Cricket 1908

A ugust 13, 1908. CR ICKET A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. 34 i D e r b y sh ir e . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Woodcock ... 29*2 2 102 5 .......... 8 2 32 0 Odell ........... 29 13 49 2 ............ 22 5 (53 1 Astill ........... 14 3 39 1 ............ 14 0 52 2 King ........... 15 3 44 2 ............ 7 2 16 0 Coe................... 4 0 150 ... ... 3 0 11 0 Wood ........... 3 1 5 0 Odell and Coe bowled 011 c wide each. W O R C E S T E R SH IR E v. LANCA SH IRE . Played at W orcester on A ugust.6, 7 , and 8. W orcestershire won by nine wickets. Lancashire had a weak side and did badly to be disposed of in two hours and three-quarters for 217 on a good wicket. Even for that score they were responsible to only two of their number, Tyldesley and Sharp, who, between them, made 171 of the 210 runs scored from the bat. Together, they added 116 for the third wicket in an hour and a-quarter, of which number Sharp, who hit nine 4’s, claimed 70. Kermode stayed whilst 45 were added, and at the close of the innings Tyldesley carried out his bat for 101 made out of 208 in one hundred and sixty minutes ; he hit ten 1 ’s, and gave only one chance— of stumping, when 98. After Bowley had been bowled at 9, Burns and G. N. Foster put on 88 in fifty minutes, and were both dismissed at the same total. Foster, by attractive and vigorous cricket, made his 71 in an hour; he hit ten 4’s. On Tuesday Arnold was quickly lbw, but M. K. Foster stayed half-an-hour for 20, and Burrows, quieter than usual, batted an hour for 32 and helped Cuffe to add 107 for the eighth wicket. Cuffe made his 126 out of 218 in one hundred and fifty-five minutes without a mistake, and hit eighteen 4’s. He played a defensive game until 50, but afterwards hit out and made his sccond half-century in thirty-five minutes. 145 behind, Lancashire lost Hornby at 52, Tyldesley at 59 and Hartley at 98. Sharp, however, made 4S out of 110 in eighty-five minutes, and Makepeace scored 59 by excellent cricket in one hundred minutes, so that at the end of the day the total for six wickets was 251. With 30 added Whitehead was bowled by a lob, after which Heap and Huddleston added 53 for the eighth wicket. Heap played the game admirably, and when the innings closed for 378, leaving Worcestershire witu 234 to win, earned out his bat for 82. Worcestershire made very light of their task, Bowley and Pearson making 88 for the first wicket, and the latter and G. N. Foster adding 147 without further loss. Pearson made his runs in two hours and a-half, and both he and Foster played admirably. It was a great performance. Score and analysis :— L an cash ire . First innings. Second innings. J.S.Cragg,c Bale,b Burrows 1 c Bale, b Arnold 9 A. Hartley, b Burrows ... 6 c and b Hunt ...49 Tyldesley (J. T.), not out ...101 st Bale, b Arnold 1 Sharp, lbw, b Burrows ... 70 c Bale, b Burrows 48 Whitehead, c Simpson- b Simpson-Hay Hayward, b Cuffe.......... 9 ward ............41 A. H. Hornby, c Cuffe, b Burrows .......................... 2 b Burrow s........... 28 Heap, c Bale, b Burrows ... 0 not out ...........82 Makepeace, c G. N. Foster, b Cuffe ................. . ... 0 c Bale, b Arnold 59 Huddleston, b Cuffe........... 4 cBurns,b Pearson 28 Kermode, c G. N. Foster, b Cuffe ..................................12 b Cuffe.......................14 Worsley, b Simpson-Hay- c M. K. Foster, ward .................................. 5 b A rn old........... 7 B 2, lb 1, w 2, nb 2..; 7 B 2, lb 7, w 2,n b 1 12 Total ...................217 Total W o rcestersh ire . 78 Bowley, b Sharp ... 8 Pearson, c and b Heap 23 G. N. Foster, c Make­ peace, b Whitehead 71 W. B. Burns, b Ker- modc..............................38 Cuffe, c Worsley, b Whitehead .............126 Arnold, lbw, b Ker­ mode ..............................25 Total .....................362 M. K. Foster, c Wors­ ley, b Whitehead ... 20 Second innings: Bowley, lbw, b Huddleston, F3 ; Pearson, not out, 116 ; G. N. Foster, not out, 79 : b 2, lb 2, w 1, nb 2. Total (1 wkt) 235. L an cash ire . G. H. Simpson-Hay­ ward, c Kermode, b Whitehead......... 4 Burrows, b Make­ peace .....................32 Hunt, b Makepeace.. 