Cricket 1913

J uly 19, 1913. CRICKET: A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. 417 First Innings. C o rn w all . Second Innings. W. N. Bickford-Smith, b Gilbert ................ 0 c F. G. Phillips, b Silverlock 4 11 . Tresawna, b Silverlock ... 10 b Gilbert 0 Trevarthen, c E. S. Phillips, b Silverlock 2 c Smith, b Gilbert ................ 19 T. Romer, st Diver, b Silverlock 0 b Gilbert ............................ 0 Vibart, b Gilbert ............... 1 c E. S. Phillips, b Silverlock 4 J. C. Bickford-Smith, not out ................ 8 b Gilbert ............................ 18 F. C. Barnes, b Silverlock ... 0 b Gilbert 39 E. Hawken, c and b Gilbert 1 b Gilbert ............................ 2 R. Holman, b Silverlock ................ 4 st Diver, b Silverlock 2 Whiting, b G ilb e rt................ 1 b Silverlock............................ O F. Port, b Silverlock 0 not out ............................ 0 Extras ................ ................ 4 Extras ............... 7 Total ................ 31 Total 95 C ornw all B o w ler s ’ A n a lysis . M onm outhshire B o w ler s ’ A n a ly sis . 0 . M , R. W. 0 . M. R. W. 0 . M. R. W. Hawken ... 8 0 31 0 F. G. Phillips 1 0 8 0 ... — — — — Whiting ... 24 8 48 5 Gilbert 7 4 7 4 ••• 16 1 55 6 W. N. Bick- 4 0 21 0 Silverlock 7 0 12 6 ... 15-2 4 31 3 ford-Smith P ort................ Trevarthen]... Holman 17 42 Lincolnshire v. Durham. At Lincoln, July io and i i . Durham put up a good score on the first day, Dennis Hendren following his 139 at Cambridge with 140, made in 190 minutes, and including fourteen 4’s. A. F. Maynard, the old Durham boy and Cam­ bridge R u gger blue, also did well. At the close of the day Lincolnshire had scored 136 for 5. They were all out for 198 on Thursday, and the Durham captain enforced the follow-on. It seemed a good move, for the northern county has plenty of bowlers; but it did not turn out well. Three wickets fell cheaply; but VV. Rose, the Lincoln Lindum man, played up so finely, making his second county century of the season (thirteen 4’s included), and had such able help from Pullein, Williamson, and Riley, that Thompson was enabled to declare at 266 for 8, leaving Durham to get 140 in about three-quarters of an hour'— if they could. They made no attempt to do it, of course, and at call of time had only scored 39 for 3. Lincolnshire seem a stronger side this season than for some years past. D urham . First Innings. A. F. Maynard, c Appleby, b Riley 73 J. J. Common, b Appleby ... 32 Morris, c Day, b Riley ............... o 14 140 Smith, not out Extras H. Brooks, b Broughton ... Hendren (D.), c Day, b Riley T. A. Bradford, b Broughton T. Kinch, lbw, b Broughton H. L. Dales, st Rose, b Broughton Harrison, c H. E. Thompson, b “• A p p leby......................................... 10 i Total ................325 Harry, b Broughton ................ 14 ----- Seco n d In n in g s :—H. Brooks, c Appleby, b Broughton, 1 ; Hendren (D.), b Broughton, 7 ; T. A. Bradford, not out, 10 ; T. Kinch, not out, 6 ; A. F. Maynard, b Rilev, 5 ; extras, 10—Total (for 3 wkts.), 39. First Innings. E. Pullein, c Smith, b Harry W. E. Thompson, c Common, b Harry Day, c Kinch. b Morris Broughton, c Common, b Morris ... W. Rose, c Common, b Hendren ... C. Williamson, b Hendren ... Rilev, b Morris T. H. Bowman, b Morris H. E. Thompson, b Harry A. Bavin, b Hendren ................ M. W. Appleby, not out ................ Extras ............................ L incoln sh ire . Second Innings. 43 c Common, b Morris 25 b Morris ................ 19 c Bradford, b Morris 3 c Bradford, b Smith 32 b Harry ................ 15 b Smith 20 b Harrison •................ 6 not out ................ 1 11 c Hendren, b Harrison 12 11 Extras hi 35 57 Total Riley Day ... Broughton Appleby Williamson Bavin Morris Harry Smith Hendren Harrison Brooks i ................ ... 198 Total (for 8 wkts., dec.) 266 L in c o ln s h ir e 0 . M. B ow lers R. A n a lysis . W. O. M. R. w . ... 30 2 108 3 8 1 18 I ... 22 6 86 0 — — — — ... 25 5 59 5 2 1 3 2 ... 12-5 2 34 2 2 1 3 O ... 6 0 25 0 — — — — ... — — — — 4 1 5 O D urham 0. B o w le r s ' A n a ly s is . M. R. W. O. M. R. w . ... 29 6 79 4 28 7 80 3 ... 27 8 74 3 25 9 62 1 5 1 16 0 12 0 53 2 ... 6-5 1 18 3 8 0 21 0 ... — — — — 8 1 30 2 «*. — — — — 3 0 17 0 C r ic k e t S e c r e ta r ie s should obtain Mr. A. W. Somerset’s Unique Score Book, *50 openings, Records and Curiosities, 5s.