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Read lose five games in a row
Earby 181 for 6 declared, Read 119.
READ failed once again to get back into winning form, registering their fifth successive defeat in their away match
wicket, and a certain amount of good fortune, and were able to declare at 5 p.m. with 181 on the board and only six wickets down.
l'P J lH H W t. JT fp.MiOTial
Newby. The first wicket fell the latter, when, with the score at 21, Newsholme was out an excellent diving slip catch by Harwood._ At 51 two more good catches disposed of Moore and
Earby won the toss and faced Read’s opening attack of pro- ess ona
caruy wuii m lo Smithith
a lace onrl a d T?rar»lr
Fr nk to
to Dennett, and Earby appeared to B. Wright b Smith ........... 40 cne t
by Wear and later by Gibb, pulled the innings together and went on to make 40 before being bowled by Smith. Gibb him self, after surviving a confident lbw appeal, proceeded to make 55 not out, and while some of his shots were edgy, he also plaved some attractive strokes. Just before five, and with
be in a little trouble. Wright, however, assisted first
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Gisbuni 254
M. Dennett c Sumner h Newby .......................... 28 N. Wear c Sumner b Dob son
.............................. ^ 25
J. Gibb not o u t .................. 55 B. Wasby b Smith............... 0 K. Crabtree not o u t ......... . 4 Extras
Total (6 wkts)
...................... 7. 181
BOWLING: R. Smith 9.2—0
—50—3; F. Newby 9—0—43— 2; J. Waddington 3—0—18—0; R. Goodway 4—0—31—0; M. Dobson 6—0—32—1.
Smith about to bowl to Gibb, the Earby captain declared and set Read to score 182 to win in just under two hours. O p e n e r s Fairclough and
Goodway started fairly briskly and 15 had been scored from three overs before Fairclough was lbw for four. Goodway went on to score 20, as did Barry Smith and there then fol lowed a succession of batsmen who, while contributing ade quately to the general total, were unable to provide Read with the match-winning innings they required. Towards the end, a draw
seemed possible, but R o n n i e Smith could find no-one of suffi-
R. Goodway b Madden ... 20 B. Smith c Wasby b Moore 20 M. Grainger c Moore b Dennett
W. P. Fairclough Ibw Mad den
READ .............................. 4
M. Dobson b Madden....... 11 J. Harwood lbw Moore ... 1 P. Boyce-Kenyon c Dennett b Moore ...................... 10
...................... 2
R. Smith not out .............. 15 J. Waddington lbw Pratt ... 13 E. Sumner lbw Madden ... 18 F. Newby b Madden ....... 0
Extras Total
...................... 5 119
Chess Club Leading positions in the
Coach and Horses Chess Club handicap league are:
W. Wolstenholme ........... 4.81 S. Taylor .......................... 4.44 H. Cosgrove ...................... 4.32 J. Wilson ............................4.00 A. Brocklehurst .................3.96
J. W. Fielding..... ............ 3.70 The club meets weekly on Wednesday evenings at 8 p.m.
use of an excellent batting him, and the end came at 119. inV
against league leaders Earby. . The Yorkshiremen made full cient determination to stay with «uu cuv w
uu vauiv at Piain amnnnt nf Ar,ntUn.
fliVnn.nLila.. J...
Another disappointing day for Read, who were somewhat un lucky to lose despite a better all-round performance.
B. Moore c Boyce-Kenyon h QmilK
• LAKIIrEARBY
G. Newsholme c Harwood b Newby ...................... 11
b Smith.......................... 11
2—43—1; C. Madden 10.3—1— 31—5;' D. Moore 7—0—21—3; T. Mcllor 1—0—1—0; J. Pratt 1—0—18—1.
CRICKET FIXTURES
Clitheroe, Blackburn N. v Baxenden, Great Harwood v Cherry Tree, Padiham v Whal- ley, Ribblesdale W. v Read, Settle v Earby.
•
mMinw tt? AftlTF, JUIN1UK l la u u c
C.V. v Settle, Lucas v Padiham, Read v Lower Darwen. Div. 2: Rolls-Royce 1st v
Tomorrow: Div 1: B.B. and
Ribblesdale W. VALLEY LEAGUE
Belvedere v Lucas H (at Lucas), Barrowford v Burnley
Boys’ Club. Results: Burnley Boys’ Club 93-9; Lucas II 143: Atkinsons 188-7 dec., Barrowford 145-5.
