James Lillywhite's Cricketers' Annual 1882

T H E C O U N T I E SIN 1881. 9 1 a n dthebrilliant f o r mh e showedin other fixtures causedhis loss to b e the moreseverely felt . In Mr. Parfitt , Surrey introduced a newfast bowler, who, if he is not overdone, will be of service , and Mr. Roller is a good all- round cricketer who will always be of use in the team. WhatSurrey wants is youngplayers whocan field and will work, and it has the materials for the making of a very fair eleven , R e s u l t sof M a t c h e s . Matches Played, 14 ; W o n, 4 ; Drawn, 1 ; Lost, 9. Opponents. Club. O p n t s. W h e r e W h e n played. played. 1st 2nd 1st 2nd W o nb y inn. inn.inn. inn. MatchesW o n(4). * N o t t s * K e n t (2) Sussex *K e n t هيف MatchesD r a w n(1). (4) Sussex... MatchesLost (9). * M i d d l e s e x (1) Yorkshire * Gloucestershire * N o t t s * L a n c a s h i r e (3) Yorkshire * L a n c a s h i r e * Gloucestershire * M i d d l e s e x O v a l July21, 22 293 109 162 M a i d s t o n e 25-27245 310 177 175 Inns. & 22runs. 203 runs. و د O v a l Aug. 1,2 193 O v a l Sep. 1, 2, 3 185 39* 95 136 118 139 86 8 wkts; *2 w d. 78 runs. R e m a r k s : Brighton Lord's M a y23, 24 157 79 192 O v a l ود Aug.22-24 178 105 113 96* *8 wkts down. HuddersfieldJune 2,3110 61 388 9-11130 214 261 Nottingham 13,14208 187 377 M a n c h e s t e r O v a l O v a l Clifton O v a l " و د 16-18 6 9 130 324 Aug.11,12 224 66 256 45* 84* 20* 38* 18,19 3 6 81 78 255 25-27 79 149 236 ,; 29-31 161 129 259 33* ود ود * Havebeen treated in previous reviews . (1) Surrey . Yorkshire. Huddersfield , June 2 and3, 1881. Lostb y 10wks; *n o w d. I n n s.& 217runs. 8 wkts; *2 w d. 9 wkts; *1 w d. I n n s.&125r u n s. 9 wkts; *1wd. 216 runs. I n n s. & 8 r u n s. 10wks; *n o w d. Themost decisive defeat suffered by the Surrey eleven during the year . Jones, whohad been left out of the team for sometime, was tried again in place of Blamires , but the wicket was too good for the very moderate bowl- ing of the Southerners , and the Yorkshiremen hit with a freedom that was unsurpassed during the season . Atone time it looked as if the Yorkshire innings would not be completed in the first day, but the last few wickets fell unexpectedly fast , and Peate , the eleventh man, thinking that he would not be wanted till the following morning, had left the ground . The North- erners were out by 6.20 , when they had got 388 runs , pretty fast scoring . Noneof the Surrey batsmen , except Mr. Lucas , whose first score of 62 was a first -class display of batting , could look at the bowling of Hill and Peate , and they were never changed during the match. It is not often that two scores above 100 are found in the same innings , but this was the case with

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