Hopkins played for St. Margaret's (Anglican, Woodville) church team and Woodville Cricket Club before leaving Australia. He made his first-class debut for the Oxford University against
Free Foresters at
The University Parks in June 1921. He scored 7 and 32 in a game which ended in a Free Foresters win despite an innings of 202 from Oxford captain
R.L. Holdsworth. After three more university games Hopkins played the rest of the summer for Worcestershire, though his only substantial score was an
unbeaten 60 against
Lancashire in August. During 1922 and 1923, Hopkins divided his playing time between his university and his county. In June 1922, in a 15-run win for Oxford over the
Army at Oxford, he scored what was to remain his career-best innings of 142*, though he made only one other half-century that season. and won his
Blue when he appeared in the
Varsity Match at the same venue a few days later, making 42 in a crushing innings-and-227-run triumph over
Cambridge University. He ended 1923 with 729 first-class runs
at 27.00, by some way his highest season's aggregate. (His other wicket, claimed earlier that same summer, had been that of
Glamorgan's
Jack Mercer.) Hopkins scored just one more century — 122 against his old university in 1925 — although he got a start in a large number of innings without pushing on to fifties or hundreds. After the 1927 season, Hopkins ceased to play English cricket because of his work as a doctor in the
Malay States, although he played minor cricket for Straits Settlements as late as 1938, by which time he was well into his forties. The exception was 1931, when he turned out nine times for Worcestershire in the
County Championship during a period of leave. His uncle,
Bert Hopkins, played 20
Tests for
Australia; while another uncle,
Cyril Hopkins, had nine games for
Otago. ==Notes==