English cricketer
Ronald Joy
Full name Ronald Cecil Graham Joy
Born (1898-07-30 ) 30 July 1898Colchester , Essex , England Died 12 December 1974(1974-12-12) (aged 76)Ditchingham , Norfolk , England Batting Right-handed Bowling Right-arm fast-medium Role Bowler
Years Team 1931 Hyderabad Cricket Association XI 1930 Europeans (India) 1922–1928 Essex 1926–1927 Army
First-class debut 5 August 1922 Essex v Worcestershire Last First-class 4 December 1931 Hyderabad Cricket Association XI v Aligarh University Past and Present
Ronald Cecil Graham Joy (30 July 1898 – 12 December 1974) was an English cricketer .[ 1] A right-handed batsman and right-arm fast-medium bowler , he played for Essex between 1922 and 1928.[ 2] His father-in-law Frank Penn played Test cricket for England in 1880.[ 3]
Biography
Born in Colchester in 1898,[ 2] Ronald Joy made his first-class debut for his native Essex against Worcestershire during the 1922 English cricket season . He did not play first-class cricket the following season, returning for three County Championship matches in 1924 and one match against Gloucestershire .[ 4]
He didn't play at all for Essex in 1926 and 1927, instead playing first-class cricket for the British Army cricket team . He played against Cambridge University and the Navy in 1926, with those two along with Oxford University making up his opponents in 1927.[ 4]
He played twice against the touring New Zealand national cricket team in the 1927 season , a first-class match for the Army[ 4] and a non first-class match for HM Martineau's XI .[ 5] He returned to Essex for the 1928 season , playing eight County Championship matches.[ 4]
The remainder of his recorded cricket career was spent overseas. He played twice for Egypt against HM Martineau's XI in 1929,[ 5] and played in the Madras Presidency Match in India in January 1930.[ 4]
His last first-class match was for a Hyderabad Cricket Association XI against Aligarh University Past and Present in the semi-final of the Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup Tournament in December 1931.[ 4] He played twice more for Egypt against HM Martineau's XI in April 1936.[ 5] He died in Norfolk in 1974.[ 2]
References