Alan Knott was born on 9 April 1946 at Belvedere, Kent. He was a former wicket-keeper batsman who represented England at the international level in both Tests and ODI. Alan Knot made his Test debut at the age of 21 against Pakistan at Nottingham which England won by 10 wickets. He took 7 catches (3 in first innings, and 4 in Second innings) in the match and Mushtaq Muhammad dismissed him on Zero.
Philip Eric Knott was one of the purest eccentric wicket keepers there can ever have been. He played alongside many great England cricketers. But many saw him enough for over the years. He was a teammate, opponent or simply observing him on TV, to get the very real sense of a genius at work.
His departure for World Series Cricket opened a door into the England team for Bob Taylor, with whom he played many times, and Taylor’s own class as a glove-man was itself a clue as to the quality of the man who had been referred to him year after year.
Alan Knott superior batting played a part in this; as keepers, they were both outstanding. It would feel wrong not to include someone in a list of this sort who was a specialist wicket keeper as opposed to those such as Adam Gilchrist, Kumar Sangakkara and AB de Villiers who, fine keepers though they were or are, were chosen for their sides as much if not more for their batting skills.
Alan Knott had the silkiest of hands. People often say that you only notice a wicket keeper when he is doing things wrong and, on that basis, it was easy to overlook how well Knott was doing his job. Keeping wicket standing back to fast bowlers and standing up to the stumps for spinners are very different tasks, but his technique and movement were always excellent.
The ball just seemed to nestle into his hands every time he took it. Many remember him taking a catch off quite a thick edge while standing up to a left-arm spinner. Probably Derek Underwood, with whom he formed a great alliance. His hands just seemed to glide into the right position, and you were left wondering how on earth he could have reacted so quickly.
Very few keepers would have held that catch; most would have seen the ball clatter off their wrist. Keeping does not get any better than that. Taylor ran him close, so many cricketers feel privileged to have played alongside both. As a talented wicket keeper sometimes are, Alan Knott was a complete eccentric, but only bonkers in an endearing rather than an irritating way.
Concentrating intently on every ball that is bowled for hour after hour probably encourages a certain quirkiness and fastidiousness; they feel everything must be just right if they are not to commit the inexplicable, costly error. One of Knott’s obsessions were keeping himself ultra-fit, this at a time when fitness was not quite the prerequisite for England selection that it is now.
Like Jack Russell – another member of the wicket keeping fraternity with oddball tendencies – Knotty looked a bit of a shambles in his beloved floppy white hat, but you hardly cared about that when the ball went so precisely and regularly into the gloves. He was born to his work. He established himself as Kent’s regular keeper at the age of 18 and having been chosen for his first Test at 21 cemented himself as England’s first-choice glove-man within months, excelling on his first winter tour of West Indies under his Kent colleague Colin Cowdrey in 1967– 68.
England had been through several keepers in a previous couple of years and we're grateful for the stability Knott offered. He became a central figure in a highly successful England Test side in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and helped Kent win multiple championship titles and one-day trophies. He was also a very gutsy, pugnacious batsman who made a specialty of digging England out of trouble in a resourceful, unorthodox fashion.
His strengths as a keeper were his massive strengths as a batsman too. His agility and quick-footedness made him nimble around the crease and therefore difficult to bowl to. His ability to concentrate for long periods and watch the ball closely helped not only when he was standing behind the stumps but when he was in front of them too.
It was a great a testament to his batting skills that he coped better than most of England’s specialist batsmen with the raw pace of Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson in Australia in 1974–75. Only Dennis Amiss scored more runs for England in that series; a defiant century at Adelaide was one of five three-figure scorers Knott made in Tests.
He may have used unusual methods at times, but he would not have scored the runs he did in that series – with no helmet for protection in those days, of course – had he not possessed a fundamentally sound technique. He also took another century off Australia is a famous partnership with Geoff Boycott at Trent Bridge in 1977 when they rescued England from a desperate start that had seen Derek Randall fall victim to Boycott’s famously erratic running between the wickets.
In 95 Tests he scored 30 half-centuries in addition to his five hundred, which suggests impressive reliability. In later times, keepers were expected to offer more with the bat then they were then, but his Test record of 4,389 runs at an average of 32.75 put him in the all-rounder class for his generation.
He finished with what was then a Test record of 269 dismissals, which would have been many more had he did not sign up with Kerry Packer and for a rebel tour of South Africa, decisions that meant he appeared in only six Tests after 1977. He was only 35 at the time of his last Test and could easily have kept going for a few years beyond that.
A renown cricket journalist Simon Wilde describes him "a natural glove man, beautifully economical in his movements and armed with tremendous powers of concentration". Hist test career was ended against Australia at The Oval, the 6th match of the Ashes series in 1981. He scored extraordinarily 70 not out innings that save the match.
Alan Knott was born on 9 April 1946 at Belvedere, Kent. He was a former wicket-keeper batsman who represented England at both level in Tests and ODI.[/caption]Read More
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