Cricket 1884
194 CRIGKET; A WEEKLY REGORD OF THE GAME, jt jn e 12,1884, OXFORD UNIVERSITY t . M.O.O. AND GROUND (12 A S id e ). The Oxford University brought its home matches to a successful close on Saturday, when they defeated a weak team of M.C.C. and Ground with five wickets to spare. Through the heavy rains the ground was all against the batsmen, and the scoring in consequence was low. The last day’s play, though, was singularly exciting. Marylebone had a lead of 31 runs on the first innings, but when they went in again Mr. Buckland’s bowling was so effective that no one but Mr. Studd showed any form, and when the eleventh wicket fell the score was only 37. Mr. Buckland took seven wickets for 17 runs— a fine performance. Oxford had to get 69 to win in an hour and twenty-five minutes, and thanks to the good batting of Messrs. Key, Page, and Brain, won just before time with five wickets in hand. Mr. Key made a si 1 in each innings off Woof, M.C.C. a n d G r o u n d . First Innings. Second Innings. Mr. J. S. Russel, c Kemp, b Bastard ..........................22 b Buckland .. Mr. J. G. Walker, 0 Cobb, b Whitby......................................39 Barnes, b Whitby.........................5 Flowers, b P a g e ................. .2 6 Attewell, c Brain, b Whitby 0 Mr. E. J. C. Studd, c Cobb. b N ich olls..........................12 Mr. R. Miller, c Cobb, b Bastard ......................... ,1 5 Mr. H. Fowler, c Brain, b Page .................. .. .. 0 Mr. A. E. Payne, c Nicholls, b Page......................... .. 16 Mr. E. A. Parke, not out .. 5 Sherwin, b P a g e .......................0 Woof, b N icholla..................,1 8 Byes.......................7 run out.................. e Page, b Buck land .. .. b Buckland.. .. c Brain, b Buck land.................. Total ..165 b P age..................18 b Page .. .. 4 c Nicholls, b Page 9 c Key, b Buckland 0 b Buckland .. .. 3 b Buckland.. .. 0 notout .. .. 0 L b .................. 1 Total .. 87 O x f o r d U n iv e r s it y . First Innings. T. R. Hine-Haycock, b Flowers ..........................2 E. H. Buckland, b Woof .. 2 J. H. Brain, h w, b W oof .. 27 T. C. O’Brien, at Sherwin, b W o o f ..................................13 b Woof B. E. Nicholls, c and b Atte well .................................2 1 M. C. Kemp, b Flowers .. 41 H. V. Page, c Parke, b Woof 4 Second Innings, st Sherwin,b Woof b Flowers .. .. 18 A. R. Cobb, b Flowers.. .. 0 K. J. Key, not out..................19 A. G. G. Asher, b Attewell.. 0 H. O. Whitby, b Flowers .. 3 E. SV. Bastard, b Flowers .. 1 L b .......................... 1 not out..................3 b W oof..................2 b W oof..................16 not out..................3 c Payne, b W oof 18 Total ..134 Total .. 70 BOWLING ANALYSIS. M.C.C. a n d G ro u n d . T he Christchurch eleven, at Oxford, have been doing some high scoring recently. On May 26 and 27 they scored 567 (0. F. Jac- son, 130) ; on June 3, 311 for six wickets, v. Eton Ramblers, F. T . Higgins 109 not out. KENT v. DERBYSHIRE. Kent, though with only a moderate eleven, succeeded in defeating Derbyshire at Derby on Friday last by 67 runs. Their victory was mainly due to the brilliant batting of Lord Harris and the effective bowling of Wootton when Derbyshire went in a second time. The wicket bumped on the first day until the rain, and it played so treacherously at the close when the home county went in with 125 to win, that