Cricket 1913

246 CRICKET: A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. M ay 31, 1913. E t c e t e r a s ’ B o w l in g A n a l y s is . O. M. R. W. 0. M. R. W. W hite1, \ ................ ... 21 ja 2 i 95 1 I " 12 4 27 2 M cCaughey................ ... I 7 - 2 . 1 65 3 it 4 0 29 2 Knight ................ ... 17 0 55 0 14 2 41 1 Fairbairn ................ ... 12 2 44 1 3 0 20 0 M ulholland................ 3 0 22 1 Straker ................ 3 0 26 0 _ _ _ _ Patteson ................ 2 0 21 0 _ _ _ _ Vincent ................ 4 0 14 1 _ _ Browne ................ _ 3 0 22 0 Fairbairn bowled a wide in each innings, Browne one in the second ; White bowled a no-ball in each, Vincent one in the first. P e r a m b u l a t o r s ’ B o w l in g A n a l y s is . 0. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Baker ............................. 16 1 43 2 13 1 4 ° 4 Naumann 26 6 63 8 10 5 21 1 W o od roffe............................. 9 4 10 0 16 3 48 4 Calthorpe ............................. 11 1 42 1 1 0 2 0 Lagden ............................. 3 0 16 0 _ _ M ulholland............................. 5*5 1 22 1 2 0 18 1 Riley ............................. 3 1 12 0 Fairbairn. ... ................ — — — 7 1 3 1 2 Woodroffe bowled one no-ball in the first innings, two in the second ; bowled a no-ball in each and a wide in the second. Naumann Somerset v. Yorkshire. By a regrettable error the score and analysis of this match, played at Bath on May ig and 20, were not given with the account last week. They are now appended :— First Innings. S o m e r s e t. < ’ Second Innings. J. Daniell, c and b Hirst M. P. Bajana, b Hirst Hardy, b Hirst .......................... Braund, c Booth, b Hirst ... E. S. M. Poyntz, c Haigh, b Booth P. W. Vasey, c Dolphin, b Drake .. H. E. Hippislcy, b Drake ... J. C. White, b Drake .............. Robson, b Drake Bridges, c Hirst, b Booth ... Chidgey, not out ........................... L.b. 6, n.b. i Total Rhodes, c Bajana, b Robson ... 28 Wilson (B. B.), c Daniell, b Bridges 33 Denton, c Braund, b Robson ... 11 Drake, b Robson ............................. 14 Hirst, b Robson .............................58 J. Tasker, c Chidgey b Hardy ... 17 Oldroyd, b W h ite .............................. o Bates, b Robson ... ... ... 7 Y o r k s h ir e B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . O. M. R. W. O. M. H ir s t ................ 1$ 6 33 4 ... 10 1 Booth ... 23 2 46 2 ... 16 4 D rake................ 4-3 1 4 4 ... 6*i 4 Booth bowled a no-ball in first innings. ... 14 b Booth ... 12 b Booth 3 b Booth .............. ... 13 c Denton, b Booth ... 15 c Denton, b Drake ., 10 b Hirst ............... 1 c Dolphin, b Booth .. 0 c Haigh, b Booth 12 b Drake ............... 1 b Drake ............... 2 not out ............... 7 ... 90 Total Y o r k s h ir e . Booth, not out Haigh, c Hippislev, b White Dolphin, c Chidgey, b White B. 4, l.b. 5, w. 1 ... Total ... 6 7 289 Umpires : Street and White. S o m e r s e t B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . R. W. O. M. R. W. 25 1 Robson 46 11 91 5 39 6 W hite... 41 12 92 3 3 3 Bridges 15 o 69 1 Hardy 10* 3 27 1 Bridges bowled a wide. Derbyshire v. Warwickshire. A Wednesday start is a rare occurrence in first-class cricket. The determining cause was the weekly half-holiday at Derby, and the experiment met with some measure of success, for in spite of the miserably cold weather 1,200 attended— a much better gate than usual there. Foster won the toss. Smith and Kinneir put up 40 before the first wicket fell, and the latter and Charlesworth added 62 for the second. After they were parted only Baker did much. He was slow at first, and at 42 he gave a chance— rather a difficult one, it is true— but on the whole he played a capital innings. Not out 84 when rain stopped play overnight, he only added 6 in the morning. No one did anything big for Derbyshire, who were 74 behind on the first innings. They stuck gamely to their work, however, and at draw ing of stumps on the Thursday had got six Warwickshire wickets down for 157, 56 of which had been added by the not out men, Parsons and Jeeves. Charlesworth alone of the earlier batsmen did at all well, and he w as slower than usual, taking roughly two minutes per run for his 56. On the last morning Jeeves left early, and though Parsons stayed on for a while, the tail gave him no help. Derbyshire went in to get 261 for victory — a task which last year would have been reckoned far beyond their powers. But it would