1883 English cricket season

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1883 English cricket season
Cricket formats major, including inter-county

The 1883 English cricket season saw the first of four successive titles won by Notts, and the beginning of the "Great Revival" of Surrey,[1] who had been among the weaker counties since 1866.

Champion County[a]

Playing record (by county)[2]

County Played Won Lost Drawn
Derbyshire 8 2 5 1
Gloucestershire 12 3 6 3
Hampshire 6 2 3 1
Kent 10 2 6 2
Lancashire 12 6 5 1
Middlesex 10 4 2 4
Nottinghamshire 12 4 1 7
Somerset 6 1 5 0
Surrey 20 10 5 5
Sussex 12 4 7 1
Yorkshire 16 9 2 5

Leading batsmen (qualification 20 innings)

1883 English season leading batsmen[3]
Name Team Matches Innings Not outs Runs Highest score Average 100s 50s
Walter Read Surrey 22 39 6 1573 168 47.66 2 13
CT Studd Middlesex
MCC
20 34 5 1193 175 not out 41.13 2 4
WG Grace Gloucestershire
MCC
22 41 2 1352 112 34.66 1 9
Louis Hall Yorkshire 26 44 9 1180 127 33.73 2 3
Bunny Lucas Middlesex
MCC
12 23 3 664 97 33.23 0 4

Leading bowlers (qualification 1,000 balls)

1883 English season leading bowlers[4]
Name Team Balls bowled Runs conceded Wickets taken Average Best bowling 5 wickets
in innings
10 wickets
in match
Alec Watson Lancashire 3762 1135 96 11.82 7/36 9 2
Alfred Shaw Nottinghamshire 4247 840 67 12.53 7/22 7 0
John Crossland Lancashire 2191 934 72 12.97 8/57 6 0
George Harrison Yorkshire 3143 1326 100 13.26 7/43 6 1
George Robinson Oxford University 1015 471 35 13.45 6/38 2 0

Notable Events

  • 30 January – England won the deciding match of the scheduled three-Test series in Melbourne (although an additional match was arranged later). Some ladies burned the bails and placed the resultant ashes in a small urn. This was presented to England’s captain, Ivo Bligh, who had promised to "recover those ashes". The urn is kept in a glass case at Lord’s but England and Australia have been playing for the Ashes ever since.
  • 25 May – Surrey, in a season that marked their revival from a lowly position since 1866 to the champion eleven of the late 1880s and early 1890s, break the record highest team total in county cricket by scoring 650 against Hampshire.[5]
  • George Harrison became the first bowler to take 100 wickets in the season in which he made his debut in first-class cricket.[6]
  • George Ulyett scored 1,562 runs with a highest score of 84. Not until Charles Harris in 1935 did a player scoring no centuries score more runs in a season.
    • Ulyett’s feat of getting within eleven runs of the leading scorer with no centuries has been approached since only by David Green in 1965.[7][8]

Notes

a An unofficial seasonal title sometimes proclaimed by consensus of media and historians prior to December 1889 when the official County Championship was constituted. Although there are ante-dated claims prior to 1873, when residence qualifications were introduced, it is only since that ruling that any quasi-official status can be ascribed.

References

  1. Pardon, Sydney H. (editor); John Wisden's Cricketers' Almanack; Forty-Seventh Edition (1905), pp. 173-174
  2. Wynne-Thomas, Peter; The Rigby A-Z of Cricket Records; p. 54 ISBN 072701868X
  3. First Class Batting in England in 1883
  4. First Class Bowling in England in 1883
  5. Webber, Roy; The Playfair Book of Cricket Records; p. 18. Published 1951 by Playfair Books.
  6. Webber; The Playfair Book of Cricket Records; pp. 176-177
  7. First Class Batting in England in 1883 (by Runs)
  8. First Class Batting in England in 1965 (by Runs)

Annual reviews

  • John Lillywhite's Cricketer's Companion (Green Lilly), Lillywhite, 1884
  • James Lillywhite's Cricketers' Annual (Red Lilly), Lillywhite, 1884
  • John Wisden's Cricketers' Almanack, 1884

External links