Bertram Sutton Evans MVO (17 December 1872 — 2 March 1919) was an English first-class cricketer and Royal Navy officer.
He would see action in the First World War and was present at the Battle of the Falkland Islands commanding the armed merchant cruiser HMS Macedonia.
[4] It was in 1900, that Evans made his debut in first-class cricket for Hampshire, with him playing two matches in the County Championship against Warwickshire and Sussex at Portsmouth.
The first of these happened in early 1912, when he was chastised after a bad gun layer's test on Pandora manifested a "want of supervision of training and organisation for war disclosed in report."
[13] From March 1917, he commanded the battleship HMS Implacable,[11] until she returned to the United Kingdom and paid off in July 1917 at Portsmouth to provide crews for anti-submarine vessels.
In October 1918, there was a mutiny of sorts aboard the ship when large numbers of her crew disembarked without orders; Evans was adjudged to have been to blame for the incident and was relieved of his command two months later.