run-getting was very difficult. Such a complete failure of their batting, though, was hardly to be expected, and the last five wickets only added sixteen runs. Lord Harris’ second innings was a brilliant display of batting. He scored as many as 82 out of 134 while he was in. Among hia figures were a six, eight fours, and six threes. In the first innings of Kent, Marlow got G. Hearne, and Messrs. Jones and R. T. Thornton with successive balls—the hat trick. Score and analysis : K e n t . First Innings. F. Hearne, c Docker, b Walker..................................4 Mr. A. J. Thornton, c F. H. Sugg, b Marlow..................0 G. G. Hearne, b Marlow .. 7 Lord Harris, c Smith, b Marlow................................. : Mr. R. S. Jones, b M arlow.. Rev. R. Thornton, c W. Sugg, b Marlow.................. Mr. R. B. Sewell, run out .. Mr. S. Christopherson, c Marlow, b Cropper .. Wootton, not out.................. 8 H. Hearne, run out .. .. 3 Pentecost, c W. Sugg, b Cropper ..........................4 n otou t.. .. B 8,1 b 5 ..................13 B 3,1 b 9 Total..................97 19 Second Innings, b Walker .. .. l b Shacklock.. .. J c Mycroft,b Shack lock .................. st Mycroft, b W. Sugg..................8! b Shacklock .. j at Mycroft, b Shacklock .. b W. Sugg .. .. b W. Sugg .. c Docker, b Walker 2 1b w. b Marlow .. Total.. ..160 D e r b y s h ir e . First Innings. Second Innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. r . w . Nicholls . 29.3 12 44 2 Buckland 21 18 17 7 Whitby . 23 11 32 3 Bastard . . 58 32 45 2 Page.. . 80 12 37 4 O x f o r d . First Innings. Second Innings. O. M. R. W. O . M. R. W. Flowers . 31.1 13 83 5 ................ 18 6 26 1 Woof . 32 12 73 4 Attewell . 20 10 24 Barnes . 2 0 3 0 First Innings. Mr. R. P. Smith. 1 b w, b Wootton ..........................5 Mr. G. G. Walker, b’Christo- pherson ..........................9 Mr. L. C. Doeker, b Wootton 39 F. H. Sugg, 1b w, b Christo. pherson ..........................6 Chatterton, c H. Heame, b Christopherson.................. 0 Cropper, c Pentecost, b Christopherson..................2 W. Sugg, not o u t..................26 Foster, c Harris, b H. Hearne 25 Shacklock, b H. Hearnc .. 5 Marlow, c Jones, b Wootton 8 T. Mycroft, run out .. .. 2 B 4, w 2 ..................6 Second Innings. run out .. .. 2 st Pentecost, b Wootton .. .. 2 C Pentecost, b Christopherson 1 c Jones, b CI 11 isto- pherson .. .. 13 c Pentecost, b H. Heaine .. .. 3 b Woott^n .. c A. J. Thornton, b Wootton run out.................. b Wootton b H, Hearne not out.................. B .................. Total ..133 Total .. 67 Walker .. Marlow .. Shacklock Cropper .. SURREY v. LEICESTERSHIRE. Rain interfered considerably with the play in this match, at Leicester, on Thursday and Friday, and the scoring was low on both sides. In all, indeed, only 342 runs were made for the thirty-three wickets, and the average was only just over ten runs. Rylott bowled well in the first innings of Surrey, but the figures of Messrs. Roller and Horner, in the second innings of Leicestershire, were even more noteworthy. The former took four wickets for seven runs, and Mr. Roller, in the match, was credited with eight wickets for 38 runs. Surrey won, as in the previous match at the Oval, with seven wickets to spare. L e ic e s t e r s h ir e . First Innings. Second Innings. Mr. W. H. Hay, c W. W. Read, b Horner..................24 c Abel, b Roller .. 