Horace Fisher

[1] He is notable as the first bowler to ever claim a hat trick of LBW victims,[3] in the course of taking 5 for 12 against Somerset at Sheffield in August 1932.

Umpire Alex Skelding, after dispatching Mandy Mitchell-Innes for five and then Bill Andrews first ball in the same manner, stared up the wicket at the new man Wally Luckes, when the third appeal was made.

Earlier that week Fisher took six wickets for 11 runs, against Leicestershire at Bradford, which remained his best bowling return.

[2] Fisher died in April 1974, in Middlestown, Horbury, Yorkshire, at the age of 70.

This biographical article related to an English cricket person born in the 1900s is a stub.