Cricket 1913

60 CRICKET : A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. F eb . 15, 19i3. THE SCORE-BOOK. Cricket in Australia. TOOWOOMBA v. NEW SOUTH WALES. The cricketers of the Queensland town of Toowoomba, where E. P. Barbour’s father is head-master of the Grammar School, are nothing- if not ambitious. They have met South Africa and England on even terms, so that taking on an unrepresentative eleven of New South Wales was, of course, the merest circumstance to them. It is true, they borrowed the Sydneysiders’ best batsman, who made 213 for them in the match; but that is a detail. The visitors broke their journey back from Brisbane to play the match (November 27 and 28), and the result was victory for them by 7 wickets. It will be seen that E. P. Barbour only just missed achieving the double century feat. A. II. Jones and F. Fett have played for Queensland. First innings. Tooowom ba. Second innings. G. P. Barbour, c and b Massic ... E. P. Barbour, c McKew, b Mailey W . Sisley, b Mailey .................. A. H . Jones, b Mailey E. A. Gill, b Mailey ................. W . Miles, c W addy, b Collins A. Dennis, b Collins .................. N. Ferguson, b Mailey C. N oel, c Moore, b Mailey F. Fett, b M a ile y ............................... J. Lendrum, not out Extras Total 10 c McMillan, b Arnott 9 99 b Folkard .................. ... 114 9 b Folkard .................. 4 12 st McKew, b Mailey ••• 33 4 lbw, b Arnott ... 6 2 b Massie ................. ... 6 9 b Massie, ................. 4 11 b Massie 5 0 not out ... 0 6 b Folkard ... ... 0 4 b Folkard ................. ... 8 8 Extras ... 6 174 Total ... .. 195 E. L. W addy, b Noel H. L. Collins, b Fet* .................. L. A. Cody, c Ferguson, b Lendrum P. S. Arnott, run out .................. B. J. Folkard, b Lemlrum S. Moore, c Dennis, b Noel R. J. A. Massie, b Fett ................. N e w S o u th W a le s . First innings. A. Mailey, c Jones, b Fett... C. McKew, c Lloyd, b Noel C. McMillan, not out J. R. D . Scott absent Extras Total ................. S e c o n d In n in g s :— H. L. Collins, c Sisley, b Fett, 14 ; P. S. Arnott, c and b Fett. 26 ; L. A. Cody, c E. P. Barbour, b Fett, 22 ; E. L. W addy, not out, 43 ; B. J. Folkard, not out, 34 ; extras, 21-— total (for 3 wickets), 160. N.S.W . B o w lin g :— Mailey, 7 for 71 and 1 for 43 ; Collins, 2 for 20 (is t) ; Massie, 1 for 24 and 3 for 65 ; Folkard, 4 for 30 (2nd) ; Arnott, 2 for 51 (2nd). T o o w o o m b a B o w lin g :— Noel, 3 for 25 and o for 25 ; Fett, 3 for 60 and 3 for 75 ; Lendrum, 2 for 50 and o for 15 ; Gill, o for 34 and o for 5 ; E. P. Barbour, o for 30 and o for 18. SYDNEY UN IVER SITY v. MELBOURNE UN IVERSITY. Several men who have made their mark in inter-state cricket figured in this match, played on the Sydney Univer­ sity Oval on December 17, 18, and 19, and won by the home side by 7 wickets. C. J. Tozer and F. M. Farrar added 294 runs for the third wicket in Sydney’s first, the former batting 150 minutes for his 132 (eighteen 4’s) and the latter 145 for his 155 (three 6’s, fourteen 4’s). A. E. V. Hartkopf, who many good judges considered should not have been left out of the Victorian team v. N.S.W. at Christmas, was top scorer in each innings of the losers, for whom O'Hara Wood, a slow leg-break bowler, did excellent work. W. J. Stack had fine figures—-12 for i76--for Sydney. He has played for N.S.W. with some success, and will doubtless play again before long. The winners lacked Minnett and Massie, away with the State team 011 the eastern tour. S y d n e y U n iv e r sit y . First innings. E. P. Barbour, c McGregor, b Ander­ son 48 G. C. W illcocks, b Anderson C. J. Tozer, c Matthews, b Hart- ropf ............................................. F. M. Farrar, c W illis, b W ood ... F. E. McElhone, c Doig, b W ood... N. M. Gregg, not out .................. 23 Total ............................... 407 C. V. Single, st McGregor, b W ood S e c o n d In n in g s :— F . E. McElhone, c Doig, b W ood, 21 ; G. C. W illcocks, st McGregor, b W ood, 2 ; C. V. Single, st McGregor, b W ood. 23 ; N. M. Gregg, not out, 10 ; W . F. Crawford not out, 9 ; byes, 4— total (for 3 wickets), 69. 