I am sure many others think that only Don Had 90+ average in test but there was an unlucky player who scored hundred and never selected again for his team.
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[/TR]
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[TH=“class: left, align: left”]Player[/TH]
[TH=“class: left, align: left”]Span[/TH]
[TH]Mat[/TH]
[TH]Inns[/TH]
[TH]NO[/TH]
[TH]Runs[/TH]
[TH=“class: padAst”]HS[/TH]
[TH]Ave[/TH]
[TH]100[/TH]
[TH]50[/TH]
[TH][/TH]
[TH][/TH]
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[TR=“class: data1”]
AG Ganteaume (WI)
1948-1948
1
1
0
112
112
112.00
1
0
0
[/TR]
[TR=“class: data1”]
DG Bradman (Aus)
1928-1948
52
80
10
6996
334
99.94
29
13
7
[/TR]
[TR=“class: data1”]
MN Nawaz (SL)
2002-2002
1
2
1
99
78*
99.00
0
1
0
[/TR]
[TR=“class: data1”]
VH Stollmeyer (WI)
1939-1939
1
1
0
96
96
96.00
0
1
0
[/TR]
from Cricinfo.
**AG Ganteaume **
In one respect Andy Ganteaume, a diminutive wicketkeeper-batsman, eclipsed even Don Bradman. Whereas Bradman ended his career with a Test average of 99.94, Gunteaume’s was 112. On his Test debut, against England at Port-of-Spain in 1947-48, he scored 112 and yet he never played for West Indies again. West Indies had a formidable batting line-up around this time - it was the era of Walcott, Worrell, Weekes, Sobers, Kanhai, Rae, Stollmeyer and Gomez - and there were suggestions that he slowed down when nearing his hundred, possibly costing West Indies the chance of victory. Jeff Stollmeyer later wrote: “Andy’s innings in its later stages was not in keeping with the state of the game and his captain [Gerry Gomez] was forced to send a message out to him to ‘get on with it’.” Stollmeyer did concede that Ganteaume was unlucky to miss out on selection for the tour of India the following year. Ganteaume continued to play for Trinidad, and in fact toured England as late as 1957 without getting into the Test side.
and
http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/294164.html
Andy Ganteaume’s 112 against England in 1948 remains the highest score by a batsman who’s played only one Test. Read the Rewind for more about Ganteaume’s hundred for the slow pace at which he scored it, which cost him his spot in the team. Coincidentally, Ganteaume played the Trinidad Test only because Jeff Stollmeyer, the regular opener, was injured. And, nearly a decade earlier, Jeff’s brother Vic Stollmeyer scored 96 on debut at The Oval. It was West Indies’ last Test before the war and Vic never played again.
http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/52955.html
Batting and fielding averages
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[TR=“class: data1”]
Tests
1
1
0
96
96
96.00
0
1
11
0
0
0
[/TR]
Stollmeyer, Victor Humphrey, who died on September 21, 1999, aged 83, scored 96 in his only Test innings for West Indies. Vic Stollmeyer was a Trinidadian right-hander and a last-minute selection for the last Test match before the war, at The Oval in 1939. According to his younger brother Jeff, he had been told he was not playing and so went out on the town the night before the game. Luckily, West Indies fielded first. When West Indies did bat, Vic Stollmeyer ran out George Headley, but stayed out there to put on 163 in 100 minutes with Bam Bam Weekes, scoring his runs in what Wisden called perfect style in just two and a quarter hours. By the time West Indies played another Test, his career was over; Jeff, however, went on to become captain