RIBBLESDALE LEAGUE Tomorrow: Barnoldswick v
BOWLING: M. Dennett 10—
JUNIORS HOME BY 8 WICKETS
Bamoldswick 145, Clitheroe 153 for 2.
BY AN eight-wicket win over Bamoldswick at Chatbum Road on Saturday, Clitheroe second XI showed why they are lead ers of Division 2 of the Ribbles
dale Junior League, The innings 'was notable for
a richly-endowed unbeaten 77 by Stanley Crabtree, with Steven Bennett following up his two recent half-centuries witth an
unbeaten 25. Bamoldsyick: Malone 1; Ald-
erson 22; Geldard 9; Lord 68; Bellwood 0; Sharpies 6; Sneath 5;Kilner 14; Jones 5; Frankland 0; Brown n.o. 1.
BOWLING: Boden 11—2—
40—1; Rawson 4—1—11—1; Aspinwall 10—3—27—4; Tom linson 4—1—16—1; Atkinson 5—0—9—0; Wigglesworth, 43
—0—18—3. Clithcroe: Atkinson 17; Crab
tree n.o. 77; Dobson 12; Ben nett no. o 25; extras 22. Total
153. BOWLING: Sharpies, 9.1—1
—2—50—0; Frankland 7—0— 36—0; Aldersley, 5—0—32—2; Kilner, 2—0—11—0.
THE Waggon and Horses team had a comfortable win over a team jrom Atkinson’s Ltd., in the popular seven- a-side cricket competition held at Church Meadow, and I organised by Ribblesdale Wanderers Cricket Club. Helped by a score of 60 from Booth, and 48 from
Workman, the Waggon team made 120 all out, and in reply, Atkinsons could only manage 90 before their last
wicket fell. After the match, the players were presented with
miniature cups by the governing director of Castle Cart
ings, Mr. Ted Lawrenson. The players for the two teams in the final are pic-
tured with Mr Lawrenson. On the left of the picture is the Atkinson team, from left to right, Sunter, Clough,
I Buchanan, Seedall, Hamer, Johnson and Pearson. The Waggon and Horses team, on the right, are, from left to right, Wigglesworth, Aspinwall, Knowles, Musgrove,
Booth, Parker and Workman.
SCHOOL CRICKETERS PAY I
BEST TRIBUTE
k CRICKET tour made by umbers of Citheroe Royal Grammar School’s first XI provided a fitting finale to Mr. Malcolm Blackburn’s spell as organiser. of the
team. Mr. Blackburn, of Buc-
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cleuch Avenue, Clitheroe, who is to take up a new teaching post at Turton m September, had the satis faction of seeing the team win three of their four games and draw the other. In the course of the tour,
fee school played the City of Bath School, King
Edward. VII Grammar School, Weston-super-Mare Grammar School, and Keynsbam G r a m m a r
School
City of Bath School 107, CRGS 214 for 6 dec. On a hard, fast wicket,
CRGS were put in to bat, and scored 214 for six before Wall- bank declared. A highlight was an unbeaten. seventh-wicket stand of 98 between Wallbank and K. Boden. Wallbank finished at 94 not out, K. Boden at 46 not out, and Lister scored a useful 23. City of Bath started badly at
at well under a run a minute, but excellent bowling by CRGS soon tied the opposition bats men down, with the result mat wickets fell regularly, and they
finished with 13.1—3—6—28 (including a three-wicket maiden!). Compton chipped in with two for 13 off six overs. CRGS required 129 at about
were all out for 102. Wallbank took three for eight,
K. Boden three for 27, and I. Webster three for 33.
16 for two, the Boden brothers each taking a quick wicket. From then on, despite the fast outfield, wickets fell steadily and runs came slowly. The opposi
figures of 16—8—6—26. King Edward V n 102, CRGS 133.
wicket, Wallbank won the toss and decided to bat. Accurate bowling by the King Edward s attack inhibited the scoring rate, and the school were all out tor 133.
On another hard, fast and true
• Berryman had a fine innings of 34, and J. Boden scored 28, including two sixes and two
. .
fours.King Edward’s had to score
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Greenhalgh 12 1 425 96x 38.6 C. Bacon 11 0 191 51 l/»5 S. Westhead 11 1 143 52x 14.3 G. Davies 9 0 129 39 14.3 R . . Vaiighton .8 3 65 21 R. Stevenson 12 0 143 26 Washbrook 8 1 68 32x G. Sutcliffe 6 4 15 7
R. Wilson 7 0 . 4 5 16 Wigglesworth 6 0 27 12 Also batted:—R. Read 19,_S. Bennett 11,
R.GreenWO^ 76,
A. Turpin 21, K. Boden 41. P. Dobson 14, ,P. Atkinson 11.
b ow l in g O. M. R-W. Ay.
