Cricket 1898

308 CRICKET : A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. 'J uly 28 1898. when he was out it was pretty clear that Lancashire would win. It was, however, by no means a walk over, but Frank Sugg and Mr. Eccles placed the result beyond doubt, S o m e r s e t . First innings. L. C. H. Palairet, c JBaker,b Mold ............................... 71 b Mold. H. T. Stanley, st Smith, b Stoddart ........................34 W . Trask, run out .......... 9 Griffin, c Eccles, b Mold ... 4 Hobson, c Smith, b Cuttell 17 S. M. J. Woods, b Mold G. Fowler, b Baker Second innings. .. 12 c Eccles, b Mold 15 c 8t jddart, b Mold 9 Ibw, b Briggs ... 1 b Briggs .......... 6 9 lbw, d Cuttell ... 51 58 c Mold, b Cuttell 26 J . Daniell, b Mold .......... 3 b Cuttell Tyler, c Ward, b Mold ... 20 Gill, b M o ld ........................59 Kev. A. P. Wickham, not c Hartley, b Stod­ dart .......... b Cuttell .......... out... B 8, lb 3 .. Total ... 19 not out .. .314 Total ...131 L a n c a s h ir e . C. R. Hartley, c Wickham, b Robson .......................34 c Trask, b Fowler 15 Ward, c Griffio, b Woods ...24 b G ill.................. 2 Tyldesley, c Robson, b Fowler..............................63 b G ill.................20 Sugg, c Wickham, b Fowler15 b Gill .................43 A. Eccles, c Robson, b Fowler... Cuttell, c and b Eowler Baker, b Gill................. W. B, Stoddart, lbw, Tyler ........................ Briggs, b W oods.......... Smith, c and b Woods Mold, not out not out ......... ... 29 st Wickham, Tyler......... ... 52 notout......... b ... 4 ... 35 ... 18 5 41 W a r w ic k s h ir e . Byes......... ......... 18 L b 6, b 4... 10 Total.. ..........297 Total (5 wkts) 151 S o m e r s e t . O. M. R. W. O. M. R. w . Cuttell ........... 37 11 104 1 ... ... 73 3 17 4 Mold .......... 41-2 9 105 6 ... ... 23 9 67 3 Stoddart........ . 10 3 33 1 ... ... 6 0 21 1 Biiggs .......... 20 10 33 0 ... ... 25 14 36 2 Baker .. .... 9 1 28 1 ... ... L a n c a s h ir e . O. M. R. W. O. M. 11. W. Fowler .......... 21 5 64 4 ... ... 8 2 17 1 Tyler .......... 28 3 92 1 ... ... 6 2 23 1 Woods ......... . 191 5 38 3 ... ... 5 0 ‘21 0 Robson ........ . 14 1 50 1 ... ... 2 0 12 0 G ill................ . 11 3 34 1 ... ... 15 1 56 3 Palairet ... 3 1 8 0 Stanley ... 0-2 0 4 0 WARWICKSHIRE v. DERBYSHIRE. Played at Derby on July 25, 26 and 27. Drawn. A brilliant innings by Mr. Evershed, and moderate batting by the rest of the team enabled Derbyshire to keep at the wickets nearly all day. The Derby­ shire captain made the highest score of his life in first-class cricket. He almost monopolized the scoring while he was in, reaching his hundred when a total of 161 was up, in two hours and ten minutes, and when he was out, he had made 153 out of 229. At times his batting was superb. Naturally, his partners were content to let him do the scoring, so that although his innings only lasted for two hours and fifty minutes, the rate of scoring of the team as a whole was not fast. The tail did very little. Warwickshire had made 19, without loss, when play ended on Monday. Devey was in great form on Monday, and only just missed his hundred, but the rest of the team could not do much, and the total of the innings was 68 behind that of Warwickshire. Good cricket by Mr. Wright, Storer, Chatterton, G. Davidson, and Charlesworth, enabled the Derbyshire captain to close, but Warwickshire were doing par­ ticularly well when the time came for play to cease. L.G.Wright,cDiver,b Field 1 b Dickens .........31 S. H. Evershed, c Santa.'l, b Lilley ........................153 b Field................ 0 Bagshaw, c Santall, b Field 12 b Santall Ftorer, b Dickens... ... Chatterton, run out ... Davidson (G.), run out Sugg (W.), b Field ... H. Blackwell, not out Davidson (F.), b Santall Charlesworth, b Field......... 5 G. G. Walker, c W. G. Quaife, b Field................. 5 B 13, lb 2 .................15 24 lbw, b Dickens ... 47 ... 7 b Dickens ..........66 ...24 c Lilley, bField .. 22 ... 22 c Lilley, b Field .. 10 not out................. 3 c Williams, b Santall .......... 5 n otout................22 14 3 Extras Total .................285 Total (8wkts) *224 * Innings declared closed. Firat innings. Quaife (W .), c and b G. Davidson .............. . ... 