Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 58. Chapters: Ian Chappell, Clem Hill, Greg Chappell, Joe Darling, Nick Xenophon, Raphael Cilento, Robert Helpmann, Lionel Logue, Renfrey Potts, John Lavington Bonython, Newton Moore, Trevor Chappell, Bill Griggs, Adam Liaw, Jack Trengove, Bert Kelly, Rodney Jory, Russell Dumas, Hugo Throssell, Philip McBride, Henry Fry, Will Ashton, Harold Boas, David Fawcett, John Burton Cleland, Geoffrey Reed, Herbert Angas Parsons, Horace Nock, Rick Davies, Luke Tapscott, Nick Martin, William Douglas Allen, Bernie Vince, Robert Gerard, Wayne Jackson, Con Stough, Norman Jolly, Bill Bateman, Edward Holden, Harold Young, Hermann Homburg, Cecil Madigan, Adam Thomson, Brian Hone, Brian Kenneth Hobbs, Nick Lower, Henry Brose, Charles Chewings, Herbert Basedow, Duncan Chessell, Greg Siegele, David Angel, Ed Lower, Ivan Venning, Peter Darley, Hurtle John Lewis, Doug Padman, Peter Woodley Mann, David Basheer, Charles Richmond Glover, Paul Rofe. Excerpt: Clement "Clem" Hill (18 March 1877 - 5 September 1945) was an Australian cricketer who played 49 Test matches as a specialist batsman between 1896 and 1912. He captained the Australian team in ten Tests, winning five and losing five. A prolific run scorer, Hill scored 3,412 runs in Test cricket-a world record at the time of his retirement-at an average of 39.21 per innings, including seven centuries. In 1902, Hill was the first batsman to make 1,000 Test runs in a calendar year, a feat that would not be repeated for 45 years. His innings of 365 scored against New South Wales for South Australia in 1900-01 was a Sheffield Shield record for 27 years. The South Australian Cricket Association named a grandstand at the Adelaide Oval in his honour in 2003 and he was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame in 2005. A short and stocky left-handed batsman, Hill had a crouched, somewhat awkward stance....