S S & & 1 1 | :• » « V 8 8 i 1 Greenwood. 24 9 61 5 12.2
13.0 11.9 9.7 7.5: 6.4 4.5
Wlialley
BATTING Ins N.o. R H^. Av.
D. Bleazard 6 1 117 47 23.4 G. Topham 6 1 112 45 22.4 Wilkinson 10 1 103 42x 11.4
Anderson 10 1 Shuttleworth 9 1
:G. Hindlc 9 1 J. R u d d Duckworth J. .'Collier
J. Slinger Hall ........
Also" batted:— T. Parkinson 22, M, Fallon 35.
8 1 8 0 8 4 9 0 8 1
92 25x 10.2 67 28x 8.3 45 16 35 16 33 19 14 7 32 14 16 5
Hall ........... 140 38 365 40 9.1 J . R u d d ... 114 21 274 40 6.8 Also bowled; G. Htndle
BOWLING O. M. R. w. Av.
3—71, G. Topham 4—53.
5.6 5.0 4.1 3.5 3.5 2.2
Ribblesdale ba tting Ins N.o. R H.s. Av.
Workman U } \®L ^4 16.8 K Proctor 12 1 127 41x .\6.1
Slinger ...... D j. Ainsworth 10 0 112 40
W. Lamb ... » J D. Cottam 11 t T. Barker 6 j p. Wilkinson 6 1
•Lister 22.
bowling o . M. R. W. Av.
Clinccr
T Metcalfe 80 9 283 21 13.4 P. Peddar 553 5 220 11 20.0
166 25 489 50 9.7, p. Wilkinson 52 7 196 7 28.0
I. Metcalfe 9 3 58 20x Musgrove 1- i
90 22 54 19 76 34 23 14 7 5
Also batted; P- Nester 23, D -
P * Peddar 10 5 79 23x 15.8 X Wallbank 10 0 52 38 15.2
14.5 11.2 9.6 8.1 7.7 7.6 5.7 1.4
Read
b a t t in g Ins N.o. R H.s. Av.
R. Goodway 10 2 289 67 28.9 P. Kenyon 5 0 M. Grainger 10 2 P. Haworth 5 1 Smith (R) 6 1 B. Smith ^ 0
E. Sumner 7 3 J. Wilkinson 6 2 — — - Also batted:—Tatton 30, M.
66 27 98 32 38 22 55 31 63 20 31 10 16 11
13.2 9.8 9.5 9.2 9.0 6.2 4.0
Dobson 27, J. Waddington 19. bow l in g
■ Gondwav- 46 6 154 9 17.1 Smith W 84.5 11'303 18 16.9 E. Sumner 57 5 238 24 9.9, D. Pollard 51 ? 98 11 8.9 Also bowled; Tatton 3—49,
Wilkinson 67.3 9 243 10 C 4.3 O. M. R. W. Av.
T. Savage 3—28. . x indicates not out.
Weston Grammar School 117 for 9 dec., CRGS 70 for 4.
tion were finally all out for 107. J. Boden had the remarkable
for the match against Weston- super-Mare. Weston won the toss and batted first. Outstand ing bowling from J. Boden (whose analysis at one stage was 3,5—l—3—6) had the opposi tion batsmen in great difficulty, at one stage they were 9 for
The weather was again fine
f° A* fifth wicket stand of 63, however, and a sixth stand ot 24, boosted their total to a mod est 117 for nine, at which point the innings was declared. John Boden took three for 32,
a run a minute. Just as the opening howling attack of the two Bodens was sorely missed, so Lister, the number one bats man was also missed, the three of them having taken this as their rest day on the tour. Nevertheless the school bad
only two wickets down with 100 on the scoreboard, and Blair-Bryan scored the winning runs with a magnificent pull for four off the opening fast bowler in what was unquestion ably the last over of the match. This four brought Blatr-
Bryan’s score past the 50 mark, and his unbeaten 52 was with out doubt the best of the tour. In carrying his bat, the opener had also hit eight boundaries. The boys all agreed that the
of i t
• who claimed five victims and took one excellent catch; and
J. Wallbank three for 23, and i. Webster two for 39. Special mention must be made of Berry man, the CRGS wicket keeper,
he did not concede one bye. The school batsmen soon
found runs difficult to come by. The wicket was something ot a let-down after the previous two, and the game fizzled out into a tame draw, the school scoring 70 for four by the close of play. K. Boden got 28 not out, includ ing a six and four fours, and Rushton scored an unusually
SC<Exactly half the overs the opposition bowled were maid ens but criticism should he affiied at the wicket not the
batsmen.
