


Palm continued to play first-class cricket in a few matches for Western Province over the next six seasons. He was dropped for the next Test and never regained a place in the team. He took one catch in the match to dismiss Wally Hammond in England's second innings. Palm did not distinguish himself in the match: batting at No 6, he made just 2 as South Africa established a lead of 117 on the first innings and then, when England had replied with a second innings of 428, he made only 13 as South Africa went down to defeat by 87 runs, being all out for 224 after a first-wicket partnership of 115. He was not picked for the first Test which followed immediately after this game, but was then selected for the second match of the series, at Cape Town just 10 days later. Palm scored 0 in his first innings, but made 41 in the second.
#Palm cricket scoring trial
The first representative game he played was a first-class match for "A South African XI" against the MCC essentially, the South African XI was a trial team composed of younger, promising players, and six of them, Palm included, went on to play Test cricket. But he had scored no further centuries when he was picked for representative teams against the English touring side in 1927–28. The stand remains the highest sixth wicket partnership for Western Province. He did not play in 1922–23, but in the next season he hit an unbeaten 106 in the match against Griqualand West, putting on 244 unbroken for the sixth wicket with Mick Commaille after five second innings wickets had fallen for 27.

Palm was a right-handed middle-order batsman who played first-class cricket intermittently for Western Province from 1921–22 to 1933–34. He was born in Rondebosch, Cape Town and died at Somerset West, Cape Province. Archibald William Palm (8 June 1901 – 17 August 1966) was a South African cricketer who played in one Test in 1927–28.
