Geoff Keith
{{Short description|English cricketer}}
{{For|the musician|Jeff Keith}}
{{EngvarB|date=August 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2023}}
{{Infobox cricketer
| name = Geoff Keith
| image = File:Geoff Keith of Hampshire.jpg
| caption = Keith in 1967
| country =
| fullname = Geoffrey Leyden Keith
| nickname =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1937|11|19|df=yes}}
| birth_place = Winchester, Hampshire, England
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1975|12|26|1937|11|19|df=yes}}
| death_place = Southampton, Hampshire, England
| batting = Right-handed
| bowling = Right-arm off-break
| role =
| family =
| club1 = Somerset
| year1 = {{nowrap|1959–1961}}
| club2 = Hampshire
| year2 = 1962–1967
| club3 = Western Province
| year3 = 1968/69
| columns = 2
| column1 = First-class
| matches1 = 77
| runs1 = 2,108
| bat avg1 = 19.16
| 100s/50s1 = 1/8
| top score1 = 101*
| deliveries1 = 1,050
| wickets1 = 13
| bowl avg1 = 43.00
| fivefor1 = –
| tenfor1 = –
| best bowling1 = 4/49
| catches/stumpings1 = 79/–
| column2 = List A
| matches2 = 5
| runs2 = 67
| bat avg2 = 13.40
| 100s/50s2 = –/–
| top score2 = 33
| deliveries2 = 0
| wickets2 = –
| bowl avg2 = –
| fivefor2 = –
| tenfor2 = –
| best bowling2 = –
| catches/stumpings2 = 3/–
| date = 15 December
| year = 2008
| source = https://www.espncricinfo.com/cricketers/geoff-keith-15844 Cricinfo
}}
Geoffrey Leyden Keith (19 November 1937 — 26 December 1975) was an English cricketer and cricket coach. As a player, he played first-class cricket for Somerset, Hampshire and in South Africa with Western Province. Beginning his career with Somerset in 1959, Keith moved to Hampshire in 1962 where he made sixty appearances in first-class cricket, and played in Hampshire's inaugural List A one-day match in the 1963 Gillette Cup. He moved to South Africa in 1967, where he took up coaching. He returned to Hampshire in 1971 to become their coach, a role he maintained until his death from leukemia in December 1975.
Cricket career
=Somerset=
Keith was born in Winchester in November 1937. He grew up in the West Country, where he played his early club cricket for Taunton Deane.{{cite web|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000528/19580823/172/0012|title=Pickles and Walker not retained|work=Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser|page=12|date=23 August 1958|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription|via=British Newspaper Archive}} Keith made his debut in first-class cricket for Somerset against Cambridge University at Fenner's in May 1959, with him making a further appearance that season against the touring Indians.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/3/3661/First-Class_Matches.html|title=First-Class Matches played by Geoff Keith|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription}} He made his first County Championship appearance in the 1961 County Championship against Yorkshire. That season he made ten first-class appearances during the first half of the season, scoring 220 runs at an average of 13.75.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/3/3661/f_Batting_by_Season.html|title=First-Class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Geoff Keith|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription}} He featured just three times in the 1961 County Championship, and was not retained by Someset at the end of the season.{{cite web|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000528/19610923/255/0012|title=Alley, Wight and Greetham American bound|work=Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser|page=12|date=23 September 1961|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription|via=British Newspaper Archive}} In fifteen first-class appearances for Somerset, he scored 319 runs at an average of 12.76, but never passed fifty.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/3/3661/f_Batting_by_Team.html|title=First-Class Batting and Fielding For Each Team by Geoff Keith|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription}}
=Move to Hampshire=
In April 1962, Keith joined his native county, Hampshire.{{cite news|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001336/19620403/009/0009|title=Keith has big chance with Hants|work=Scunthorpe Evening Telegraph|page=9|date=3 April 1962|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription|via=British Newspaper Archive}} He played once for Hampshire in 1962, against Oxford University at Oxford, scoring 82 in Hampshire's first innings of the match.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/25/25489.html|title=Oxford University v Hampshire, University Match 1962|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=14 December 2008|url-access=subscription}} He played only three first-class matches in 1963, but did play in Hampshire's inaugural List A one-day match against Derbyshire in the Gillette Cup.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/3/3661/List_A_Matches.html|title=List A Matches played by Geoff Keith|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription}} In 1964, long-standing opening batsman Jimmy Gray was available for only the second half of the season, and Keith stood in for him for the first two months of the season, opening with Roy Marshall, though he failed to retain his place for long once Gray was available again. In seventeen first-class matches that season, he scored 653 runs at an average of 21.76. He made nineteen further first-class appearances in 1965, but at a different batting position: Barry Reed and Mike Barnard became Marshall's more regular opening partners, while Keith resumed batting in the middle order. He scored 561 runs at an average of 26.75 across the season, but did score the only century of his first-class career when he made an unbeaten 101 against the touring South Africans, reaching his century by hitting a six into the pavilion in the last over of the day, with Wisden remarking that up to that point he had played a rather stubborn innings.{{cite web|url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/228564.html|title=Wisden – Obituaries in 1976|date=5 December 2005 |publisher=ESPNcricinfo|access-date=21 September 2024}} He made a further two one-day appearances in the 1964 Gillette Cup, against Wiltshire and Warwickshire.