1 Bale, not out ........ 3 B 5, lb 5, nb 1 ... 11 First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. ■Cuffe ... »,.. 20 2 64 4 .. ... 20 7 51 1 Burrows .. 16 1 74 5 ... ... 18 2 81 2 Hunt ........... 10 3 40 0 ... ... 3 0 19 1 S.-H ayward... 8*4 0 32 1 ..., ... 20 1 86 1 Burns ... ... 2 0 10 0 Arnold ... ... 34*4 10 92 4 Pearson... ... 7 0 27 1 W orcestersh ire . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Kermode ... 27 5 81 2 ............ 11 3 28 0 Sharp ......... 9 3 22 1 ............ 9 1 34 0 Heap ......... 22 3 74 1 ............ 6 0 26 0 Huddleston ... 17 0 72 0 ............ 12 1 40 1 Whitehead ... 2 1’4 5 90 4 ............ 11 0 49 0 Makepeace ... 4 0 12 2 ............ 6 0 44 0 Tyldeslcy ... 1 0 7 0 Sharp bowled three no-balls and Whitehead one wide. W ARW ICK SH IRE v. G LO U CE STE R ­ SH IR E . Played at Edgbaston on August 6, 7 , and 8. Gloucestershire won by 60 ruus. This was the first meeting of the sides since 1903, and the visit of the Gloucestershire team to Bir­ mingham aroused much interest. The visitors lost their first three wickets for 24, but Jessop improved matters somewhat by making 29 in a quarter of an hour. Board scored his very valuable 46 out of 111 in eighty-five minutes, and Roberts seponded him well by making 39 ; the latter, however, was missed at mid-off when 3. The whole side werq disposed of on a good wicket for 165, and Board, Jessop, Roberts, and Parker were responsible for 131 of the 147 runs scored from the bat. In response the home side made 195 for six wickets, and for their good position they were wholly indebted to Lilley and Glover, who put on 105 for the sixth wicket in sixty-five minutes, after five wickets had falleu for 84. Lilley, made some powerful drives and pulls, and hit nine 4’s. On the Friday the outstanding wickets added only 34, Glover being caught at the wicket after batting one hundred minutes for 51. In their second innings Gloucestershire lost Langdon at 13, but Board again played well and was well supported. Brownlee helped to add 55 for the second wicket, Winstone 45 for the third, and Spry 34 for the fourth. Board was fifth out for a valuable and steady innings of 81 which lasted one hundred and seventy minutes ; he gave no chance, and hit five 4’s and as many as 40 singles. Jessop, during the twelve minutes he was in, made 21, and it was owing chiefly to Roberts and Dennett that Warwickshire were left with 265 to win. The former, missed in the slips when 43, batted ninety-five minutes for 56 and hit five 4’s, whilst the latter was in eighty-five minutes for his faultless 47. TJie last three wickets went down in four balls. Kinneir and Field made 13 for the first wicket, and Quaife batted an hour for 21. The only stand of the innings, howeve", was by Lilley and Fishwick, who put on 98 in eighty-five minutes. Once they were parted the end soon came, the last five wickets going down for 17 runs, leaving Gloucestershire successful by 60 runs. Score and a n a ly s is * G loucestershire . First innings. Board, b Field ... 46 Second innings. b Langdon, c and b Santall... 6 L. D. Brownlee, b Santall 0 Winstone, b Field ........... 0 G. L Jessop, c Kinneir, b Field.............. %.. .............29 F. B. Roberts, c Field, b Santall ... .................. 39 Spry, c and b Field ........... 0 Dennett, b Goodwin'. Parker, not out ... . Mills, b Santall ... . Penduck, b Santall . B 9, lb 9 ... . Total ... 17 ... 2 ... 0 ... 18 ...165 Goodwin, Santall ........... b Field.................. run out ........... lbw, b Field cKinneir, b Charlesworth b Field ........... c Goodwin, b Quaife ........... b Charlesworth... b Baker ........... not out ........... b Charlesworth... B 15, lb 7, nb 5 Total ..328 Cuffe bowled three wides and Burrows one wide and three no-balls. First innings. T. S. Fishwick, b Penduck 18 Kinneir, c Board, b Parker 18 Baker,c Dennett,b Penduck 18 Quaife, c Board, b Parker.. 9 H. A. Busher, c Board, b Dennett ..........................15 Lilley, lbw, b Mills ...........63 A. C. S. Glover, c Board, b Dennett ..........................51 H. J. Goodwin,'c Langdon, b Parker .......................... 5 Charlesworth, c Brownlee, b Dennett..........................15 Santall, not o u t................... 1 Field, c Spry, b Dennett ... 