20 Devey.cStorer,bG.Davidson 92 Kinneir, b Blackwell............ 27 Quaife (W. G.), c Sugg, b Storer ................................ 1 Lilley, b Blackwell ............ 16 Diver, b G. Davidson...........16 A. C. S. Glover, b F. David­ son ..................................23 R. Williams, c Storer, b G. Davidson .................. 0 Santall, c Storer, b F. Davidson ........................ 0 Field, b G. Davidson........... 4 Dickens, not o u t................. 7 B 8, lb l, n b l, w l ...11 Second innings. b F. Davidson ... 15 b G. Davidson ... 12 b G. Davidson ... 0 not ou t................60 c G. Davidson, b F. Davidson ... 49 not ou t................33 Extras ... 4 Total ......... 217 Total (4 wkts) 173 D e r b y s h ir e . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. San'all .......... 30 12 43 1 ........... 52 29 69 2 F ield................. 40 8 107 7 ........... 36 11 83 3 Dickens ..........17 4 f7 1 ...........81 9 55 3 Kinneir .......... 4 1 170 ........... 5 2 3 0 Devey................. 5 3 8 0 ........... 2 0 7 0 Lilley.................11 1 38 1 ........... Santall bowled two wides and Dickens one. W a r w ic k s h ir e . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Davidson (G.) .. 34 15 43 5 ........... 24 13 23 2. Davidson (F.) .. 41 15 69 2 ........... 28 6 74 2 Walker .......... 8 0 56 0 ........... 10 2 32 0 Storer................. 9 1 44 1 ........... 7 1 25 0 Blackwell.......... 9 1 23 2 ........... 7 0 15 0 Bagshaw.......... 1 0 1 0 ............ G. Davidson delivered two no-ball, F. Davidson two wides, and Blackwell two no-balls. KENT y. SURREY. Played at Blackheath on July 25, 26 and 27. Abandoned. It was not at all a bad performance of the Kent team to score nearly 300 runs after Mr. Burnup, Alec Hearne, Mr. Mason, and Mr. Stewart had been dis­ posed of for about 80; on the other hand the score could not be considered large for the first innings on an exc llent wicket. Daring the innings there were two good partnerships : the first between Mr. Patter­ son, producing 79, and the second between Mr. Marchantand Martin, 90. Mr. Marchant, after taking a long time to settle down, played a particularly good innings. Martin scored pretty quickly, and Mr. Patterson played a very sound game indeed. Surrey had made 64 for two wickets, which was not a re­ markably good beginning, as the batsmen who were out were Brockwell and Mr. Crawford. On Tuesday, Lockwood played very pretty cricket, and Hayward was in his very best form; but Abel was not himself, and Mr. Jephson did nothing of note. Mr. Bradley met wiih suoh considerable success with the ball that at first there seemed a chance that Surrey would be a good many runs behind. But Baldwin and Wood stood in the breach at the end of the inn­ ings, and enabled Surrey to lead by 13 runs. Kent did so badly before stamps were drawn that they lost five wickets for 79, Lo' kwood and Brockwell being in great form with the ball. Mr. Burnup played good cricket for 45. Another wicket fell yesterday for an additional 10 runs, and th eD th e collapse was stayed by Mr. Merchant and Walter Wright. Mr. Marchant was at his best. Wright played steadily, and after­ wards Martin played a useful innings. In the end, Surrey had to make 201 in a little more than three hours. The game was at a very interesting stage when rain stopped play. K e n t . First innings. C. J. Burnup, c and b Rich­ ardson ...................................30 Hearne (A ), run out..............18 J. R. Mason, c Jephson, b Lockwood............................20 W. H. Patterson, cWood, b Brockwell............................47 H. C. Stewert, b Richardson 6 B. D. Bannon, c Crawford, b Hayward......................... ,33 F. Marchant, run out............. 48 Martin, c Baldwin, b Rich­ ardson .................................. 56 Wright, b Bichards n ... 0 W.M.Bradley, b Richardson 0 Huish, not out .................. 5 B 5, lb 8, n b l ............. 14 Total ....................277 Second innings. bLockwool ... 45 b Lockwood ... 5 c Jephson, b Brockwell ... 15 b Lockwood ... 4 c Wood, b Brock­ well .................. 5 run ou t................ 4 c Hayward, b Lockwood ... 49 notout.................34 c Wood, b Craw­ ford ..............44 b Crawford.......... 0 b Lockwood ... 5 E xtras.......... 