Cricket 1913

370 CRICKET : A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. J uly 5, 1913. E s s e x . First Innings. D er bysh ir e B o w lers ’ A n a lysis . L e icester sh ir e B o w ler s ’ A n a lysis . b J. T. C. P. McGahey, c Tarrant, b J. W. Hearne O. C. Bristowe, run out Buckenham, c Tarrant, Hearne Mead (W.), not out... 13 . io, l.b. 4 Total J. W. H. T. Douglas, c Haig, b J. W. Hearne ..........................................43 C. D. Mclver, run out ... ... 17 Rev. F. H. Gillingham, lbw, b J. W. Hearne ..........................................93 P. A. Perrin, c Warner, b J. W. Hearne ................. ................ 6 F. L. Fane, cMann,bTarrant ... 115 Russell (A. C.), c Tarrant, b J. W. Hearne ... ... ... ... 60 Freeman (J.), bTarrant ................. 14 S e co n d I n n in g s :—C. D. Mclver, c Tarrant,rb J. T. Hearne, 9 ; Russell (A. C.) b Murrell, b Tarrant, 24 ; Rev. F. H. Gillingham, lbw, b Tarrant, 49 ; P. A. Perrin, c and b Tarrant, 1 ; F. L. Fane, c and b J. T. Hearne, 8 ; J. W. H. T. Douglas not out, 26 ; Freeman (J.), c Hendren, b Haig, 11 ; b. 13, l.b. 1 n.b. 1—Total (for 6 wkts.), 143. M id d le se x . First Innings. W. P. Robertson, c Freeman, b Bristowe ... ................ 56 Tarrant, b Douglas ... ... 48 Hearne (J. W.), not out ... ... 178 P. F. YVarner, c Buckenham, b M ead .................................................. 12 Hendren (E.), c Fane, b Mead ... 4 F. T. Mann, c Fane, b Mead ... 1 M. H. C. Doll, c Gillingham, b Bristowe ............................. 10 M id d le se x B o w le r s ’ A n a lysis . N. Haig, b Buckenhain ... Murrell, c Mclver, b Bristowe Hearne (J. T.), b Buckenhain Mignon, b Buckenham B. 9, l.b. 10 ... Total ... Forester ... Cadman ... Bracey ... Root Slater Wild M. R. W. 13 7 4 42 16 Shipman Geary Astill King Riley Whitehead O. M. R. W. 15 O. 15 13 ^Shipman and Astill each bo wled one no-ball in the first innings. "^Shipman aud King each bowled two no-balls and Astill one no-ball in the second innings. Umpires : Carlin and Moss. O. M. Hearne (J. T.) 42 16 Mignon ... 7 1 Hearne (J. W.) 51 5 Tarrant ... 40 14 Haig ... 3 Hendren ... 3 Doll ... 7 R. W. 79 1 40 o 174 5 65 2 14 o 9 o 16 O. 26 4 o 26 7 14 - 5 . 4 R. W 25 2 17 o 38 3 34 1 E ssex B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . Douglas ... Buckenham Bristowe ... McGahey ... Mead Russell 0. M. R. W. 32 9 90 1 34 4 129 3 26 3 93 3 10 3 25 0 41 9 87 3 3 0 6 0 Doll delivered one 110-ball in second innings. Umpires : Richardson and W. A. J.[West. Derbyshire v. Leicestershire. At Chesterfield, June 28 and 30. The home team were without Warren and Morton. On a pitch favourable to bats­ men, the visitors had nevertheless lost four wickets for 11 when De Trafford went in. The veteran of nearly fifty summers at once set about the bowling, and before lunch Riley helped him to add 84. Later Shipman (60) and Astill, whose 75* in eighty minutes is his highest in first-class cricket and included two 6’s, rendered more valuable help, and the fine total of 351 was realised. De Trafford, whose splendid 137 included no chance till he had reached three figures, hit three 6’s and seventeen 4’s. He was batting for only two hours. An extraordinary series of disasters took place when Derbyshire went in, and six wickets were actually down for 10. Then a stand by Humphries and Forester produced 59; yet the close of Saturday’s play saw eight men out for 96.This foreshadowed an easy win for Leicestershire, and infact an equally bad breakdown took place in the follow-on after a good start by Oliver and Cadman, the latter’s 56 being admirable. The end came before 4 p.m. on Monday, the visitors winning by an innings and 43. De Trafford and Shipman were the heroes of the match, the professional’s well-hit 60 being supplemented by 9 wickets for 96; in the second innings Whitehead claimed 4 for 21. L eicester sh ir e . C. J. B. Wood, st Humphries, b F orester......................................... Whitehead (H.), b Cadman King, b Cadman ............................ J. Burgess, b Forester C. E. de Trafford, c Baggallay, b Root ............................ Coe, b Cadman ................ W. N. Riley, c Baggallay, b Root... First Innings. L. Oliver, b Geary ... Cadman, b Shipman J. Chapman, b Geary T. G. O. Cole, c Wood, b Geary . C'apt. R. R. Baggallay, b Shipman Slater, b S h ip m a n ......................... T. Forester, b Astill Humphries, c Shields, b Astill Bracey, no out ......................... Root, c Burgess, b Shipman Wild, b Shipman ......................... B. 14, l.b. 1, n.b. 2 Warwickshire v . Lancashire. At Edgbaston, June 30, July 1 and 2. Warwickshire were without Field and Kinneir, while the visitors played Cook and Blomley for Dean and Boddington. Hornby won the toss for the eleventh time in fourteen matches, but though the pitch was fast, fifteen wickets fell on Monday for 337. Great unevenness marked the Lancashire batting, Makepeace, McLeod, and John Tyldesley scoring 192 out of 220 from the bat. The brightest cricket was while Make­ peace and McLeod were together, when 90 came in fifty-five minutes. The professional scored a chanceless 86 in two hours and a quarter, McLeod taking about the same time to compile his welcome 75*. Eventually Warwickshire got within 28 of their opponents’ total, thanks to the good cricket of Baker, Parsons, and Crockford. The former’s 62 occu­ pied 2 hours, and he hardly made a bad stroke. Some streaky form was seen when Lancashire went in again. Eight were down for 162, and then, after a delay due to bad light, Huddleston was missed byFoster, afterwhich no further wicket fell on Tuesday, when thescore w as 205 for eight. The effort closed for 216 on Wednesday, leaving the home side 245 to win. A stern fight followed, its outstand­ ing feature being the partnership of Foster and Baker after lunch. The captain \Vas missed by Hornby when 57, but left three runs later. Baker was at length dismissed for a splendid 77, which enabled Warwickshire to win a fine game by the close margin of two wickets. Quaife w as run out. First Innings. L ancashire . A. H. Hornby, b Foster ... ... ... i Makepeace, c Crockford, b Jeeves ... 86 Tyldesley (J. T.), c Baker, b Foster ... 31 Sharp, c Smith, b Foster ........................... o Tyldesley (E.), b Jeeves ........................... 4 K. G. MacLeod, not out ... ... ... 75 Heap, lbw, b Quaife ........................... 17 Whitehead (R.), c Stephens, b Quaife ... 3 Huddleston, c and b Quaife ... ... o Cook (L.), b Jeeves ... ... ... ... 3 Blomley, c Taylor, b Jeeves ... ... o B. 2, l.b. 10, w. 1 ... ... ... 13 Total Second Innings, c Smith, b Charlesworth b Foster ................ lbw, b Jeeves c Taylor, b Quaife ... b Jeeves ................ c Jeeves, b Foster ... b Jeeves ................ b Foster ................ c Taylor, b Foster ... not out c Foster, b Jeeves ... B. 2, l.b. 5, w. 3 Total 46 8 26 32 4 28 Shipman, c Baggallay, b Forester... Astill, not out Geary, b Wild ................ J. Shields, b Forester B. 9, l.b. 4 137 4 24 D e r b y sh ir e . Total Total 17 148 Second Innings c Shields, b Shipman c Geary, b Whitehead b Shipman b Shipman b Shipman b Whitehead ... c Riley, b Whitehead not out st Shields, b Whitehead b King ............... run out ................ B. 1, l.b. 2, n.b. 5 Total First Innings. Smith (E. J.), b Heap G. W. Stephens, c Blomley, b Whitehead Charlesworth, lbw, b Huddleston............... Quaife. c Blomley, b Heap................• F. R. Foster, b Cook ........................... Baker, b Huddleston ........................... Parsons, b Cook ....................................... E. B. Crockford, c Tyldesley (J.), b White­ head .................................................... Jeeves, b Cook ••• 233 W a r w icksh ire . Second Innings. 1 c Huddleston, b Whitehead... o not out ............................ 23 lbw, b Huddleston ... 15 run out 22 c MacLeod, b Huddleston ... 62 b MacLeod ............................ 29 c Blomley, b Makepeace 3 i c Blomley, b Cook c MacLeod, b Cook not out T a y lo r; c B lo m ley , b C o o k ....................... B . 4, l.b . 1 , w . 2 ................ 4 ... 7 L .b . 1 , n .b 3 4 60 75 T o ta l ....................... ... 205 T o ta l (for 8 w k ts .).. 248 26 3 13 W a r w ic k sh ir e O. M. B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . R. W . O. M. R. W . ------ F o ste r ......................... 28 6 76 3 30 5 88 4 3 5 i J e e ve s ..................................... 25-5 7 64 4 22*2 13 55 4 ------ S a n ta ll ......................... 13 2 28 0 — T a y lo r ..................................... 5 1 11 0 3 1 5 0 Q u aife 12 0 41 3 8 0 32 I 23 5 '» 1 4 12 C h arlesw o rth ... — — 17 9 26 1 J e e v e s b o w led o u e w id e in th e first in n in gs. C h arlesw o rth b ow led th ree w id e s in th e secon d in n in gs. L a n c a s h ir e B o w l e r s ’ A n a l y s is . O. M. R. W . 0 . M. R. W . 34 W h iteh e ad . .................................... 23 5 55 2 cz 2 56 1 3 H eap 18 6 30 2 14 4 25 0 8 C o o k ... .................................... 21 4 56 4 24 5 58 2 1 H u d d lesto n ...................... 19 3 51 2 34-5 7 69 2 1 M ak ep eace . .................................... 3 2 3 0 4 0 20 1 9 S h a rp ......................... 2 1 3 0 2 0 6 0 8 M acL eod ... — — 3 1 10 1 160 C o o k an d S h a rp each b ow led on e w id e in th e first in n in gs. Sharp delivered two no-balls and Whitehead one in the second innings. Umpires : Roberts and Bagshaw.

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