Cricket 1913
25 i CRICKET : A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. M a y 31, 1913. S u ssex B o w le r s ’ A n a ly sis . O. M. R. W. 0. M. R. W. Jupp ................ 7 1 35 0 . . — ■. .— — — Relf (A.) ................ 21 6 50 2 7 3 18 2 Relf (R.) 11 3 36 1 7 0 26 O Vincett ................ J 5 2 60 2 .— — — T— Vine i ................ 16-5 3 55 3 — . — . —- --- Fender ................ 1 7 1 70 2 — ■— — --- Wilson ...............— — — — 1 0 4 O Umpires : Carlin and Phillips. Fender delivered one no-ball in the first innings. Gloucestershire v. Nottinghamshire. Monday’s play a t Gloucester w as of the “ W ho’d have thought it? ” type. On a good wicket Notts collapsed before Dennett and Parker for 88, the last 5 w ickets only adding 18. John Gunn batted 90 minutes for 27; and, while _he was tied up, the rest seemed quite helpless. Gloucestershire, without doing anything wonderful, performed far better. Sewell made 21 of the first 30; and there w as a good stand of 91 in 70 minutes for the fifth w icket by the steady Dipper and J. W . W . Nason, stocky, resolute, and hard-hitting. The old Hastings boy scored 50 in an hour, and was 81* at the finish, when Gloucestershire had scored 202 for 6. On Tuesday he made his first century in first-class cricket. In all he batted 195 minutes, gave no chance, and put in some really brilliant hitting. Smith showed hitherto unsuspected batting ability, and helped to add i n for the seventh wicket. Notts made a bad start in their second innings. George Gunn and Hardstaff were out before double figures went up. Lee, who seems to be developing into a really good bat, and John Gunn added 88 for the third wicket, and Iremonger, Alletson (28 in 20 minutes, two 6’s included), Oates, and Wass all scored ’ usefully, the last-named having three lives in making 20; but the total of 241 left the home side only 16 runs to make for victory, and there seemed small reason for prolonging the gam e into the third day. First Innings. A. 0 . Jones, c Parker, b Dennett Gunn (G.), b Dennett ............... Hardstaff, st Smith, b Dennett Gunn (J.), c Green, b Parker Payton, c Smith, b Cranfield Irenionger, b Dennett Lee (G. M.), c Truman, b Dennett Alletson, b P a r k e r ............................ Oates, lbw, b Parker ............... Riley, b Dennett Wass, not out Byes 7, n.b. 2 ............... Total Second Innings. 12 c Green, b Dennett ... 1 I c Dennett, b Parker 2 8 c Sewell, b Parker ... 0 27 b Parker ................ ••• 53 9 c Truman, b Dennett 9 15 c Smith, b Dennett ... ••• 37 4 c Nason, b Dennett ••• 39 1 st Smith, b Dennett ... 28 0 not out ................ ••• 34 2 b Dennett ................ 10 0 c Cranfield, b Parker ... 20 9 B y e s ................ 8 88 Total ... ... 241 G lo u c ester . First Innings. Cranfield, c Jones, b Gunn (J.) Parker, b Riley ................ Dennett, not out ................ Bye 1, l.b. 10 5 i C. 0 . H. Sewell, c Lee, b Wass Dipper, st Oates, b Lee Langdon, c and b Iremonger M. A. Green, c Iremonger, b Wass.. C. S. Barnett, b Gunn (J.) ... J. W. W. Nason, lbw, b Gunn (J.) T. A. Truman,b Lee Smith, b Gunn (J )............................ S eco nd I nnings : — Langdou, b Riley, 1 ; Dipper, not out, 7 out, 10 ; 110 ball, 1— Total (for 1 wkt.), 19. 13 139 39 19 9 Total ........... 314 Truman, not O N C E T R I E D , A L W A Y S U S E D - THE “ PATTISSON " HORSE BOOTS. S im p le s t! S tro n g e s t! Most E c o n o m ic a l! Used .in the Royal and in Thousands of the principal Gardens, and by the leading Cricket and Golf Clubs. SILVER M EDALS- Royal Horticultural Society, 1904. Royal International Horticultural Exhibition, 1912. ITig. 1 . HUND REDS OF TESTIM ON IALS. T he F ield says ;— “ As good as anything that could be devised.” D r . W . G. G race writes;— “ The Best.’ * MR. S. A pted (The O val);— “ The best I have ever used .** E X C L U S I V E L Y U S E D A T T H E O V A L FOR T H E L A S T 1 0 Y E A R S . FiR. 2 . Illustrated Price Lists, with Testimonials, from H. PATT I SSON & CO., 4 -6 , G reyh ound Lane, Streatham , S .W . G lo u cestersh ir e B o w ler s ’ A n a l y s is . 0. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. Parker ............. ... 11 4 19 3 29*1 7 85 4 Dennett ............... ... 18 3 40 6 35 8 103 6 Cranfield ... 9 4 11 1 ... 9 1 27 0 Nason ............... 