William Lankham

William Lankham
Personal information
Born (1861-12-04)4 December 1861
Auckland, New Zealand
Died 2 December 1886(1886-12-02) (aged 24)
Devonport, New Zealand, Auckland
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1882-83 to 1883-84 Auckland
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 5
Runs scored 90
Batting average 12.85
100s/50s 0/0
Top score 27
Balls bowled 1367
Wickets 53
Bowling average 7.05
5 wickets in innings 6
10 wickets in match 4
Best bowling 7/13
Catches/stumpings 7/0
Source: Cricket Archive, 29 September 2014

William Lankham (4 December 1861 – 2 December 1886) was a New Zealand cricketer who played five first-class matches for Auckland before his death at the age of 24.

An opening bowler, Lankham played his first first-class match in December 1882 for Auckland against Canterbury in Christchurch. He took 7 for 39 in Canterbury's first innings; on the second day, which was also his 21st birthday, he made the second-top score in Auckland's first innings with 27, batting at number ten; then he took 4 for 60. Canterbury nevertheless won by 27 runs.[1] Auckland then travelled to Wellington, where Lankham took 3 for 28 and 4 for 41 in an Auckland victory.[2] The team then crossed Cook Strait again to play Nelson. In a match in which 40 wickets fell for 370 runs, Lankham took 6 for 18 and 4 for 39, and Auckland won by four runs after the Nelson last-wicket pair had put on 50, the highest partnership of the match.[3]

Three months later Taranaki travelled to Auckland to play their initial first-class match, but Lankham was too much for them, bowling unchanged to take 13 for 35 (7 for 13 and 6 for 22) and dismiss Taranaki for 63 and 55 to give Auckland an innings victory.[4] Lankham finished the season as the leading wicket-taker in New Zealand with 41 wickets at an average of 6.34.[5]

In 1883-84 Auckland played only one first-class match, against Canterbury in Auckland. Lankham bowled for most of the first innings and unchanged in the second to take 6 for 60 and 6 for 54, and Auckland won by four wickets.[6] He never played again, and died from tuberculosis[7] two days before his 25th birthday.

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References

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