9 B 6, nb 1 ................... 7 W a r w ic k sh ir e . Second innings, c Jessop,b Parker 52 c Mills, b Dennett 8 b D ennett...........21 lbw, b Parker ... 21 not out b Parker c Langdon, Dennett ... run out ... 0 ... 64 b ... 1 ... 10 b D enn ett.......... 5 c and b Parker ... 1 b D ennett........... 6 B 8, lb 7 ... 15 G loucestershire . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. S a n ta ll.....14 2 1 48 5 ............. 26 2 94 1 Field ......... 20 2 78 4 ............. 28 4 86 3 Goodwin ... 6 0 21 1 ............ 10 1 21 0 Quaife ... . 1 2 3 43 1 Charlesworth 9*2 1 31 3 Baker ......... 5 0 26 1 Field bowled four no-balls and Quaifc one. W a r w ic k sh ir e . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. \V. Parker ......... 28 8 73 3 ............ 30"3 8 60 4 Dennett........... 36*2 14 72 4 ......... 46 12 87 5 Penduck ... 12 1 34 2 ........... 13 5 29 0 Mills ......... 9 1 25 1 ............ 3 0 13 0 Roberts......... 2 0 18 0 Penduck bowled one no-ball. IR E LAN D v. YO RK SH IRE . Played at Dublin on August 6 and 7 . Yorkshire won by ten wickets. Yorkshire, although very poorly represented, always held the upper hand, and eventually won by ten wickets. Grimshaw batted an hour and fifty minutes for 61, and Bates and Booth put on 53 together for the eighth wicket. Score and analysis : Y o r k sh ir e . Rhodes, c Corley, b R o ss.......................... 13 Hardisty, c Napper, b Lam b ert.............. 10 Grimshaw, run out ... 61 Wilkinson, c sub., b Kelly.......................... 28 Rothery, c Ross, b Kelly..........................11 Newstead, c Corley, b Kelly...........................0 Sir A. W. White (capt.), lbw, b K e lly ............... 3 Bates, e Napper, b R o s s ..........................28 Booth, c Kelly, b Ross 30 Watson, c Corley, b R o ss .............. ... 1 Brown, not out Byes, &c. ... 17 Total ...202 Second innings : Booth, not out, 7 ; Watson, not out, 6 ; byes, &c., 4. Total (no wkt.), 17. I relan d . First innings. W.W. Bourchier, inn out... 1 Second innings. Newstead, b B o o th ...............19 Total ...229 Total ...204 G. J. Meldon, c White, b Brewn ............. R. H. Lambert, c Rhodes, b Newstead ...............11 lbw, b Newstead 1 G. A. Morrow, c Rothery, b R h o d e s..........................14 c Booth, b Rhodes 49 F. H. Browning (capt.), c c Hardisty, b Booth, b Rhodes.............. 0 Rhodes............... 1 S. C. Smith, c Booth, b N ew stead.............. ... 3 b Newstead T. C. Ross, c and b Rhodes 3 c and b Booth H. H. Corley, lbw,b Rhodes 0 not out W. Harrington, not out ... G. W. F. Kelly, c Watson, b Newstead c Bates, b Rhodes 29 11 9 6 c Booth, b Rhodes 14 W. H. Napper, b Newstead 0 Byes, &c. 0 b Newstead ... 28 Wilkinson, b Rhodes............. 0 4 Byes, &c. ... 5 T o tal...............49 Total ...168 Y o r k sh ir e . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Ross .......... 19*5 5 56 4 ............ 24 0 7 0 Lambert ... 25 11 67 1 Kelly ...........19 1 62 4 Harrington ... 2 06 0 I relan d . First innings. Second innings. O. M. R. W.O. M. It. W. Newstead ... 12 “2 4 22 4 ............ 2 1‘3 4 59 3 Brown ........... 7 2 12 1 ............ 5 1 11 0 Rhodes........... 5 2 11 4 ............ 22 5 77 5 B o o th ........... 6 1 16 2 Newstead bowled one no-ball. N. A. Knox made 129 for Oxted v. C. Palmer’s X L, at Oxted on Thursday last. “ Unless the county clubs do more earnestly nurse amateurism, it is not so very difficult to estimate the days when the Championship will be delivered up to professionalism. Real cricket outside the Universities and the schools will then be confined to club and house matches .”—The Observer. MARHI FT<V ky 9ft., With ridge poles, l Y I M n y U L u O two centre poles, six wall poles and curtains, six nobs, two fligs, pegs, lines, guy ropes, mallet, complete, £3 15s.,; 30ft. by 16ft., complete, with 12 wall poles, £7 10s.; Soft, by I6f* , complete with 25 wall poles, £14 ; all sizes in stock Army Bell Tents, complete. 35s.; new Bell Tents, complete, 45s. each. — List of Fancy Tents post free, H. J. Gasaon, Government Conti actor, Rye.

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