132 155 J. B. Lane, c Hartkopf, b W ood... W . J. Stack, c Anderson, b W ood T. Cooney, st McGregor, b W ood... W . F. Crawford, b W ood ... B 9, lb 3, w 3 ............................... First innings. R. L. Park, b Stack W . McGregor, c Gregg, b Stack A. E. V. Hartkopf, b Stack C. B. W illis, c Lane; b Stack P. O’H. W ood, stLane, b Stack A. Giblin, c McElhone, b Stack K. Doig, c and b Cooney ... W. F. Stephens, c and b Stack A. E. Middleton, b Cooney R. Matthews, b Cooney . G. Anderson, not out B 1, lb 4, w 3, nb 2 Total Anderson Hartkopf Matthews W ood ... W illis ... Park ... Middleton Cooney Stack ... Single ... Gregg ... W illcocks Crawford Farrar Barbour M e lb o u rn e U n iv e r s ity . Second innings. ................. 1 c and b S ta ck ................................48 c Barbour, b Willcocksj ... 31 b Crawford ............................... 78 c Gregg, b Stack ... ... 11 not out.............................................. 50 c Lane, b Stack ... ...- 3 c and b Crawfoid .................. 54 b Barbour ................................ 2 c Lane, b Stack. 95832 29. o 3 4 7 0 lbw , b Stack 7 4 b S tack 8 10 B 14, lb .10 w 1, 11b 1 26 157 T otal 318 ELBOURNE (X B o w lers ’ M . R . A n a lysis . W . 0 . M. R. W . ... 25 3 95 2 — — — — ... 23 6 99 1 8 3 12 0 ... 12 1 36 0 — — — — l6 2 77 7 7‘4 0 53 3 4 0 40 0 ... 7 1 18 0 — — ^ —- — 3 0 27 0 — — — — S y d n e y O . B o w le r s ’ M. R. A n a ly sis . W . 0 . M. R. W . .. 18-3 7 24 3 18 5 48 0 ... 23 9 61 7 34-4 6 115 5 8 2 30 0 10 2 29 0 2 0 13 0 . .... -— — — — • ... 7 2 10 0 11 2 23 1 ... 7 3 9 0 16 5 28 3 1 1 0 0 2 0 14 0 ... — — — . — : ' — 11 1 35 I Thirty-two matches have been played between the Universities to date, Sydney winning 20, Melbourne 10. Two were drawn. 15 SOUTH AUSTRALIA v. NEW SOUTH WALES. The colt element was largely represented in both sides in this game, begun on the Adelaide Oval on December 20 (Friday), and ending after three days’ play on December 23 in a big win for the home team by an innings and 53 runs. Victor Trumper had R. B. Minnett, S. H. Emery, E. L. Waddy, and J. C. Barnes to support him, and B. J. Folkard is rather past colthood as a matter of years; but the other five N.S.W. players are all quite young men. Macartney, Bardsley, Gregory, Cotter, Carter, Hordern, Barbour, Kelleway, and Scott were among the absentees. For South Australia Algernon Gehrs and R. B. Rees, the googly exponent, were unavailable; but Mayne and Whitty played, as well as Clem Hill, J. N. Crawford, L. W. Chamberlain, and G. C. Campbell. Moyes and Steele,, by the way, are only 19, Rundell and Bridgman 22, and Chamberlain, though he has been playing several seasons, 23. John Crawford, in partnership with Mayne, made 47 out of the first 69 in an hour. Clem Hill hit two 4’s, then departed, caught at the wicket off a bad stroke. Missed by Emery before he had scored, young Moyes thereafter hit finely, making 64 (one 6, eight 4’s) in 70 minutes out of 96 for the third wicket. Chamberlain helped Mayne in a long stand.— 163—for the fourth. Mayne was the man to go ; he had batted 245 minutes for his 124 (eleven 4’s). The pace of the wicket bothered him at first, but later he showed tine form, cutting particularly well. Chamberlain’s 103 (eleven 4’s) was a brilliant innings, versatile and free. He was only in 130 minutes. But even he did not show better form than Donald Steele, a youngster who ought to go far. In fourth wicket down, Steele carried his bat for 113, made in 175' minutes, with fifteen 4’s, by all round the wTicket play. Rundell helped him to add 73 in 55 minutes for the seventh wicket-. The total of 569 was only seven short of the S.A. record v. N.S.W.— 576 at Adelaide in December, 1900, when Clem Hill scored 365*. Seven hours was the time taken. Whitty bowled Trumper. for a duck with a ball that pitched outside the off stump and took the leg one. Waddy and Collins added 68 for the second wicket, Minnett and Collins 72 for the third; after that there was no stand of any note, though Barnes and Emery made useful scores; and the innings closed for 276. Collins batted 140 minutes for his 79—a good, careful display. Rundell, one of the colts, was the most successful bowler. Following on, N.S.W. fared disastrously. Waddy left at 10, Collins and Minnett at 13, Barnes at 20, and Trumper at 34. Whitty had 3 for 14 at this stage. Arnott and Moore made a plucky

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