Keith Slater

{{Short description|Australian sportsman (1935–2025)}}

{{Other uses}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Use Australian English|date=September 2012}}

{{Infobox sportsperson

| name = Keith Slater

| image =

| fullname = Keith Nichol Slater

| birth_date = {{Birth date |1935|3|12|df=y}}

| birth_place = Midland, Western Australia, Australia

| death_date = {{Death date and age|2025|02|24|1935|3|12|df=y}}

| death_place =

|nickname = Spud

|module = {{Infobox cricketer

|embed=yes

| country = Australia

| nickname =

| heightft =

| heightinch =

| heightm =

| batting = Right-handed

| bowling = Right-arm fast-medium,
right-arm off-spin

| role = All-rounder

| family =

| international = true

| onetest= true

| testdebutdate = 9 January

| testdebutyear = 1959

| testdebutagainst = England

| testcap = 212

| club1 = Western Australia

| year1 = {{nowrap|1955/56–1967/68}}

| columns = 2

| column1 = Test

| matches1 = 1

| runs1 = 1

| bat avg1 = –

| 100s/50s1 = 0/0

| top score1 = 1*

| deliveries1 = 256

| wickets1 = 2

| bowl avg1 = 50.50

| fivefor1 = 0

| tenfor1 = 0

| best bowling1 = 2/40

| catches/stumpings1= 0/–

| column2 = First-class

| matches2 = 74

| runs2 = 2198

| bat avg2 = 21.13

| 100s/50s2 = 1/13

| top score2 = 154

| deliveries2 =

| wickets2 = 140

| bowl avg2 = 42.29

| fivefor2 = 0

| tenfor2 = 0

| best bowling2 = 4/33

| catches/stumpings2= 50/–

| date = 15 July

| year = 2012

| source = https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/1/1093/1093.html CricketArchive

}}

|module2=

{{Infobox AFL biography

|embed=yes

| image =

| birth_date =

| birth_place =

| death_date =

| death_place =

| height =

| weight =

| position =

| statsend = 1967

| coachstatsend = 1966

| repstatsend = 1967

| years1 = 1955–58, 1960–63, 1967

| club1 = Swan Districts

| games_goals1 = 166 (201)

| years2 = 1964–1966

| club2 = Subiaco

| games_goals2 = {{0}}52 {{0}}(41)

| games_goalstotal = 218 (242)

| sooyears1 = 1956–1967

| sooteam1 = Western Australia

| soogames_goals1 = 20 (16)

| coachyears1 = 1964–1966

| coachclub1 = Subiaco

| coachgames_wins1 = 64 (27–35–2)

| careerhighlights = *1961, 1962, 1963 – WANFL premiership

}}

}}

Keith Nichol Slater {{post-nominals|country=AUS|AM}} (12 March 1935{{Cn|date=February 2025}} – 24 February 2025) was an Australian cricketer and Australian rules footballer.{{cite news |last1=Townsend |first1=John |title=All-round champion Keith Slater dies at age 89|url=https://www.sportfm.com.au/news/all-round-champion-keith-slater-dies-at-age-89/ |access-date=24 February 2025 |work=SportFm |date=24 February 2025}} He played one Test cricket match for Australia as an all-rounder. In football, he played for Swan Districts and Subiaco in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) as well as twenty games for the Western Australian state team.

Cricket career

In cricket, Slater was an all-rounder who played in only one Test match, against England in 1958–59, but he played 67 first-class matches for Western Australia between 1955 and 1968. He had his best batting season in 1963–64, scoring 655 runs at an average of 38.52, and scored his only century, 154 against Queensland, when he opened the batting and helped Western Australia avert defeat.{{cite web |title=First-Class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Keith Slater |url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/1/1093/f_Batting_by_Season.html |website=CricketArchive |access-date=8 October 2020}}{{cite web |title=Queensland v Western Australia 1963-64 |url=http://static.espncricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/1960S/1963-64/AUS_LOCAL/SS/QLD_WA_SS_15-19NOV1963.html |website=Cricinfo |access-date=8 October 2020}} His best bowling season was 1960–61, when he took 30 wickets at an average of 32.43.{{cite web |title=First-Class Bowling in Each Season by Keith Slater |url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/1/1093/f_Bowling_by_Season.html|website=CricketArchive |access-date=8 October 2020}} He toured New Zealand with the Australian team in 1959–60, playing in two of the four matches against New Zealand.Wisden 1961, pp. 847–53.

His international career was shortened by doubts over his bowling action. Slater wasn't selected for the 1961 Ashes tour of England, even though he had been widely expected to go. The chairman of selectors, Don Bradman, explained it to him as a policy of the Imperial Cricket Conference to exclude bowlers with doubtful actions. He later showed Slater a film of his bowling to illustrate.{{cite web | url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/1010995.html | title=Brydon Coverdale meets Keith Slater, who played an Ashes Test in 1959 | work=ESPN Cricinfo | date=23 May 2016 | access-date=24 May 2016 | author=Coverdale, Brydon | author-link =Brydon Coverdale }} Slater was indeed called for throwing while playing against New South Wales in 1964–65.

Australian rules football career

Slater was a star footballer for Swan Districts and Subiaco and played in the 1961 WANFL grand final with Swans against East Perth and his display in containing "Polly" Farmer won him the Simpson Medal in a huge upset victory.Devaney, John; Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion; p. 293. {{ISBN|9780955689710}} He continued to play for Swans for the following two seasons before Subiaco, who had between 1947 and 1956 constantly occupied the bottom two places with Swans and whose president Frank Exell had approached Slater a season before, lured him as their captain-coach after two disappointing seasons.Spillman, Ken; Diehards: The Story of the Subiaco Football Club 1946–2000, p. 99. {{ISBN|0957818505}}

In Slater's first season the Maroons made only their fourth open-age finals appearance since 1936, but were unexpectedly defeated by the equally unsuccessful Claremont in a rainy first semi-final. The following two seasons proved very disappointing, with the Maroons winning only eight games in 1965 and six (plus one draw) in 1966, when they lost their last nine matches. This led to questioning of Slater's coaching methods, notably his taking the Maroons on a trip to Singapore during the 1964/1965 off-season, and his contract was not renewed for 1967.Spillman; Diehards 1946–2000; pp. 103–108 Slater returned to Swan Districts for 1967 but retired following that season.{{Cn|date=February 2025}}

Later life and death

After he retired from playing, Slater ran a sports store, Slater Gartrell, in Perth, and was also a television and radio sports commentator. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2020 Australia Day Honours for "significant service to cricket, Australian rules football, and baseball, in Western Australia".{{cite web |title=Mr Keith Nichol SLATER |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/2006034 |website=honours.pmc.gov.au |access-date=8 October 2020}} He was awarded the Australian Sports Medal in 2000.{{cite web |title=Mr Keith Slater |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/984076 |website=honours.pmc.gov.au |access-date=8 October 2020}}

On 24 February 2025, Slater died at the age of 89.{{cite web|url=https://www.sportfm.com.au/news/all-round-champion-keith-slater-dies-at-age-89/|title=All-round champion Keith Slater dies at age 89|work=Sport FM 91.3|date=24 February 2025|first=John|last=Townsend}}

See also

References

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