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Douglas St. John

Douglas Stuart St John was a New Zealand sportsman who played field hockey for the New Zealand national team and first class cricket for Otago and Wellington between the 1946–47 and 1956–57 seasons. A right-handed batsman, St. John played 34 first-class matches, scoring 1,236 runs at 20.94 with five half-centuries.

Career
Doug St John was born at Nelson in 1928 and attended Otago Boys' High School, where he won the award for most improved player in the cricket team in his second-last year, 1944. He went on to study commerce at the University of New Zealand. St. John made his debut on 1 January 1947, against Auckland. Batting at six for Otago, he scored 28 and 31, and took two catches but could not stave off a one wicket defeat. He went on to play two more matches that season; scoring eight and eight not out against Wellington on 31 January, six and 25 in a drawn game against the Marylebone Cricket Club on 25 March. He ended his first season with 106 runs from three matches at 21.20, with a best of 31. At the start of the next season, St. John scored 85 and five not out against Wellington on Christmas Day. He would go on to play five matches in total, scoring a career-best 278 runs at 34.75, with two half centuries. His batting and sharp fielding in the match were noted, and he was named alongside John Reid as a promising player who might be selected to tour England in 1949. He struggled with the bat during the next few seasons, scoring only 102 runs during 1948/49 at 20.40 with a best of 53, and 117 during 1950/51 at 16.71, followed by 92 runs at 13.13 and 146 runs at 18.25 during his first two seasons at Wellington. Opening the batting – as he often did after moving to Wellington – St. John's 88 was bettered only by Test cricketer John Reid's 106 as Wellington pursued Central Districts' first innings score of 183 all out. St. John made 15 more runs in the second innings as Wellington reached victory by four wickets. The following season was to be his last, however, and saw St. John play five matches, scoring 182 runs at 20.22 with a best of 52 – his only half century of the season, St. John worked as a solicitor. He died at Ōtāne in Hawke's Bay in 1992 at the age of 64. An obituary was published in the 1996 edition of the New Zealand Cricket Almanack. ==References==
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