—A. J . Gaston, “ Argus " Office, Brighton. For Sale: Cricket Annuals, over 2,000 Books on Cricket, Cricket Prints « Engraviogs. A. J. Gaston, “ Argus’' Office, Brighton. Gentlemen of Scotland v. Gentlemen of Ireland. On the ground of the Grange C .C ., Raeburn Place, Edinburgh, July 10, 11, and 12. Neither side mustered full strength. Prominent absentees from the Irish team were G. J. Meldon, W . Pollock, and W . Harrington, while in having to play without R. G. Tait and R. W . Sievwright, Scotland lacked perhaps her best bat and her best bowler. The Irishmen had the advantage of first innings, and Quinlan, the Dublin University man, made top score— 54 in 95 minutes. White helped him to put up 60 in 45 minutes for the first wicket. McDonald, the Edinburgh University slow bowler, met with success at his second turn with the ball, and had 3 wickets in 4 o vers; but just when the side looked like being disposed of cheaply, McNamara and Kelly, the old Oxford blue, made a useful stand of 43. The Scots batted in a bad light, and lost 8 for 129, Hone at wicket catching four. Kerr was top scorer, and still in pos­ session at the finish with 28. On Friday Fraser aided him in a capital stand of 67, and after all the total reached exactly the same number as that of Ireland. K err’s was a very sound display. The Irishmen proceeded to pile up what looked like a winning advantage, being 212 for 3 at the close; but their scoring was slow to the point of wearisome­ ness, Quinlan batting 165 minutes for 78 and Lambert 180 minutes for 75— this, too, against bowling by no means specially strong or varied. They added 150 runs in partner­ ship. On Saturday play was continued until 7 o ’clo ck; but the match could not be finished. Hone and Bateman, the overnight not-outs, made a stand of 104, but did not force the pace. Soon after lunch the innings was declared, and the Scots sent in to get 369 for victory in about four hours. There was little use in attempting this, and no attempt was made; but thanks mainly to Gardiner of Perth and Kerr of Greenock defeat was avoided. Gardiner and Sorrie put up 68 for the first wicket, and Kerr batted two hours for his 22. Murray also proved himself good at need. In the match 1,044 runs were scored for 33 wickets. First Innings. _ G e n tle m e n o f Ir e la n d . Second Innings. A. Blair White, c Murray, b Fraser P. F. Quinlan, b Fraser R. H. Lambert, c Murray, b Paterson P. Hone, c McDonald, b Fraser N. C. Bateman, c Gardiner, b McDoncJl E. A. Rooney, c Fraser, b McDonald N. F. McNamara, b Fraser F. R. Shaw, b McDonald A. W. Walker, lbw. b McDonald ... G. W. F. Kelly, c Sorrie, b McDonald S. J. Ward, not out ... Extras ............................ lbw. b Fras?r ... b Kerr... c Kerr, b McDonald b Fraser c Eddie, b Kerr 7 78 75 92 52 30 not out Total 3 25 9 25 224 Extras ... ... 11 Total (for 5 wkts., dec.) 368 First Innings. I. W. Sorrie, c Hone, b Kellv R. P. Gardiner, c Lambert, b Ward M. R. Dickson, c Hone, b Ward ... T. A. Bowie, c and b Ward I. Kerr, not out ............................ Hon. R. B. Watson, run out C. B. Paterson, c Shaw, b Kellv ... [. C. Murray, c Hone, b Quinlan ... W. Eddie, c Hone, b Quinlan W. L. Fraser, c McNamara, b Lambert D. McDonald, b Ward ............... Extras ............................ Total G e n tle m e n o f S c o tla n d . Second Innings. ... 2s c Ward, b Lam bert............... 18 c Bateman, b Ward o b Lambert 14 b Lambert 64 c Quinlan, b Lambert c and b Shaw ................ not out ............................ c Bateman, b W ard............... not out ............... b Shaw 37 - 72 5 5 15 4 44 6 1* Extras 37 Total (for 8 wkts.) ... 228 O. M. R. w. 17 3 51 5 12 2 32 0 23 1 85 4 16 3 3 i 1 z z z S cottish B o w ler s ’ A n a lysis . McDonald ............... Eddie Fraser Paterson Bowie Dickson ............... Kerr . . . . . . . . . Fraser bowled three no-balls. Fr I rish B o w lers ' A n a lysis . McNamara Ward Kelly Quinlan Lambert Shaw 0. M. R. W. 9 2 28 0 24 2 66 4 14 1 4 J 2 14 1 4 * 2 13 3 32 I M;lckenzic. O. M. R. W . 3 i 7 97 1 14 0 58 0 34 7 98 2 15 5 34 0 4 0 15 0 2 0 7 0 17 2 48 2 bowled three no-balls. O. M. R. w. 4 0 21 0 18 3 41 2 10 3 25 0 11 s 16 0 40 18 51 4 16 5 37 2

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