Cricket 1914
J u l y i i , 1914. THE WORLD OF CRICKET. 329 ml ‘ zylmn I te * iFilKiWCH MAKERS BRMINGH»Mu .XTRfl S pecial QUAIFE BROS., & LILLEY, Sports Outfitters. jH j t Sole makers of the “ PNEUMATIC HANDLE " CRICKET BAT. M EN ’S. SMALL MEN 'S. SIZE 6. 27/6 & 23/6 21/- 17/6 “ XYLON ITE DRIVER ff CRICKET BAT. M EN ’S. SMALL MEN 'S. SIZE 6. 25/- & 21/- 17/6 15/6 Short handle Bats same prices as men's. Specialities : T IES, HATBAN D S , CAPS, BADGES for COLLEGES, SCHOOLS, A N D CLUBS. Special terms to Catalogue Colleges & Clubs. post free. 313, BROAD ST., BIRMINGHAM. T H E W O R L D ’S B E S T in Everything Required for Sport, Direct from Experienced Players, who know the Practical Side of the Business. S o le M a k e r s o f T H E W o r l d - F a m e d st: T h e f J.T.T yldesley T E S T MATCH S p e c i a l 21 / - E x t r a S p e c i a l 2 5 / - POST FREE With I.R. Cover. POST FREE. With I.R. Cover. Small Men'i 8lze - 20/- No. 6 size - IS/6 No. 6 size - - - 14/- No. 4 size - 12/8 FOREIGN POSTAGE EX TRA. The best bats it is possible to buy. Used in Test Matches by Australian, South African and English Players. Alto Bat* at 4/6, 6/6, 7/6, 9/-, 10/6, 12/6 & 16/6 Fully Guarantied. Bats Re-Bladed and Repaired on the Premises. Send or Illustrattd List. IMPORTANT TO 8ECRETARIE8. — If you think yourclub account is high give us a trial, as others have done— it will repay you. T Y L D E S L E Y & HO LBROO K , Practical Sports Outfitters, 109, D e a n s g a t e , M a n c h e s t e r . N o t t i n g h a m s h i r e and Warwickshire are to meet next season. They have not played one another since 1894, and in all only five matches have taken place between them. T h e allocation of Yorkshire matches for 1915 gives to Sheffield Northants, Notts, and Surrey; to Leeds Kent, Middlesex, and Somerset ; to Bradford Derbyshire, Lancashire and Warw ick ; to Harrogate S u ssex ; to Huddersfield Leicestershire ; to Dewsbury Hampshire ; and to Hull Gloucestershire. It would appear that Wor cestershire will again be absent from the card. S e c o n d eleven matches with Lancashire and Surrey will be played at Rotherham and Bridlington respectively ; and Yorkshire II will meet picked local teams at Bradford Huddersfield, Otley, Pontefract, and Redcar. T h e projected Tasmanian tour in this country has been abandoned. The original intention was to send a team this year ; but negotiations were entered into too late for that. The opinion of Mr. F. E. Lacey was sought, as was that of Mr. P. F .‘ Warner, Mr. Tom Paw ley, and others. fl§MR. L a c e y told the promoter (Mr. G. F. Linney, of the East Hobart C.C.) th at no financial assistance on this side could be hoped for unless the team was one capable of meeting the first-class counties, and that even then the tour would be an experiment. Mr. Paw ley pointed out that on the suggested lines— that the team ’s matches should be w ith the universities, public schools, and minor counties— gate-money would be a negligible factor. Mr. Warner, disregarding the financial side, considered the project an excellent one from a cricket standpoint. A s u m of £2000 would have been needed for the trip, and the hopelessness of raising so much b y subscription was recognised. O n e of the weak points of the scheme from one point of view, and one of its strong points from another, was the suggested character of the team. I t was not to be a representative side of Tasmania, but mainly composed of young players from Hobart. Now a representative Tasmanian side would probably be able to beat the majority of the minor counties, and would not be disgraced in meeting the first-class counties, though some 400’s and 500’s would in all likelihood be made against it. B u t w hat a team of young players from the island would do no one living might safely prophesy. If they were all Colin Newtons they could hardly help doing well, for Newton is a youngster of real promise. B ut that would be too much to hope for. T h e Tasmanian M ail says in its last issue to hand, under date “ London, May 15th,” that playing for Hampshire against Sussex that day E. J. M. Barrett took 5 wickets for 58 runs. L e t whoso will puzzle this out. Certainly the player meant was not Capt. E. I. M. Barrett, who is busy getting runs— not wickets— in Shanghai cricket, as two scores on another page will show. T h e Sussex v. Notts match came very near indeed to having a sensational result. Notts, 501 for 3, declared ; Sussex, 499. If Sussex had only made three more runs—
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