10 Wheeler, st Wood, b Barratt 0 c Abel, b Roller .. 0 Mr. C. C. Stone, c Wood, b Bairatt..................................10 c Abel, b Roller.. 0 Mr C. Marriott, c Diver, b J o n e s .................................. Warren, n o t o u t .................. Bottimore, c Horner, b Jones Mountney, c M. Read, b Horner.................................. Mr. C. L. Gardiner, c Abel, b H o r n e r .......................... Whittle, st Wood, b Barratt Parnham, h w, b Roller Ry'ott, c Wood, b Roller .. B 1, w 1 .......................... 2 c W. W. Bead, b Roller .. .. 7 53 c Bowden, b Roller 3 0 c Abel, b Horner 18 2 not out..................0 0 b Roller .. . . 1 2 2 c Roller, b Horner 23 8 c Wood, b Horner 0 0 cShuter, b Horner 0 2 ’8 8 Total..........................103 Total.. S u r r e y . First InningB. Mr. W. E. Roller, c Stone, b Rylott .. 15 Abel, b Parnham .. .. 5 Mr. E. J. Diver, c Mar riott, b Parnham .. 9 Mr. W. W. Read, b Ry lott ..........................39 Mr.J.Shnter, cW heeler, b R y lo t t ..................0 Maurice Read, c Pam- Total »• . . 9 7 ham, b Rylott .. .. 0 In the Second Innings Roller scored (not out) 3, Abel, b Rylott, 17, Diver, 0 Rylott, b Parnham, 22, W. W. Read (not out) 15, M. Read, b Bottimore, 16: b 1, w I__Trtnl " b o w l in g a n a l y s is . L e ic e s t e r s h ir e . Mr. M. P. Bowden, c Whittle, b Rylott .. 21 Jones.c Stone, b Rylott 0 Wood, b Bottimore Mr. C. E. Horner, Bottimore.. .. Barratt, not ou t.. B ................... Barratt Jones Horner Roller R.W. First Innings. O. M. . 83 10 40 3 . 30 20 33 2 . 10 4 . 1 1 Second Innings. O. 28 0 5 22 6 17 5.1 8 7 85 22 84 R.W. 10 0 Mr. Horner bowled a wide. BOWLING ANALYSIS. K e n t . First Innings. Sccond Innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R.W. 17 4 38 1 ................... 17 6 38 2 26 13 31 5 ................... 16 4 37 1 5 1 7 0 ................... 10 3 27 4 4.2 0 8 2 ................... 1 0 14 0 Chatterton . . 3 0 1 4 0 W. Sugg.. 7.2 3 18 3 D e r b y s h ir e . First Innings. Second Innings, 0. M. R.W. O. M R.W. Christopherson.. 19 5 56 4 .. .. 14 4 28 2 Wootton .. .. 2812 53 8 .. .. 19 8 23 4 H. Hearne . . . . 9.2 8 18 2 . . . . 5.1 2 5 2 Christopherson and Hearne each bowled a wide. T he Melbourne Club scored 403 against Ballarat, at Ballarat, on April 11 and 12. Duffy contributed 106 and McLeod 103. S u r r e y . First Innings. O. M. R.W. Rylott .. ..25.1 10 41 6 Parnham .. 20 6 42 2 Bottimore .. 6 3 9 2 Second Innings. O. M. R.W. . .. 21 13 19 1 . .. 18.3 2 80 . .. 7 1 24 Parnham bowled a wide. MIDDLESEX v. YORKSHIRE. Rain prevented a little more than an hour’s play in this match at Lord’s on Thursday and Friday. The ground,too,on Saturday morning was in such a state from the heavy downpour that the two captains decided to give up all idea of continuing the game, and the score was left with only two wickets of Middlesex down for 62 runs. M id d l e s e x . Mr. C. T. Sludd, not out .......................... B .......................... Mr. I. D. Walker, not out .. .. . . 4 0 Mr.A.J.Weble,b Ulyett 13 Mr.T.Greal orex ,c Loi k- wood, b U lyett.. .. 0 Total *. . . 6 2 A. W. Ridley, G. F. Yernon, T. S. Pearson, P. J. de Paravicini, J. Roleiteon Burton, and Hon. A. Lyttelton did not bat. The Yorkshire Eleven was composed as follows:— Ulyett, Hall, Emmett, Bates, Lockwocd, Grim&haw, Peel, Peate, Baker, Bunler, end F. Lee.
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