn of the bowler’s rhythm. Titmus’ exclusive, rocking action was so familiar to Doug it made him smile and, as he says, it provided him with an instinctive competitive edge that made him very confident:
My second ball from Titmus was flighted a bit higher than the first. I latched on to the length early and jumped down the track to hit it wide of mid-on for four. I guess when you’re playing your first Test match at the age of nineteen, nerves don’t really come into it. And if I had any nerves at all, they disappeared with that boundary to get off the mark. Nerves usually do disappear when you get off the mark.
Ray Johnston would have smiled at this. At high school during the winter months, Doug used to travel with Ray to Newcastle to play baseball for the Wallsend Robin Club. Fielding at short-stop never worried Doug, but he sometimes had trouble with the bat. Ray says:
He had the habit of jumping down the ground towards the pitcher, just as he would advance to the pitch of the ball against a spin bowler. In baseball it caused him a bit of strife, for he was invariably given out for batting out of the box.4
Given Doug’s fabulous eye and his penchant for the horizontal-bat shots, the pull and the cut, one would think that he would have been a sensational batter in baseball.
Baseball wasn’t my game. I used to terrorise pitchers. I could never hit ’em in the middle. I could always get wood on the ball, but it would be either too high or too low on the bat; never in the middle. I think I only ever hit one home run in my life. Anyone who could pitch properly had me struggling. I couldn’t lay a bat on an outcurve.
And there was also the problem of jumping out of the batter’s box to get to the pitcher. Fatal footwork in baseball. But that same swift footwork in Test cricket was to serve Doug well. His first scoring shot was something of a signature stroke for he would bring his front and back feet together in a snapping-at-the-heels drive through mid-on; his come-to-attention shot. The great bowler Bill ‘Tiger’ O’Reilly, the man Bradman named as the best bowler of any type he had ever played with or against or seen, praised Doug’s debut Test knock in his regular Sydney Morning Herald column:
Australia had lost, in quick succession, the wickets of Cowper, Burge and Booth and four wickets were down for 125 runs—a situation expressly designed to try the temperament of a much more mature man. And to emphasise the problem he [Walters] was facing, England’s captain Mike Smith crowded two short legs and a silly point in to the close positions for Fred Titmus to give Walters a searching personality test. The youngster came through it like a veteran. In fact, he shaped up aggressively. Throughout his long innings it was quite obvious that Walters was holding many of his aggressive shots in check. The lofted on-drive, for instance, seldom came into play but I am sure that the English bowlers will have not been hoodwinked about that now the young man has made his mark and secured his position. I can only remember one false step on Walters’ part. That was the wind-and-water shot outside the off stump when David Brown was using the new ball.5
Doug’s temperament shone through in that innings. He says the experience of listening to the Tests on the radio had left an indelible impression on him:
When I finally played against some of these blokes I had never seen, I found myself thinking that I know so much about their approach and mannerisms that I felt like I had been batting against them for a couple of years. When Titmus was almost into his delivery I found myself thinking: ‘Gee, how good is this? I have this bloke’s run-up to a tee.’ I didn’t have a clue what these blokes looked like. I certainly wouldn’t have been able to recognise them if I’d walked past them in the street, although I do recall Colin Cowdrey being described as ‘rotund’.
Doug knew what to expect from all the players except for one: Len Hutton. For some strange reason Doug always envisaged Hutton as being a left-handed batsman. How he came to make such an error, Doug cannot explain. However, years later, he discovered that liquor salesman Arthur Battie spent many days at the Sydney Cricket Ground during Sheffield Shield matches and Tests throughout the Bradman era and it was not until Don Bradman had been retired for fifteen years that Battie learnt that the champion batsman of all time was a right-hander. As Doug explains, Battie had always thought Bradman was a ‘Molly-Dooker’:
Arthur used to always have his back to the play at the SCG and he would spend hours at the Members’ Bar looking at the cricket in the reflection of the huge mirror which was affixed to the wall at the back of the bar. Not once did Arthur turn around to watch the game through the window, so he had spent all that time looking at Bradman in the reflection in the mirror, batting ‘left-handed’.
Doug’s debut Test brought him 155. He had two days to get a hit, given that only 111 minutes of play was possible on the first day of the game and the second day was washed out without a ball being bowled. When he was on 89, a little dog rushed onto the ground and play was stopped. Again, with Doug on 93, the little dog returned, but the youngster remained calm. He reckoned the incident helped him relax and to forget about the nervous nineties:
I think the little dog was a kelpie. He had to be caught twice, but those delays helped. Rather than upset my concentration, the stoppages gave me a breather, although I did tighten up in the nineties because it took me some time to move from ninety to a hundred.
