Born on 29 March 1871 in
Cambridge, Hayward came from a cricketing family: his grandfather,
father and uncle had all played first-class cricket. Hayward himself made his debut for
Surrey in
1893 and quickly established himself as an important part of the side, being
capped in
1894 and receiving the accolade of
Wisden Cricketer of the Year the following season. Although primarily a batsman, Hayward took 481 wickets in first class cricket, taking 114 in the 1897 season. GL Jessop referred to him as an awkward bowler, who bowled wide of the crease and achieved unexpected nip off the wicket that seduced the unwary batsman into an injudicious stroke. From
1895 through to his final season
in 1914, Hayward never once failed to reach 1,000 first-class runs, passing 2,000 on ten occasions and twice (in 1904 and 1906) scoring over 3,000; his 1906 aggregate of 3,518 (
at 66.37 with 13 hundreds) established a record which stood until surpassed by
Denis Compton and
Bill Edrich in 1947.
In 1898 he made his highest first-class score of 315 against
Lancashire.
In 1899 he and
Bobby Abel put on 448 for Surrey's fourth wicket against
Yorkshire. This remains the highest partnership for any wicket for Surrey.
In 1900 he achieved the very rare feat of scoring
1,000 runs before the end of May. Hayward's first
Test match for
England came on tour with
Lord Hawke's side against
South Africa at
Port Elizabeth in 1895/96, and in his second Test (at
Johannesburg) he hit 122 as England recorded an
innings victory. In all, he played 35 times for England scoring three hundreds. In his last innings, coming against
Australia in 1909, he was run out for six to finish just one run short of 2,000 for his Test career. He scored 130 at
Old Trafford in the fourth Test of the
1899 Ashes series, batting at number six. He came in at 47 for 4 and enabled the final total to reach 372. It was described as "one of the great Test innings" by
Ralph Barker. He followed that up in the fifth Test, at
The Oval, with 137, putting on 185 for the first wicket with
FS Jackson. He headed the batting averages for both sides in this series, in seven innings scoring 413 runs at 68.83. Once
Jack Hobbs made his Surrey debut
in 1905, he and Hayward formed an effective opening partnership for the county. The pair put on a hundred or more for the first wicket on 40 occasions. They only played together once for England, opening the innings when Hayward was recalled for what was to prove his final Test, at
Lord's in 1909. Despite a gradual decline in his athleticism in his later career, Hayward remained an effective batsman well into his forties, and in
June 1913 he scored his hundredth first-class century, becoming only the second batsman (after
W. G. Grace) to achieve this feat. He made his 104th and final hundred in August 1914 against Yorkshire at
Lord's (where Surrey played several "home" matches after
World War I had begun), but made just one in his last innings of all, against
Gloucestershire back at
The Oval and on grounds of age did not resume his career after the end of hostilities. Surrey won the
County Championship in his final season. Hayward had the rare honour for a professional of the time of captaining the side for six matches in August when the regular captain,
Cyril Wilkinson, was unavailable, in preference to the young amateurs
Donald Knight and
Percy Fender. Although primarily known as a batsman, Hayward was also an effective bowler for his county in the middle of his career.
In 1897 he did the "double", with 1,368 runs and 114 wickets, and in 1899 he took two
hat-tricks. His best bowling of 8–89 was achieved against
Warwickshire at
Edgbaston in 1901. Hayward was respected as a model professional. Of his final years with Surrey, David Lemmon wrote: "He was the senior professional in all aspects, setting down standards of behaviour which others violated at their peril. He led by bearing and by example." He stood in one first-class match as an
umpire, the 1920 game between
Oxford University and
Essex. He died on 19 July 1939 in Cambridge at the age of 68. ==References==