Horace Snary

{{Short description|English cricketer}}

{{EngvarB|date=August 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}}

{{Infobox cricketer

| name = Horace Snary

| image = Horace Snary in 1931.jpg

| caption = Snary in 1931

| country = England

| fullname = Horace Charles Snary

| heightft =

| heightinch =

| nickname =

| living =

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1897|9|22|df=yes}}

| birth_place = Whissendine, Rutland, England

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1966|12|26|1897|9|22|df=yes}}

| death_place = Leicester, Leicestershire

| batting = Right-handed

| bowling = Right-arm slow medium

| role = Bowler

| family =

| club1 = Leicestershire

| year1 = 1921–33

| type1 = First-class

| debutdate1 = 11 June

| debutyear1 = 1921

| debutfor1 = Leicestershire

| debutagainst1 = Yorkshire

| lastdate1 = 1 September

| lastyear1 = 1933

| lastfor1 = Leicestershire

| lastagainst1 = Surrey

| columns = 1

| column1 = First-class

| matches1 = 183

| runs1 = 2156

| bat avg1 = 15.97

| 100s/50s1 = 1/–

| top score1 = 124*

| hidedeliveries =

| deliveries1 = 35414

| wickets1 = 419

| bowl avg1 = 24.27

| fivefor1 = 12

| tenfor1 = 1

| best bowling1 = 7/31

| catches/stumpings1 = 115/–

| date = 22 July

| year = 2013

| source = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/32/32915/32915.html CricketArchive

}}

Horace Charles Snary (22 September 1897 – 26 December 1966) was an English cricketer who played first-class cricket for Leicestershire between 1921 and 1933.{{cite web | url = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/32/32915/32915.html| title = Player Profile: Horace Snary | publisher = www.cricketarchive.com | accessdate = 20 July 2013}} He was born at Whissendine, Rutland, and died at Leicester.

Army service

Snary joined the 2/6th Battalion of the South Staffordshire Regiment at the age of 18 and saw action in Ireland during the 1916 Easter Rising.Jonathan Farmer, "Horace Snary", The Cricket Statistician, Spring 2017, pp. 33–37. Having been promoted to lance-corporal he accompanied the battalion to France in February 1917. He saw action in the Third Battle of Ypres from September to November 1917, where he suffered lung damage leading to double pneumonia, ending his military career with the rank of sergeant. His twin brother William was killed in action in 1917.

Cricket career

Snary was a right-handed lower-order batsman and an extremely economical right-arm slow- to medium-pace bowler: through his career, he conceded only 1.72 runs per over. He made his first-class debut for Leicestershire in a couple of matches in 1921 but made little impression, failing to take a wicket.

In 1924, Leicestershire, to that point one of the weaker first-class counties, decided that a more professional approach was needed for success; the club appointed its first-ever professional coach, the former Surrey and England player Ernie Hayes, and entered a second eleven in the Minor Counties Championship for the first time.{{Cite book | title = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack | edition = 1925 | volume = Part II | publisher = Wisden |chapter = Leicestershire Matches | page = 287}} Snary, Haydon Smith and Norman Armstrong were among players who later became prominent who were brought on through this system and in the team's first season in the Minor Counties Snary took 38 wickets at a cost of less than 12 runs per wicket, including a return of five wickets for six runs against Buckinghamshire.{{Cite book | title = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack | edition = 1925 | volume = Part II | publisher = Wisden |chapter = Second-class Counties | pages = 492–493}} He made one first-team appearance in 1924 and three in 1925 – finally taking a first-class wicket – and then came into the team regularly in the second half of the 1926 season.{{cite web | url = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/32/32915/First-Class_Matches.html | title = First-class Matches played by Horace Snary | publisher = www.cricketarchive.com | accessdate = 21 July 2013}} Wisden Cricketers' Almanack noted that he was "able to keep an excellent length and make the ball go away" and that he "required careful watching".{{Cite book | title = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack | edition = 1927 | volume = Part II | publisher = Wisden |chapter = Leicestershire Matches | page = 355}}

Snary played regularly in Leicestershire's first team from 1927 onwards as an accurate, containing bowler. He took 34 wickets in 20 matches in 1927, but doubled that to 68 from 30 games in 1928.{{cite web | url = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/32/32915/f_Bowling_by_Season.html | title = First-class Bowling in each season by Horace Snary | publisher = www.cricketarchive.com | accessdate = 21 July 2013}} George Geary had been out of form in 1928 and his return to bowling strength in 1929 meant that Snary played less, but he was again a regular member of the side in the three years from 1930 to 1932, and in 1931 he took 101 wickets in the season, at an average of 18.11. Snary's role was as economical back-up to Leicestershire's frontline bowlers and in no innings in 27 County Championship matches, despite taking 80 wickets in those games, did he take more than four wickets in an innings.{{Cite book | title = Wisden Cricketers' Almanack | edition = 1932 | volume = Part II | publisher = Wisden |chapter = Leicestershire Matches | page = 422}} Against Cambridge University, however, he took seven wickets for 31 in the university's first innings and, with three for 34 in the second innings he finished with match figures of 10 wickets for 65 runs in 61.3 overs, the best innings and match figures of his career.{{cite web | url = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/13/13882.html | title = Scorecard: Leicestershire v Cambridge University | date = 10 June 1931| publisher = www.cricketarchive.com | accessdate = 21 July 2013}}

Snary's batting was not rated at Leicestershire until late in his career, and he spent most of his first-class matches batting at No 9 or No 10: a career average of 15 and an extremely high proportion of not-out innings – 114 out of 249 – indicate that he was probably under-rated as a batsman, but he only passed 50 once. That was in 1932 in the game against the Indian touring team when, having top-scored with 25 in Leicestershire's first innings batting at No 8, he was sent in to open the innings when the county followed on and carried his bat throughout an innings of 291, scoring 124 not out himself.{{cite web | url = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Scorecards/14/14461.html | title = Scorecard: Leicestershire v Indians | date = 20 August 1932 | publisher = www.cricketarchive.com | accessdate = 21 July 2013}}

The 1933 season was a poor one for both Snary and Leicestershire. The county finished bottom of the County Championship for the first time (it had been jointly at the foot of the table before, but never on its own) and finance became very tight. Snary's bowling was less effective in terms of containment than before – he conceded runs at more than two per over – and he took only 23 wickets, playing in around half the team's games. He left the staff at the end of the season and did not play any further first-class cricket.

Later life

After Snary retired from first-class cricket he returned to his native village of Whissendine, where he established a successful farming business producing poultry, fruit and vegetables. He also contracted to lay cricket pitches and tennis courts. He played for Whissendine Cricket Club until the 1950s. In 1950, when the owner of the club's ground decided to sell the land, throwing the future of the club into doubt, Snary bought the land himself, guaranteeing the club's survival.

Towards the end of his life Snary suffered from ill-health, including glaucoma, which left him blind, and a recurrence of his wartime breathing difficulties. He died in Leicester Royal Infirmary in 1966.

References