2 O 9 0 — — Dipper ... — — — 3 1 16 0 Parker delivered two no-balls ln'the first innings. N otts B o w lers ’ A n a ly sis . 0. M. R, W. O. M. R. W. Wass ............... ... 39 5 98 2 — — — — Iremonger ... ••• 33 12 61 1 1 0 1 0 Riley ............... ... 29-1 8 61 1 4 3 4 1 Gunn (J.) ............... ... 13 2 33 4 3*4 2 9 0 A. 0 . Jones ... 1 1 0 0 — — — — Lee ... ... 13 . 4 50 2 — — — — 3 ...................................... . ^ Gunn (J.) delivered one no-ball in the second innings. Umpires : — Street and Richardson. Hampshire v. Warwickshire. The visitois to Southampton on Monday had Santall back in their team, vice B row n ; the home side lacked their captain, as well as Fry, Johnston, Hesketh-Prichard, and Kennedy. Foster won the toss, but Warwickshire started very poorly, 4 wickets falling for 58. Then the skipper joined Quaifej and the fifth wicket added 99 in 65 minutes, though Foster might have been caught at point when he had made 26. Quaife batted 2J hours. Each hit nine 4’s. Parsons again played a useful innings; but the bowling of Brown when tried for a third time brought the venture to a speedy conclusion. The big man, previously hit for 39 without a wicket, had the last 5 for 23, and in one over clean bowled Quaife, Jeeves, and Santall. Bowell and Stone gave Hants a good start, making 73 in 50 minutes for the first wicket. Bowell batted 80 minutes for his 53. Smith caught Refnnant cleverly; the ball fell on his foot, and he kicked it up andi held it. At the close of the day the home side were 124 behind with 6 to go. Newman was early missed (at 9) on Tuesday; afterwards he batted well, and he and the Rev. W . V . Jephson added 88 in an hour. Rutherford played a useful innings, and Hants had a lead of 59 runs. When Warwickshire batted again runs flowed freely. Smith began i t ; of 89 put on in 65 minutes for the first wicket he made 57, including a 6 and eight 4 ’s. A magnificent running catch by Moore, low down, got rid of him. Foster came in, and he and Charlesworth added 69 in 35 minutes. The Warwickshire captain hit with all the verve and abandon that characterised his batting two years a g o ; he does not like rain-soaked pitches, but give him a true, hard wicket, and he can still gallop with the best of them. He made his first 50 in an hour, and added 61 more in another 55 minutes. Sixteen 4 ’s were included in his brilliant innings. Baker helped him to add 111 in 65 minutes for the fourth wicket. A fine catch, one-handed, by Haigh- Smith, dismissed Quaife; but the visitors— 303 on with 6 to g o —were on velvet when the day’s play ended. The visitors’ innings closed on Wednesday morning for 389, Bowell, the last man put on, doing quite his best performance with the ball in first-class cricket. Hants needed 331 to win, and lost their first four wickets for 50. Thereafter Mead played up in great style; but no one gave him any assistance worth speaking of, and in the end his side went under by 64 runs. The left-handert batted two hours for his xoo, and just under three hours for Kis full score of 170, his third century of the season. He made just two-thirds of the runs from the b a t; and it is doubtful whether in any previous first-class match a batsman has made so big a proportion of his side’s total in the last innings. First Innings. W ar w ick sh ir e . Second Innings. Smith (E. J.), b Jaques ............................. n c Moore, b Rutherford ... 57 Kinnerr, c Jephson, b Remnant ................ 19 b Bowell .............................. 31 Charlesworth, c Jephson, b Brown ... *>c Jcphson, b Jaqucs ... 59 Quaife, b Brown ..........................................76 c and b Smith ................. 11 Baker (C. S.), c Brown, b Remnant ... 4 c Newman, b Brown ... 54 F. R. Foster, c Smith, b Rutherford ... 66 c Remnant, b Newman ... 111 Parsons, c Stone, b Brown.............................34 st Stone, b Newman ... 10 Jeeves, b Brown .......................................... 7 c Stone, b Bowell ................. 28 W. C. Hands, not out ............................. 18 c Remnant, b Bowcll ... 4 Santall, b Brown .......................................... o c Brown, b B o w e ll................. 8 Field, c Moore, b Brown ... ... ... 13 not out ... ... ... 2 B. 4, l.b. 1, w. 2 ................ 7 B. i i , l.b. 1, w. 1, n.b. 1 14 Total ............................... 260 Total ..................389
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