3 Total..213 Second innings. b Bradley.......... 41 cMason,b Hearne 18 S u r r e y . Firat innings. V. F. S. Crawford, c Huish, b Bradley ........................ 0 Brockwell, b Bradley.......... 7 Holland, c Huish, b Bradley 39 Lockwood,cMason,b Hearne 45 notout............... 0 Hayward, b Bradley ..........101 cHuish,b Bradley 0 Abel, b Bradley .................10 runout................ D. L. A. Jephson, c Huish, b Bradley ........ . Baldwin, not out ... K. J. Key, 3 Marchant, b ~ ’ ■ ... 3 .. 24 b .. 2 .. 5 32 14 notout... 39 Bradley Wood, c and b Martin Richardson, c Martin, Bradley .......... ... Lb 4, nb 1 .......... Extras 2 Total ...............................290 Total (4 wkts) 96 K e n t , O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. L o ck w o -d ... 34 9 57 1 ........... 36‘1 9 69 5 Hayward ... 13 2 50 1 .............. 7 0 22 0 R ich ardson ... 32 6 97 5 .............. 25 8 53 0 Jephson ............ 10 1 31 0 .............. 9 2 16 0J Broikwell ... 9 2 28 1 .............. 15 5 32 2 Crawford . . 7 0 18 2 S u r r e y . O. M. R. W. O. Bradley ............. 50*2 16 127 8 ............. 16 W righ t ............. 27 8 56 0 .............. 6 Hearne (A .) ... 23 7 49 1 Mason Martin , 16 21 8 29 0 ... 7 24 1 Bradley delivered one no-ball. M. R. W . 2 44 2 2 15 0 2 12 1 1 2 ) 0 1 3 0 SUSSEX V . MIDDLESEX. TW O H U N D R E D S B Y M R . F R Y . Played at Brighton on July 25, 26 and 27. Drawn. In the absence of Mr. Brann and Mr. Newham from indisposition, and of Mr. Montezuma, Sussex gave a trial to a son of Walter Humpheys, and Mr. C. D. Fisher, and also included Mr. Arlington in the team. Thanks to brilliant play by Mr. Fry, and sound cricket by Mr. Murdoch, Killick, and Butt, Sussex remained at the wickets all day on Monday, having nine wickets down for 354. The innings was soon brought to a close on Tuesday morning. A fine start was made by Middlesex, Mr. Warner and Mr. Hayman scoring rapiily, and putting on 63 in less than an hour and a half for the firatwicket. Another long stand was made by Mr. Hayman and Mr. Stoddart, the latter making hay of the bowling, and batting in most attractive style. Then followed a collapse, and the total at the fall of the fifth wicket was the same as that at the fall of the second—viz., 175. The tail played up. but Sussex had a very useful lead, and although in the three quarters of an hour’s cricket which remained on Tuesday they only made 35 for two wickets, they were in a very satisfac­ tory position. Mr. Fry again playei a wonderfully good innings, and finally was able to score a hundred for the second time in the match. Thanks to his brilliant cricket and a good innings by the captain 8ussex was able to declare. It was perhaps just as well for Middlesex that there was not time to play the match out. S u s s e x . First innings. Second innings. C.B.Fry, cRawlin, b Ford...108 not out.................123 C. D. Fisher, lbw, b Trott... 6 c Ford, b Webb .. 2 W. L Murdoch, c & b Trott 43 b Trott................38 G. H. Arlington, c Trott, b Ford Killick, not out .......... Bean (J.), b Heirne ... Parris, b Webb .......... Butt, c Ford, b Hearne Tata, b Webb .......... Bland, b Webb .......... Humphreys, jun., lbw, Trott .................... B 18, lb 3, w l ... 18 cRawlin, b Webb 0 .. 76 b Trott................ 11 .. 2 b Trott............... 0 .. 7 notout................ 19 .. 52 cRawlin, b Webb 14 .. 14 b Webb ........ 0 ... 8 b .. 1 .2 2 Extras ........ 17 Total .................357 * Innings declared M i d d l e s e x P.F.Warcer.c Butt,b Parris 37 H. H.Haynnn,c Bean,b Tate 66 A. E. Stoddart, b Tate ... 69 F.G.J.Ford,c Bean, b Parris 0 Rawlin, c Butt, b Parris ... 19 Sir T. C. O’Brien, c & b Tate 0 Trott, b Parris ................. 6 R. W . Nicholls, c Butt, b Humphreys .................14 E.H.Bray.c&bHumphreys 19 Hearne (J. T.), notout ...29 Webb, b Bland .................17 B 4, lb 3........................ 7 Total (7 wkts) *224 closed. c Bean, b Tate ... 18 b Tate................. 0 c Butt, b Bland... 42 c Butt, b Hum­ phreys ..........36 notout................17 b Bland .......... 3 c and b Hum­ phreys .......... 1 b Humphreys ... 20 not out................. 2 B 8, lb 2, n b l ...11 Total ..................283 Total (7 wkts) 150

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