Category
page 1Sussex cricketers

Imran Khan
Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi is a Pakistani former cricketer, philanthropist, and politician who served as the 19th prime minister of Pakistan from August 2018 until April 2022. As a cricketer, he captained the Pakistan national cricket team to victory in the 1992 Cricket World Cup. After retiring from cricket, he founded the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Centre, Pakistan's first cancer hospital. He is the founder of the political party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and was its chairman from 1996 to 2023.

C. Aubrey Smith
British actor (1863-1948)
Miles Dempsey
British army officer (1896-1969)
Henry Hyndman
English writer and politician (1842–1921)
Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon
British politician (1866-1941)
Rashid Khan
Afghan cricketer
Mustafizur Rahman
Bangladeshi cricketer

Ranjitsinhji
Colonel Kumar Sri Sir Ranjitsinhji Vibhaji II (10 September 1872 – 2 April 1933), often known as Ranji or K. S. Ranjitsinhji, was an Indian cricketer who later became ruler of his native Indian princely state of Nawanagar, (present day Jamnagar) from 1907 to 1933. The main part of his cricket career was from 1893 to 1904 when, as one of the greatest batsmen of his time, he played for Cambridge University, Sussex, London County and, in 15 Test matches, for England.
C. B. Fry
English cricketer and rugby union footballer (1872-1956)
Ishant Sharma
Indian cricket player.
Ross Taylor
New Zealand cricketer
Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi
Indian cricket player. (1941-2011)
Brendon McCullum
New Zealand cricketer
Mohammad Rizwan
Pakistani cricketer (born 1992)
Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond
English patron of cricket (1701-1750)
Travis Head
Australian cricketer
George Bailey
Australian cricketer
Eknath Solkar
Indian cricket player (1948–2005)
Ed Joyce
Irish cricketer
Vernon Philander
South African cricketer
Piyush Chawla
Indian cricketer
Steven Finn
Cricket player of England (born 1989)
Wayne Parnell
South African cricket player
Javed Miandad
Pakistani cricketer
Chris Jordan
English cricketer (born 1988)
Jaydev Unadkat
Indian cricket player
Calum MacLeod
Scottish cricketer
Billy Murdoch
Australian cricketer (1854-1911)
Reece Topley
English cricketer (born 1994)
Alex Carey
Australian cricketer and footballer
David Wiese
South African cricketer
Umar Gul
Pakistani cricket coach and former cricketer
Amjad Khan
English cricketer (born 1980)
David Sheppard
English cleric and cricketer (1929-2005)

Jofra Archer
Barbadian-English cricketer
Luke Wright
English cricketer
George Dockrell
Irish cricketer

Michael Bevan
Australian cricketer
Ryan Harris
Australian cricketer
Henry Brand, 2nd Viscount Hampden
Governor of New South Wales (1841-1906)

Mohammad Sami
cricketer, Coach
Lou Vincent
New Zealand cricketer
James Lillywhite
Cricket player of England. (1842-1929)
Ian Gould
cricket umpire
Kepler Wessels
former South African cricketer, also played for for Queensland in Australia and Sussex in England
Monty Panesar
English cricketer
Philip Salt
Welsh cricketer (born 1996)
Maurice Tate
cricketer (1895-1956)
Fred Tate
English cricketer (1867-1943)
Arthur Gilligan
English cricketer (1894-1976)
Ravi Bopara
Cricket player of England. (born 1985)

Mushtaq Ahmed
Pakistani cricketer
Saqlain Mushtaq
Pakistani cricketer
Dwayne Smith
West Indian cricketer
Jerome Taylor
Jamaican cricketer

Peter Kirsten
South African cricketer and rugby union footballer
Kumar Shri Duleepsinhji
Kumar Shri Duleepsinhji (13 June 1905 – 5 December 1959), often known as Duleep or K. S. Duleepsinhji, was an Indian international cricketer who represented the English cricket team. He was a right handed batsman and an occasional leg break bowler. Playing in the era before the Indian Independence and the establishment of the Indian cricket team, he played first class cricket in the United Kingdom and later represented the England team.
Alfred Shaw
English cricketer and rugby footballer (1842-1907)
Yasir Arafat
Pakistani cricketer
Donald Smith
Sussex cricketer (1923–2021)