Cricket 1913

208 CRICKET : A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. J une 14, 1913. S u r r e y B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . S u sse x B o w le r s ’ A n a l y sis . 0. M. R. W. Rushby 20. 5 60 0 Hitch ................ 27*2 3 86 7 Reay ................ 4 0 1 7 0 Hayes 6 1 19 0 B ir d ................. ... 15 3 47 3 Goatly ................. — — — — Spring ................ — — _—■ — H itch bowled two no-balls in the first innings. M id d l e s e x B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y sis . Hearne (J. T.) Tarrant Hearne (J. W.) Napier ... ................. — — — — Napier delivered one no-ball in the second innings. Umpires : Butt and Barlow. O. M. R. W. 24 7 59 1 31 8 62 6 13-2 1 35 2 0. M. •I R- W. 20 6 53 4 11 3 43 I 2 0 8 0 — — — —r- 5 1 19 O 3 i 8 9 i 4 9 2 19 • 1 O. M. R. W. 10 3 19 0 29 2 100 7 15 0 67 2 10 0 30 1 Holloway Relf (A. E.) Relf (R. R.) Cox Wilson O. M. R. W. 16 io 13 1 18-5 3 46 6 7 5 5 3 3 0 5 0 . 1 0 7 0 . Holloway delivered one 110-ball. Umpires : Moss and W. A. J. West. O. M. R. W. .. 18 1 69 5 Forester . 18-3 7 23 5 Warren . — ----------— Slater ... . — -------— Cadman . — — — — Bracey Morton Holloway delivered two no-balls. D e r b y s h ir e B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . O. M. R. W. 32-3 6 76 5 4 o 13 o 11 o 45 o 1 7 26 1 84 3 32 o Worcestershire v. Kent. Sussex v. Derbyshire. At Hove, June 9 and 10. Probably B aggallay would have done better to send the home side in first, for Derbyshire had the worst of the wieket. He and Bracey replaced Root and Sm ith; for Sussex H. L. Wilson and N. J. Holloway played instead of Cartw right and Killick. Four runs came in 15 minutes; Oliver left at 2, Cadman and Morton to successive balls at 6, Chapman at 7, and Baggallay at 12. Half the side out; then Warren made a two, the first hit for more than a single in three-quarters of an hour’s p la y ! But the bowlers were gettin g work on, and the fielding was close and good. Six wickets were down for 24, Chaplin, left-handed, finely catching Warren at short-leg close in. Cole and Forester added 51, the only real stand of the innings, which was all over for 88. In the course of it Albert Relf brought his total of wickets for Sussex to 1,340, equalling the record of Fred Tate, who had previously more to his credit for the county than any other bowler. The first pair for Sussex sent up 38 in half-an-hour, and altogether 82 in 75 minutes before Vine w as out for 26. W ilson’s really excellent 61 were made in 85 m inutes; he hit eight 4 ’s. The two Relfs, Fender, and Jupp contributed usefully, and at call of time Sussex were 230 for 7, Cox still there w ith 55 to his credit. On Tuesday no play was possible before lunch ; but in spite of that all was over before time. Cox stayed for the rest of the time the Sussex innings lasted, and he has seldom batted better. He made his 85* in 100 minutes, and his only chance was at 82. He hit a 5 and six 4’s, and some excellent latecuts were among his strokes. The Derbyshire second innings was very much like the first. Baggallay fell at 11, Oliver and Cadman at 15; Martin and Chapman added 29 before the former le ft; Chapman was out at 59, Warren at 68, Forester at 71, Cole (who had batted 40 minutes for 21, and was again top scorer) at 80, Humphries at 85, and Slater at 99. Albert Relf was almost unplayable, and Norman Holloway also bowled with effect Sussex won by an innings and 92 runs. Second Innings. b H o llo w a y ............................. 2 c Wilson, b A. Relf.................. 9 At Stourbridge, June 9 and 10. The d ay’s play was shortened an hour or so by rain, but in the course of it 17 wickets fell, and Kent gained an advantage. Though the | pitch was soft, Bowley batted in dashing style, and hit thir- | teen 4’s in his 72, made out of the 95 put on for the first wicket. He was twice missed— at 13 and at 40— but played splendidly. After his departure there was a collapse. Before Pearson left, at 112, Foster, Burns, and Arnold were all out. Collier and Cuffe made a few each ; but altogether the last nine wickets only added 61. Woolley bowled in his