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Australian sports journalist, writer and cricket historian (1926 – 2002) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jack Ernest Pollard OAM (31 July 1926 – 25 May 2002) was an Australian sports journalist, writer and cricket historian.
Jack Pollard | |
---|---|
Born | Sydney, Australia | 31 July 1926
Died | 25 May 2002 75) Sydney, Australia | (aged
Citizenship | Australia |
Occupation | Writer & journalist |
Known for | Sports journalist, writer, cricket historian |
Awards | Medal of the Order of Australia |
Born in Sydney on 31 July 1926, Pollard began his journalism career in 1943 as a copy boy at Sydney's Daily Telegraph newspaper. At the age of 18, he was called up to the Australian Army, serving from 1944 to 1947 and finishing with the rank of sergeant.[1] A foot injury sustained during an army rugby game saw him sit out nine months at Holsworthy Barracks. The injury may have saved Pollard's life as the other men of his assigned platoon were later killed in action in New Guinea.
From 1945 to 1947, Pollard lived in post-war Japan working as a sports editor for the armed forces newspaper there. He returned to Sydney briefly, then moved to England, where he worked as a horse racing writer for a newspaper in Sheffield.
In 1948, he started work as a correspondent for the Australian Associated Press in London which included a regular column, sometimes serious, other times humorous.[2][3]
He covered many major sporting events, including the 1948 Summer Olympics, ten Wimbledon Championships and the 1948 tour of England by Don Bradman's Australian cricket team.[4][5][6]
Pollard returned to Sydney in 1956, where he worked as a sports reporter with the Telegraph before starting his own publishing company in 1959, Jack Pollard Publishing, which specialised in books on sport and leisure topics.[7] Pollard was a prolific writer and editor, who produced a large number of sporting reference books, including a definitive five-volume history of Australian cricket, encyclopaedias on rugby union, golf, horse racing and a series of popular fishing guides. He also wrote biographies for several sports stars including tennis players Lew Hoad and Rod Laver, cricketer Keith Miller and umpire Lou Rowan, golfer Bruce Devlin, rugby league players Ken Thornett and Johnny Raper, and VFL player Peter McKenna.[8]
Although Pollard's works included all Australian sports,[9] it is his cricket writing that is considered an important part of his legacy. Books include such topics as:
Pollard retired from publishing in 1981 to concentrate on writing.[14][15]
He died on 25 May 2002, after suffering a stroke upon his return to Sydney from a research trip in Melbourne.
The Jack Pollard Trophy is awarded annually by the Australian Cricket Society for the leading Australian cricket book published over the previous 12 months.[17]
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