[2] He was again an irregular player in 1934, but at the start of the 1935 season he played a match-saving innings of 105 not out and shared a seventh wicket partnership of 199 with Tom Dollery, who also made his maiden century, in the game against Gloucestershire; the partnership remains in 2015 Warwickshire's highest for that wicket against Gloucestershire.
[3] He did not manage to build on this start to the season, however, although his fielding was exceptional: the South African Cyril Vincent dropped his bat and stood to applaud the catch Collin took to dismiss him at square leg in the touring team's game at Edgbaston.
[4] He was not successful in the 1936 season and at the end of the year he left the Warwickshire staff.
[1] Collin returned to North East England in 1937 and for the next 39 years he was the cricket coach at Durham School.
[1] This biographical article related to an English cricket person born in the 1910s is a stub.