' Keynsham GS 128s CRGS 129 for 2.
CRGS heat Keynsham Gram mar School by eight wickets-
In the last match of the tour
Keynsham batted first on first-class pitch, which i
almost county standard. Despite good bowling, the
opposition never seemed in much trouble and cruised to 8S
HOMING
First for yornig birds
Homing Society sent 449 birds to the first young bird race from Whitchurch, 63 miles. Liberated at 10-45 a.m., the
Thirty members of Clithcroe
first birds were back around 12-25 p.m. Results were:
Jones and Addison
Thorsby and Lofthouse Hitchon and Chatburn Jones and Addison N. Hall W. J. F. Cottam B. Parker
for three at a run a minute. But in less than an hour their last seven wickets fell for 40, a
N. Hall G. Wilkinson E. Hargreaves F. Nutter
1100.83 1099.40 1098.57 1097.02 1095.05 1093.69 1093.27 1090.74 1087.57 1086.84 1079.94
Friendly turned into‘needle’game
THE Whalley Sunday XI were soundly beaten at the weekend by Brockhall, who turned out a strong side, including six Whalley or ex-Whalley players. It was the
Sunday XI’s first match with a local team. The game, which was at the century jn five days, the other
Abbey ground, was arranged as a friendly, but as play pro ceeded it became more of a needle match. The visitors put Whalley in
i lie fcuiiiv, '
two being made in inter county matches with the Lan cashire Schoolboys. Brockhall had the task of
to bat, and it was soon appa rent to the home team that
they had to build up a size able totaL abd4»t as long-as possible, because of Brock- hairs quick scoring potential.
Bradley put ou 29 in twenty minutes before Bradley was caught by Doman off Bibby
Openers R. Peters and P. __e.„
fell and did not pick up until Les Yates joined Bobby Peters
— * - , ,n t i1
making 150 runs in 105 min utes. Not unreasonable trom
for 20. The scoring rate then were dropped, and it wasn t
______ . . . ibby Which paid off. Three catches • -
at 107 for 7. L. Yates was 30 not out and
tour was a great success and they had enjoyed every minute
Anglers break club
records
sea angling club were hoping for a good catch when their boat left Mostyn, N o r t h Wales, at 5-30 a.m. for a day s
A dozen members of a local sea fishing.
stones Hospital Sea Angling Club, the trip turned out to bo a dream come true. For they caught more fish than had ever been caught before on a club outing, and they smashed them own club records on numerous occasions. By the end of the afternoon, they had landed 273 lb of fish—almost 2-V hun dredweight—among them. The bumper catch included
And for members of Calder- _ ,
Peters 58 not out. This was the 15-ycar-old’s third half
until the score stood at 125 that the first wicket fell, when Tom Wallbank was caught by Les 'Yates off Bobby Peters
. .« ___n f ITS for 41.
and they passed the Whalley score with a comfortable 15 minutes to spare. Neil Duck worth hit an entertaining 92 not out which included fifteen fours. This opening partner ship must have been one of the highest at Whalley since
Harrison joined Duckworth .
the war.A return match has been arranged in two weeks’ time at Brockhall.
WHALLEY
R. Peters not out ......... 58 P. Bradley c Doman b Bibby ....................
G. Hindle b Bibby ............ 3 A. Wood b Holgatc .......... 11 C. Bradley c and b J. Wallbank
20
F. Hargreaves Ibw J. Wallbank ...................... 0
.................. 16
J. Peters, Jnr. c Duck- worth b Holgate ...... 5
J. Peters, Snr. Ibw J. Wall- bank ............................ 2
L. Yates not o u t .............. 30 Extras .......................... 4
two tope, one of 28 lbs, the other 32 lbs 12 oz., 26 thorn- back ray, the heaviest emg 10 lbs 6 oz, a tub gurnard of 4 lbs 6 ozs. sjid spotted dog fish of up to 8 lb 4 oz. On top of this the anglers took whi ting, dabs, plaice and mackerel
in great quantity. The party were fishing from
back from a trip to Ireland, hope to continue their success in September with an outing to
Members of the club, freshly ,
Mr Jack Connell’s boat, the •Cambrian Enterprise’, about four miles off Rhyl, near the Hoyle Bank.
