Arthur Phebey
Arthur Henry Phebey was an English cricketer who played for Kent County Cricket Club between 1946 and 1961. He played in 327 first-class cricket matches during his career as a right-handed opening batsman.
Cricket career
Phebey was born at Catford in London in 1924. He played cricket for Kent Schools in 1939 before serving as a sub-lieutenant in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve during World War II. He made his first-class debut for Kent in 1946, and made 12 appearances during the season. Primarily an opening batsman, Phebey did not play the following season, and only appeared in two matches in 1948 before becoming a regular in the team between 1949 and his county retirement in 1961.Described as an "elegant" opening batsman, Phebey was considered "correct and sound" and was a "mainstay" of the team throughout his time at Kent. In 1954 he and Arthur Fagg scored two century opening partnerships in the same match against Gloucestershire, only the second time a pair of Kent batsman had done so in the County Championship. In 1960 he played in the last first-class match in Britain to be concluded within a day's play. After being the first batsman out on the pitch at Tunbridge Wells, Phebey predicted that "if we get 200 on that, we'll win by an innings". Kent made 187 runs and bowled Worcestershire out twice after 3:40 to win by an innings.
In total Phebey played in 327 first-class matches, 320 of them for Kent. He scored 14,653 runs, including 14 centuries with a highest score of 157, and passed 1,000 runs each season between 1952 and 1960, leading the county in runs scored in 1956. He bowled only 20 balls in his first-class career and did not take a wicket. A 1956 cigarette card described him as "a very sound fielder" and he took a total of 205 catches. Writing in 1980, John Woodcock compared Neil Taylor, an emerging Kent opening batsman, to Phebey, saying that he was "adhesive, quite stylish and not ineffective".