An elated Doug Walters walked from the ground with an unconquered century to his name. Doug and Bill Lawry (166) put on 187 for the fifth wicket. First to extend a congratulatory handshake was Ken Barrington, followed closely by the bespectacled Yorkshire opening batsman Geoffrey Boycott.
It [his debut Test century] was a great feeling, but it was nothing like the thrill I got when I first learnt I was in the Test team. That feeling could never be beaten.
Doug Walters played 74 Tests, scoring 5357 runs in 111 completed innings at an average of 48.26, with a highest score of 250. He is now a true Australian sporting legend, and many regard him as one of Australia’s national sporting treasures. Songwriter Ian Quinn, who has written for such singers as Slim Dusty, was so taken with his first meeting with Doug Walters that he was moved to pen a song about him. Entitled ‘A Legend Like Doug’, the song is part of an album, River or the Road, which Ian released in January 2007. These are the lyrics:
A LEGEND LIKE DOUG
You swung the mighty willow on the wickets around the world
Broke many partnerships with that in-swinging ball
And no matter how tough the game
You’ve always seen it through
And it never took the bush or Dungog out of you
You couldn’t care a dollar if you never made a cent
But you held a nation’s spirit when it nearly up and went
The changing of the guard underneath the lights
Wearing coloured clothing as the red ball turned to white
So let’s go back to Melbourne
In the shadow of Don Bradman
To those battles with the Windies, let’s take ’em on again
To the SCG in Sydney
Where you were king and always will be
Doug you’ll always be a legend
Like you were back then
So Doug I’ll shake your hand and shout you one before you go
We miss you from the game
Just thought we’d let you know
We miss that bit of larrikin
We miss that real true blue
No-one could fill the shoes of a legend Doug like you
So let’s go back to Melbourne
In the shadow of Don Bradman
To those battles with the Windies, let’s take ’em on again
To the SCG in Sydney
Where you were king and always will be
Doug you’ll always be a legend
Like you were back then
So let’s go back to Melbourne
In the shadow of Don Bradman
To those battles with the Windies, let’s take ’em on again
To the SCG in Sydney
Where you were king and always will be
Doug you’ll always be a legend
Like you were back then6
But legends don’t just happen.
Kevin Douglas Walters was born in Oomabah Hospital, Dungog in country New South Wales on 21 December 1945. Ted and May Walters had four children and Kevin Douglas was their third. Doug’s mum, May Walters, said:
I wanted to christen him Kevin James. His father was Edward James. However, Ted said he liked Doug. I think one of his favourite cricketers at the time was Doug Ring [the Victorian leg-spinner, who toured England with Bradman’s 1948 ‘Invincibles’]. And so we settled on Kevin Douglas, but he’s always been known as Doug.
May describes Doug as ‘a very casual baby’. ‘Nothing worried him in the slightest,’ she says. ‘When Ted and I were playing tennis, Doug would sit in the pram all afternoon.’
It was, May recalls, ‘just after he took his first steps’ that Ted put a cricket bat in Doug’s hand. ‘We always knew Doug would make it as a sportsman for he always had the ability to do what was wanted. He would find a way.’
His team-mates know too well about that trait. As Bob Willis came in to bowl the last ball of the day in Perth back in 1974, Doug had to hit it for six to complete the century in the session. Ian Chappell said of Doug: ‘Somehow the little bastard will find a way.’
The natural thing for a calf is to drink with his head up, because that’s where the ‘taps’ are on his mum, so it is the devil’s own job to make the calf put his head down into a bucket of milk. This particular day Pat Malone had the acknowledged world-champion calf at baulking the bucket. After the umpteenth try, Pat calmly picked up the bucket of milk and poured the lot over the calf. ‘Maybe that will soak in,’ he said.
Doug was only six or seven years of age when he would go out into the bush with his dad and the other timber workers to help drag out or ‘snig’—as he called it—the fallen logs.
Dad was a timber cutter. He worked for a local timber mill and I loved going out into the bush with him to collect the wood. We sometimes had a bullock team, but usually two old draught horses did the trick. We’d throw a chain around a log that had been cut down and snig it out of the bush. The use of the horses was before the tractor and bulldozer days and from very early on I learnt to harness horses or a bullock team.
