Graham Vivian


Graham Ellery Vivian is a former New Zealand cricketer who played in five Tests and one One Day International from 1965 to 1972. His father, Giff Vivian, played seven Tests for New Zealand in the 1930s. He made his Test match debut without previously playing in a first-class match.

Cricket career

After some fine performances as a leg-spinning all-rounder for the Auckland Under-20 side in the 1964-65 Brabin Tournament, he was selected in the Test side just after his nineteenth birthday, against India in Calcutta, without having played a first-class match. He made a useful 43 in the second innings, coming in when New Zealand was struggling at 103 for 7 and helping the side avoid defeat. He toured England with the national team in 1965 but was unsuccessful with bat or ball, and did not play a Test.
He toured the West Indies in 1971-72 and played four Tests but without success. However, his fielding was outstanding: Henry Blofeld described the 1971-72 New Zealanders' fielding as "the most impressive I have ever seen from any side anywhere", and he singled out Vivian as "the best of all". He continued to play domestic cricket in New Zealand until 1978-79, but never played another Test.
His best first-class bowling figures were 5 for 59 for Auckland against Central Districts at Auckland in 1967-68. On a brief non-Test tour of Australia in 1969-70 he hit his highest first-class score of 137 not out against Victoria in Melbourne, out of a New Zealand total of 220, having come to the crease at 22 for 4.

After cricket

In 1981 Vivian established a company manufacturing synthetic turf for sports grounds. By 2007 its New Zealand factory was weaving 950,000 square metres of various kinds of turf a year.