Australia’s Lindsay Kline dies aged 81

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Former Australian Test player Lindsay Kline died aged 81, Cricket Australia said of the man best remembered for facing the last ball of the first tied Test match.
Slow, left-arm spinner Kline, who took part in 13 Tests between 1957 and 1961, played 88 first-class matches in which he took 276 wickets at 27.39. He died on Friday, Australia’s cricketing authority said. In the Brisbane Test of the famous 1960-61 series against the West Indies, Australia needed just one run to win when Kline fended off a delivery to square leg and his batting partner Ian Meckiff scrambled for the single.
But West Indian Joe Solomon fielded the ball and rocketed it to the stumps, running out Meckiff and ensuring the historic tie.
“Throughout his cricket career he was involved in some extraordinary moments that have become part of the rich history of our great game,” Cricket Australia Chief Executive James Sutherland said in a statement.
“It has been a very sad year for Australian cricket with the passing of a number of treasured members of our community including Richie Benaud, Arthur Morris and now Lindsay Kline.”

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