James Lawrence (New Zealand cricketer)


James Duncan Lawrence was a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Canterbury from 1892 to 1907, and played three times for New Zealand in the days before New Zealand played Test cricket.

Early career

A "small, thin and wiry" batsman, Lawrence made his first-class debut in 1891-92, but scored only 27 runs in his first four matches over two seasons.

Partnership record

In Canterbury's first match of the 1893-94 season he opened the batting for the first time. Auckland batted first and were dismissed for 157. At 2.45 on the first day Lawrence and Len Cuff went to the wicket to open for Canterbury, and when a short tea interval was taken three hours later both men had scored centuries. Cuff was out to the last ball of the day, making the Canterbury score at stumps 306 for one wicket, scored in three and a half hours of play. Cuff's 176 set a new record for New Zealand first-class cricket, beating George Watson's 175 in 1880-81. Lawrence was out early the next day for 167. Cuff's and Lawrence's centuries were only the fourth and fifth in the 30-year history of New Zealand first-class cricket. Their partnership was the highest partnership in New Zealand first-class cricket, and it remained the first-wicket record for New Zealand for 57 years. William Robertson took 14 wickets on his first-class debut, and Canterbury won the match by an innings and 156 runs.
Lawrence was selected in New Zealand's first match, against New South Wales a month later, but Lawrence made only 6 and 3 and New Zealand lost.

Later career

He scored only one more fifty in the next 12 seasons. However, in 1906-07, his last season, he scored 289 runs at an average of 36.12 – more runs than any other New Zealand batsman. He made 61 and 37 not out in a victory for Canterbury over MCC and 60 and 26 not out in a victory over Wellington, and was selected to open for New Zealand in the two-match series against MCC, which were his last two first-class matches. He scored 18 and 51 in the first match, putting on 112 for the first wicket with Ned Sale, and his career ended a few days later on his 40th birthday when New Zealand beat MCC by 56 runs in Wellington to square the series.
He later coached the cricket team at Christ's College, Christchurch, while he worked as the Christchurch manager for the New Zealand drug company Sharland and Co.