Gedye was born in
Auckland, where he went to school at
Otahuhu College. His father,
Arnold Gedye, played two first-class matches for
Wellington in the 1919–20 season. A right-handed opening batsman, Gedye made his debut for Auckland in 1956-57 and played unobtrusively for several seasons with a top score of 88 before coming into prominence with two centuries in the match against
Central Districts in 1963–64. That performance propelled him into the New Zealand
Test team for the three-match series against
South Africa. He made 10 and a match-saving 52 in around 70 overs in the First Test, and 18 and 55 in the Third Test. His 166 runs at an average of 27.66 placed him third in the New Zealanders' averages and aggregates for the series. He retained his spot in the Test team the following season after another century in a victory over Central Districts, but after the First Test against
Pakistan, in which he scored 26 in 160 minutes, he was dropped. When he then failed to be selected for the tours to India, Pakistan and England in 1965, he retired from first-class cricket. Gedye and
Roger Harris opened the batting together in several hundred games for their club in Auckland and for Auckland in the
Plunket Shield. Gedye also played
rugby for
Auckland. ==References==