The Walters family lived in a little town called Dusdodie, which was about 15 kilometres out of Dungog, where Doug was born. He was the third child: first was Warren and Colleen, then Doug, then youngest brother, Terry. It was at Dusdodie that Doug first busied himself catching rabbits and began to make money. In Doug’s childhood days Australia was still a nation which literally rode on the sheep’s back. A quid was a quid, and the beer had to be cold and downed mighty fast with the pubs’ six o’clock closing time. Homes in the cities were full of chrome, vinyl and laminated bench-tops. We drove FJ Holdens and raved over Elvis. The celebrated ‘cow’s lick’, which years later the Fonz made famous in Happy Days, was a revolutionary hair-do, a thumbs-down to the short-back-and-sides which so conditioned the older brigade. The prime minister, Bob Menzies, seemed immovable at the political crease, the nation was entranced by the ABC radio epic Blue Hills, and the Snowy River Hydro-Electric Scheme was completed. Momentous years for Australia.
Meanwhile Doug Walters was milking the cows, playing cricket and tennis, and hunting rabbits:
In those days trapping rabbits brought good money. We’d collect two shillings and sixpence a pair, selling them to the local butcher. On a good weekend I made more money than my Dad was earning at the mill and I eventually convinced him to come rabbiting with me so that he might earn himself some extra pocket money.
Doug’s first school was at Wangat, a one-teacher school with less than twenty students. The trip home to Dusdodie was some five miles but, according to Doug, the journey could be cut by at least a mile by walking the pipeline. This was the main water pipe which was linked to the huge Chichester Dam which, at that time, fed most of the Hunter Valley, including Newcastle and the surrounding areas. In those early school days Doug was like any other fearless kid, blissfully unaware of the hazards of walking along the pipe, which wasn’t much wider than a dining table:
My mate and I would race each other along the pipe and pass one another. There we were, running full pelt, our school bags bouncing about on our shoulders. At its highest point the pipeline was about 300 feet above the ground and cold shivers run down my spine these days when I look back at the danger we ignored. It is amazing that neither of us fell from a height. We did, of course, push one another off the pipe, but only when it was a few feet off the ground. Common sense must have prevailed when we were very high up on that pipe.
Cricket was in the Walters family’s blood. Ted Walters was a keen club cricketer, who played regularly for Telligra Bs and May Walters kept wicket for a local ladies team. Doug, Warren, Colleen and Terry spent many afternoons racing about the backyard engaged in fierce combat, and sometimes Ted and May joined the children for a three-a-side contest.
At Wangat Primary School the children played a form of French cricket, and whenever a shot beat the field, the ball scuttled down a steep slope, sending Doug and the other kids into a helter-skelter race to retrieve it:
Tossing the ball back up the slope was probably how I developed my throwing arm. I went to that school for about three years, then it folded for lack of numbers, which had dropped to seventeen before the authorities decided to close it.
Doug reckons the school was destined to close down, given that it didn’t even have sufficient numbers to field two cricket elevens.
The family moved to Alison, about five miles east of Dungog, where eight-year-old Doug attended the Alison Primary School. His mate, John Hooke, lived next door and the Hooke family had a grass tennis court so the boys played both tennis and cricket on the court’s surface:
It was only about one and half miles from our home in Alison to the school. We used to ride to school and were there by 7.15 a.m. John Hooke and I got there early so we had the school tennis court to ourselves. We used to knock the ball about until the start of classes.
Alison was another one-teacher school and that teacher was sports-mad Jim Fuller. He would join in with the boys in those pre-class hit-ups and often brought along his brother, Earl, to practise after school:
Usually the teacher had to tell us to get on our bikes and go home as we batted on until darkness fell. But often John Hooke and I were pitted against Jim and Earl Fuller. On many an occasion when we were practising for the school sports carnival, we would be outdoors training for the whole day, never seeing a classroom during that intense build-up. During my three years at Alison Primary School, I think we won every sports carnival in our grouping. Jim Fuller was very sports-minded. Practising the high jump, running, a few sets of tennis, instead of being in class was great. I won most of the blue ribbons for events in those days. I was pretty good in the running.
Before Doug began any sort of competition cricket, he watched his dad play for Telligra. Doug was among a number of kids who’d sit on the boundary line, all proud of their dads playing in the middle and all of them hoping that there would be a massive power strike so that half the players would be delayed, hand-milking cows: on the occasion when a player was late, one of the kids on the boundary would be allowed to field with the grownups. When one of the kids got the chance as a stand-in fieldsman, they were given the run-around, third man up one end then sent to fine leg at the end of the over. Doug reckons they would cover more ground than the Leyland brothers, but they loved the experience and no-one complained. Years later in the Caribbean in 1973, Test captain Ian Chappell ran Doug from third man to fine leg for all of one morning session. It was a disciplinary measure, but all of that was to come much later.
