A PROCESSION.
'INNING'S CLOSES FOR 83.
(Received June 9, 9.40 a.mj V LONDON, JunefS. Australia in their first lnMMfgs jma.de 83. following were the scores: AUSTRALIA, Ist innings. ' Trumper, played Newman on ... 9 'Noble, run out — ,^« Bardsley, run out •"• ** Whitty, b Newman ... ••• ••• ,- *■ McAllister, b Newman - -*( Armstrong, c Mead, b Newman... » i Gregory, c and b. Newman. ... ? \ Macartney, b Newman ... <- 4 Hartigan, b Newman -•<• JCarter, not out ... <•• vi{ i •Layer, c Remnant, b Newman.-. U * -— " Total "• :*® "Bowling analysis: Newman 8 for '43, Mead 0 for 23, Llewellyn 0 for "12 The weather was summer-like, 'but the wicket difficult. The attendance •was 1000. / . . . The Australians' innings was little "more than a procession, no one/ex- • copting McAllister being abletowith- ■ stand the bowling of Newman, who •captured the whole eight wickets, • the other two men being run-out. He took? for 24, finishing with B*for'43. The third and fourth wickets fell at 39, a sjnart piece of fielding on the part of Boweli disposing of Bardsley, while Whitty succumbed to the first ball of Newman's next over. McAllister and Armstrong ■ carried the total to 61; then Armstrong was taken in the slip off a rising ball. Newman got rid of Gregory and. Macartney in the same over, six wickets being down for 71 and seven; for 75. McAllister played a plucky game lasting 40 minutes, his < departure leaving the score eight for 82. Hartigan added a single 'before Newman got him. Layer, the last .man, hit the first ball into Remnant's hands at mld-on. The innings occupied altogether 75 minutes. To-day the pitch was most treacherous.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19090609.2.24.1.2
Bibliographic details
Marlborough Express, Volume XLIII, Issue 138, 9 June 1909, Page 5
Word Count
261A PROCESSION. Marlborough Express, Volume XLIII, Issue 138, 9 June 1909, Page 5
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