best form. When Kent batted two of their best were out with only 31 up; but Hardinge and Woolley added 103 in *70 minutes. There were two 6’s and ten 4’s in Woolley’s hard- hit 99, which was closed by an excellent ball from young Chester, fairly beating the crack. At call of time Kent had scored 202 for 7. The Kent innings closed for 244 on Tues­ day m orning; and then, on a wicket that just suited them, Blythe and Woolley had the Worcestershire batsmen at their mercy. The few runs from the bat were scored in equal proportion against the two left-handers; but Blythe took 7 wickets to Woolley’s 3. His figures after the luncheon interval were : 8 overs, 7 runs, 6 w ickets! Kent won by an innings and 45 runs. W o r c e ste r sh ir e . First Innings. D e r b y s h ir e . Capt. R. R. Baggallay, c Chaplin, b A. Relf 2 L. Oliver, c Cox, b A. Relf ... ... o Cadman, lbw, b A. Relf .......................... 2 Morton, b A. Relf ... ... ... ... o J. Chapman, c Jupp, b Holloway ... 1 T. G. O. Cole, c A., b R. R. Relf ... 36 Warren, c Chaplin, b A. Relf ......... 9 T. Forester, c Wilson, b R. R. Rclf ... 15 Slater, b R. R. Relf ......................... o Humphries, lbw, b A. Relf ... ... 11 Bracey, not out ... ... ... ... o B. 1, l.b. 10, n.b. 1 ......... 12 Total Vine, lbw, b Morton H. L. Wilson, b Morton ... Relf (A. E.), b Bracey ................ Relf (R. R.). c Cadman. b Forester P. H. G. Fender, c Chapman, b Bracev H. P. Chaplin, c Oliver, b Forester Cox, not out Jupp, c Cadman, b Bracey 88 c and b Holloway b Holloway ... b Holloway ... c Vincett, b A. Rclf b Holloway ... st Street, b A. Rclf ... st Street, b A. Rclf ... b A. Relf ................. not out B. 4. l.b. 1, n.b. Total S u s s e x . 26 61 Vincett. c Slater, b Forester Street, c Oliver, b Forester N. J. Holloway, c Humphries, b Forester ... L eg-byes............................. Total ................ Bowley, c Hardinge, b Woolley ... . 72 c Dillon, b Woolley 5 Pearson, c Hubble, b Blythe . 37 c Seymour, b Blythe .. 8 H. K. Foster, c Huish, b Blythe ... 0 b Blythe ................ 9 W. B. Bums, c Seymour, b Woolley 2 c Hubble, b Blythe ... 3 Arnold, c Jennings, b Woolley 0 c Seymour, b Blythe 5 Collier, c Dillon, b Woolley 22 c Humphreys, b Woolley 0 Cuffe, c Preston, b Woolley 14 b Woolley ................ 0 Chester, not out 5 c Humphreys, b Blythe 10 Burrows, run out ............................. 0 c Hardinge, b Blythe 2 Bale, b Woolley 1 not out 0 Conway, c Jennings, b Blythe Byes ............................. 0 b Blythe ... ■ 0 3 Leg-bye 1 Total ................ ... 156 Total K e n t. 43 Humphreys, lbw, b Burrows 7 Fairscrvice, c Cuffe, b Chester •• 3 2 Hardinge, Ibw, b Burrdws 50 Blythe, c Burns, b Cuffe .... Preston, not out .. 12 Seymour (Jas.), c Bowley, b Chester 6 8 Woolley (F. E.). b Chester 99 B. 4, l.b. 5, n.b. 1 .. 10 Hubble, b Chester................ 13 ___ E. W. Dillon, b Burrows ... 5 Total •• 254 Jennings, b Chester Huish, c Conway, b Chesetet 12 0 K e n t B o w le r s ’ A n a l y sis . m Blythe... Fairservice Preston Woolley Umpires : Parris and Brown. O. M. R. W. O. M. R. W. 0 . M. 25 10 56 3 •• . 16 6 21 7 Burrows 16 1 9 1 3 i 0 .... — — — — Burns ... 2 0 5 0 35 0 .... — ■— — — Chester 25-5 1 10 3 3 i 6 . 1^ 7 21 3 Pearson 5 1 W o r c e ste r sh ir e B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . Burrows bowled one 110-ball Yorkshire v. Leicestershire. “ Be a sportsman, not merely a sporting Hints,” b y j . H. F a r m e r . “ Cricket At Leeds, June 9 and 10. Sir Archibald White won the loss, and Geary and Shipman dismissed the first five batsmen for 58, which looked bad for the White Rose. But Kilner and Booth were quite undismayed by the downfall. They got on top of the bowling almost at once, and added 184 at the rate of about 100 per hour— in 110 minutes, that is to say. Then Booth played on, after hitting seven 4's. Kilner was caught off his glove just after reaching his century for the first time in big cricket. His w as a really sparkling innings, including eighteen 4 ’s, and, like Booth, he gave no chance. Haigh spanked seven 4’s in his 40, and

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