seem that the Peak County’s form in the first two matches of the season was no mere flash in the pan. B aggallay and Oliver set themselves to wear down the bowling, and in 75 minutes before lunch scored only 54. The captain was out at 62. Cadman helped the Glossop amateur to add 42, and with Morton as O liver’s partner 42 more were added before the pro. was caught in hitting left-handed at one of Quaife’s slows. Three for 146 was go o d ; but the team has a tail, and victory was not yet assured. Chapman joined Oliver, and forced the pace from the outset. Runs came fa s t; in 75 minutes the 115 outstand­ ing had been made, and Derbyshire had won a really fine victory. The ex-captain hit five 4’s and six 3’s, and gave no chance. Oliver, to whom no end of credit is due, batted 3I hours with the grimmest determination, hit five 4’s and eight 3’s, and only ga ve one chance—at 86. Thus Derby­ shire won by 7 wickets. First Innings. W a r w ic k s h ir e . Second Innings. Smith, run out .......................................... Kinneir, c Baggallay, b Morton ................ Charlesworth, b Warren ............................. Quaife, b F o re s te r.......................................... Baker, c Oliver, b Warren ... ................ F. R. Foster, c Morton, b Forester Parsons, run out Jeeves, c Slater, b Morton............................. W. C. Hands, c Humphries, b Forester .... Field, b Forester .......................................... Brown, not out B. 3 , l.b. 3 ......................................... Total 29 c Baggallay, b Warren 2 29 c Root, b F o rester............... • 13 43 c Baggallay, b Root • 56 1 7 b Cadman ............................ 2 90 c Oliver, b M orto n ............... . 12 0 c Humphries, b Root • 3 8 c Humphries, b Root • 39 19 c Slater, b W a rren ............... • 36 13 b Forester ............................ 4 0 b Forester ........................... 0 0 not out ............................ 0 6 B. 11, l.b. 6, w. 2 19 254 T o t a l............... . 186 D e r b y s h ir e . First Innings. Bowden, b Foster Humphries, b Foster Root, c Kinneir, b Hands ... B. 5, l.b. 11, w. 3 13 7 19 Total Capt. R. R. Baggillay, b Foster L. Oliver, b Foster................ Cadman, b H a n d s................ Morton, lbw, b Jeeves J. Chapman, c Smith, b Hands Warren, not out ................ Slater, b Field ................ T. Forester, c Smith, b Foster S e c o n d I n n in g s : — Capt. R. R. Baggallay, b Hands, 23 ; Oliver, not out, 103 ; Cadman, cand bParsons, 17 ; Morton, c Smith, b Quaife, 24 ; J. Chapman, not out, 69 ; b. 16, l.b. 7, w. 2 — Total (3 wkts), 261. D e r b y s h ir e B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . Warren Forester ................ Slater ................ Morton Cadman Root ................ Warren bowled 2 wides in second innings. W a r w ic k s h ir e B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . 0. M. R. W. 0. M. R. W. 30 5 7 i 2 12 1 37 2 3 i-i 0 83 4 21*1 5 50 3 10 2 30 0 6 6 22 0 21 6 49 2 10 4 16 1 13 8 15 0 11 5 14 1 . — — . . — — 14 4 28 3 0 . M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Foster ................20 5 54 5 18 2 58 0 Field ............... 9 0 37 1 15 2 40 0 Jeeves ................ 18 4 48 1 7 0 23 0 Hands ............... 8-3 1 22 3 21*1 5 61 1 Quaife — — 13 3 28 1 Brown ... ... — — — — 5 0 14 0 Parsons ,.. ... — — — — ... 4 0 12 1 Field bowled 3 wides first innings ; Field and Hands each bowled one w ide second. Umpires : Carlin and Richardson. Oxford University v. M.C.C. The Dark Blues lacked their captain, Ian Campbell, and Herring was also left out, Naumann and W igan replacing them. The premier club sent down a side which, though not awe-inspiring, was stronger than Oxford usually receives. There were six bowlers on the side; but Jessop did not put himself on, and the other five were treated irreverently. Knott and Melle put up 87 for the first wicket in 55 minutes, the old Tonbridgian making 72 (eight 4*s) in that time. It was rather a variegated innings, but included plenty of good shots. Melle was not quite as slow as the figures make him appear ; it was his fate to get very little of the bowling. With Wilkinson and Colman, both Etonians, together runs came at a great pace. Colman was very sound, Wilkinson very sparkling and lusty. The latter made his 129 in 90 minutes, hit three 6’s (one a remarkable on-drive off Hearne) and sixteen 4’s, and gave no chance till just before he was

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