Day played 32 times for Cambridge University, captaining the side in 1901.[3] He played in four Varsity matches, scoring 117 not out in 1902, and was awarded his cricket Blue in his first year.[3] He scored a total of 1,631 runs for the university, hitting two centuries.[4]
Described as a "stylish batsman",[3] especially on the off-side, Day played 128 times for Kent between 1897 and 1919, scoring 5,893 runs.[4] He played regularly for the side in most seasons until the start of the First World War, although he made just one appearance for the county in Kent's first County Championship winning season of 1906 and again in 1910 and not at all in the 1913 Championship winning season.[5][6] He scored more than 1,000 runs in 1899 and 1901 and averaged 31.34 runs per innings for the county.[4][6] He played one first-class match in 1919, appearing in the 1919 County Championship against Hampshire County Cricket Club at Dean Park.[5]
Football career
Day was an inside forward and played once for Cambridge University in 1901, although he also captained the Queens' College side.[3] He went on to play amateur football for Old Malvernians and made 108 appearances for Corinthians between 1898 and 1914, scoring 117 goals for the side.[7] Day scored 68 of his goals on tour for Corinthians, including nine goals against All New York and seven against Cincinnati on the Corinthian 1906 tour of Canada and the United States.[7]
He was described as an "excellent inside-forward"[3] and was selected to play for England in the 1905–06 British Home Championship. He made three appearances for England, all in 1906, scoring two goals.[8] He also made six appearances for the England amateur team which was established in 1906.[7] Day played in the side's first match against France at Parc des Princes in Paris in November 1906, scoring twice.[9]
^ abcLewis P (2014) For Kent and Country, pp.143–144. Brighton: Reveille Press.
^ abcVenn J, Venn JA (1954) Alumni cantabrigienses; a biographical list of all known students, graduates and holders of office at the University of Cambridge, from the earliest times to 1900 vol.2, pt.2, p.260. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Available online. Retrieved 29 May 2017.)