Keith found his first eleven opportunities limited in 1966, making seven first-class appearances in the first half of the season, alongside a single appearance in the Gillette Cup against Lincolnshire; the following season, he made twelve first-class appearances, scoring 294 runs at an average of 17.29, making two half centuries. He made a further one-day appearance in the 1967 Gillette Cup against Lincolnshire at Basingstoke. Keith asked to be released by Hampshire at the end of the 1967 season, in order to move to South Africa.{{cite magazine|url=https://magazine.cricketarchive.com/Magazine/1976/vol_57_no_3/24/index.html|title=Obituaries|first=E. W.|last=Swanton|author-link=E. W. Swanton|magazine=The Cricketer|location=London|year=1976|volume=76|edition=3|page=23|language=en}} For Hampshire, he made 60 first-class appearances, scoring 1,775 runs at an average of 21.38.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/3/3661/f_Batting_by_Team.html|title=First-Class Batting and Fielding For Each Team by Geoff Keith|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription}} With his part-time off break bowling, he took 12 wickets at a bowling average of 45.83, with best figures of 4 for 49.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/3/3661/f_Bowling_by_Team.html|title=First-Class Bowling For Each Team by Geoff Keith|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription}} In South Africa, Keith made two first-class appearances for Western Province against Orange Free State and Natal B in the 1968–69 Currie Cup, which bought his first-class career to a conclusion.
Coaching career and death
In South Africa, Keith obtained a pilot's licence. He kept his interest in the game by taking up coaching, obtaining an advanced MCC coaching certificate. He returned to England in 1971 to become Hampshire's coach, succeeding Leo Harrison, who had been expected to be replaced by Mike Barnard, however Barnard was involved in a serious car injury and was unable to take up the role. In his first season as Hampshire coach, the Second Eleven won the Second XI Championship, and were unbeaten in 1972 and 1973. The high levels of fitness and the high standards of fielding which he instilled into his players were pivotal in an unfancied Hampshire side winning the 1973 County Championship.{{cite book|last=Preston|first=Norman|year=1974|title=Wisden Cricketers' Almanack|edition=111|publisher=Sporting Handbooks|location=London|isbn=0850200458}} During the latter part of the 1974 season, he was diagnosed with leukemia.{{cite web|url=https://hampshirecrickethistory.wordpress.com/2018/03/05/a-z-k1/|title=A–Z (K1)|website=www.hampshirecrickethistory.wordpress.com|date=5 March 2018 |access-date=21 September 2024}} He succumbed to the disease on 26 December 1975, aged 38.{{cite news|url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CS237993512/TTDA?u=wikipedia&sid=bookmark-TTDA&xid=a7d08e38|title=Obituary|work=The Times|location=London|page=14|issue=59596|date=8 January 1976|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription|via=Gale}} He was succeeded as Hampshire coach by Peter Sainsbury.{{cite web|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0003894/19760407/024/0024|title=Sainsbury to retire|work=Nottingham Evening Post|page=24|date=7 April 1976|access-date=21 September 2024|url-access=subscription|via=British Newspaper Archive}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{cricinfo|id=15844}}
{{S-start}}
{{s-sports}}
{{succession box|
|before=Leo Harrison
|title=Hampshire cricket coach
|years=1971–1975
|after=Peter Sainsbury
}}
{{s-end}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Keith, Geoff}}
Category:Cricketers from Winchester
Category:Western Province cricketers
Category:English cricket coaches