Doug began competition cricket when he was ten, turning out for the Under-15s, with his older brother, Warren. Soon after, Doug moved on to a team called Colts, whose home ground at the quaintly named town of Dingadee, just out of Dungog, was part of a large, privately owned property. There were half a dozen trees on the playing area, including a large gum tree which stood only about 20 metres from the bat. Every time a batsman hit a ball into the tree, four runs were awarded, and even a ball touching a leaf on the tree resulted in four.
The tree was at square leg, about 45 degrees behind square and everyone—the kids and the grown-ups—hit across the line of the ball to try and hit the tree.
Over the years cricket lovers came to love Doug’s horizontal bat shots. Anything remotely short of a length and Doug sprang into action: he went back and across, his judgement of length was swift and sure, hitting the ball with immense power. How different it might have been if that tree at Dingadee had been stationed at mid-off. In August 1968 the Australian team played Kent at the St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury. At ‘cow corner’ (deep mid-wicket) stood a famous oak that was long part of the ground’s folklore, and well in front of the boundary. Most of the Australians were amazed that a tree stood within the playing area. But not Doug Walters. The famous Canterbury oak passed into history a couple of years back, but local sentiment won and the ground authority has replaced it with a new oak.
In school cricket Doug was something of a hero with the ball. He bowled his medium-pacers, which were deemed ‘very fast’ by the opposing batsmen. Around the mid-1950s a Dungog farmer, Tom Abbott, was so taken with young Doug’s cricket that he had a chat to Ted Walters.
Tom apparently was impressed with some of the figures I was producing in local cricket and he suggested to my father that he wanted to ‘buy me the best bat that money could buy’. I had gone to Sydney for some reason. I think one of my mates had moved to Sydney and I spent a week with him on holiday. And part of my duty was to go and get this bat. I think he gave me 40 pounds—which was a lot of money in those days. We went into Mick Simmons Sports Store in Sydney and I bought a Gunn & Moore [Autograph] bat.
Doug spent a long time over his choice of bat and he must have driven the sales staff to despair as he handled every bat on display, then looked through the bats in the storeroom as well. Doug treasured that bat. He even slept with it under his pillow.
That was the first bat where I started writing my scores on the back. I didn’t write down the bad ones. When I am coaching these days, I note that the kids write down their scores on the back of their bats too. Sometimes I see their scores. ‘Why is this 0, 1 and 8 on the back of the bat?’ I tell them, ‘Don’t put the bad scores down. The bowler and particularly the wicket-keeper will be able to see that and they will say that this bloke can’t bat.’ I used to only put my good scores on the back of the bat and I believe Don Bradman did the same sort of thing.
Young Don Bradman was probably an exception in that he would have written down ALL of his scores as they were most likely all good.
Sometimes Doug got the chance to field for his dad’s team, Telligra, and that was always a thrill. Then he came under the influence of a policeman, Sergeant Vic Moffitt, who was organiser, coach and bus driver for the Maitland Police Boys team. Doug jumped at the chance to play for the team. During the Christmas holidays, Sergeant Moffitt used to drive the team nearly 150 kilometres to play in the Newcastle competition. In one match Doug took an incredible 9/8.
By the time he had reached the age of twelve Doug had developed a great love for bowling; this was his first love in cricket. He loved to see the bails fly when he clean-bowled a batsman. In a match for Maitland Police Boys against Newcastle, Doug took 17 wickets for just 11 runs in the two innings, and he finished the Under-13s season with 61 wickets at an average of 3 runs apiece.
Ted Walters was not a well-to-do man of the land and for the most part of Doug’s early life, Ted worked in a saw mill in nearby Clarencetown. Then the company bought a big slice of land—13 000 acres—in a place called Raglan. They established a dairy farm on part of the property and offered Ted the job to run the dairy. Doug had just begun attending Dungog High School when the family moved to the farm.
The land was heavily wooded and Doug was always keen to go out into the high country with the men and help them drag out or snig the logs. School, schoolyard cricket, snigging the wooden logs, milking the cows, and the hotly contested backyard ‘Tests’ presented Doug with a variety of interests and a good work ethic.