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Trevor Hohns: Difference between revisions

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| best bowling2 = 6/56
| catches/stumpings2= 86/–
| source = httphttps://content-auswww.cricinfoespncricinfo.com/ciaustralia/content/player/5688.html CricInfo
| date = 19 August
| year = 2020
}}
 
'''Trevor Victor Hohns''' (born 23 January 1954) is a former [[Queensland]] and [[Australia]]n [[cricket]]er who played in seven [[Test cricket|Test matches]] in 1989, making his international at the age of 3534.<ref name=ci>[https://www.espncricinfo.com/australia/content/player/5688.html Trevor Hohns], [[CricInfo]]. Retrieved 29 September 2020.</ref> Hohn was largely unheralded during the 1989 Ashes series, during which his wickets included England's [[Ian Botham]] in the fourth Test at Old Trafford, who was bowled for a duck after missing a charging hoick. Hohns also was a handy late-order batsman, often batting as high as number six for Queensland in [[Sheffield Shield]] cricket. He finished his first-class career with two centuries and 30 half-centuries from 152 matches, though 40 was his best Test score among his seven innings.
 
Earlier in his career when Hohns was a relatively obscure player on the fringes of Queensland cricket, he signed up to play for [[South African rebel tours#Australian tours, 1985–86 and 1986–87|the Rebel Australians during the controversial South African series in 1985/86 and 1986/87]] during the [[Apartheid]] reign. Hohns was one of only two spin bowlers in the touring party, along with former Australian Test left-arm spinner, [[Tom Hogan]]. Hohns was one of the Rebel Australians banned from playing state and Test cricket for the following two years.