3—32—2; R. Ascough 4—1— 20—0; N. Duckworth 7—1— 26—0: A. HolRate 17—9—20 —2: J. Wallbank 17—6—30—
Total (7 wkts. dec.) ... 149 BOWLING: M. Bibby 14—
3; P. Doman 3—1—17—0. brockha ll
N. Duckworth not out ... 92 T. Wallbank c Yates b R. Peters
T. Harrison not out ....... y Extras ...............
..................•.••••• 41 D
—3g—0; P. Bradley 4—0—19 —0; F. Hargreaves 3—0—22—
Total (i wkt. dec.) ... 150 BOWLNG: G. Hindle 7—0
0; R. Peters 4—0—20—1; J.
Peters Jnr. 4—0—25—0; L. — 't A__1<__fl
Wallbank started steaddy and scored 39 in the first eight overs. Thereafter, however, they began to increase their scoring rate, talcing chances
Openers Duckworth and T coach ■es invasion of pitches The coverage on television of football and cricket
pitches being invaded by the younger generation of today was a contributory factor for thespreadmg o f t h i s b e haviour, observed Mr. James A. Gledhill, of Thornton Oleveleys, when he spoke to the Clitheroe and District
Probus Club.
at Darwen Grammar School and formerly taught at Clith- eroe Royal Grammar School, is joint team manager and coach bf the Young Amateurs of Lancashire Cricket Federa
Mr. Gledhill. who is a master
tion. He said the Federation was formed in 1947 and the young amateurs had been most success ful, having lost only 16 matches out of 161 played. It was in this league that Hughes, Hayes and Hilton of Lancashire and Bore of Yorkshire were discovered, and Mr. Gledhill stressed that almost all good cricketers are recruited from League Cricket. He deplored the invasion ot
August 6th when the speaker will be Mr. David Walder, MP.
ness and stay in hospital. The next meeting will be on
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pitches when a player made a century — encouraged by the coverage on television—saying that in his younger days they always admired their heroes
from the ring side. Mr. Gledhill spoke about the lack of support for cricket to
day and that it was being strangled by the gradual exten sion of the football season. t Most county clubs were m
Whalley’s point of view, and as it turned out, not impos-
the red apart from Warwick shire who were a very wealthy club—thanks to the support of their vast supporters’ club. Lancahire Cricket Club last
2, Woone Lane, Clitheroe Tel: 2807 6 am. to 8 am.
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year, although they won the Gillct Cup, and topped the Sun day League, lost £12,500 and to help the financial situation they were building office blocks at Old Trafford. Some county clubs were unable to t meet the wage demands of their players and he thought there would be
of the leading clubs in the Rtb- blesdalc League to form the Northern League, hoping to find better support only to now
fewer clubs in the future. He instanced the departure
CYRIL
realise that their finances were no better than in the Ribbles-
Emmet Robinson, the former well-known Yorkshire player, saying there were fewer charac
dale League. Mr. Gledhill spoke about
not liking Sunday cricket, add ing that this type of cricket, although not good for the players, was a means of m- reasing a dub’s finances and he agreed with the outlook of Brian Close, adding “to get the money you have to prostitute the art.” He thought Ray Illingworth
ters in the game today. He referred to Brian Close
was exeptionally wise about cricket and a top-class man, He had looked at the pitch at Headingley on the Thursday morning before the Test and he knew what it would be like on Tuesday the last day, and there were few players in the game today as shrewd as this. At question time Mr. Glen
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hill was asked if it would not he better to have fewer thrcc- dav county matches and more one-day matches with limited overs, and he replied that clubs had to consider losing mem bership if fewer three-day mat ches were played. He instanced how much better supported were the Lancashire matches played at Blackpool and Southport during the holiday season than those played at Old Trafford. In reply to another member
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who thought it unwise to import players from abroad into the county teams,' Mr. Gledhtli said he quite agreed as this did not encourage thier own players, but it was again a case of attracting more support. York shire, he recalled, strictly res trict their players to those born
in the county. Mr. J. Dewhurst, Clitheroe,
thanked Mr. Gledhill for an interesting and enjoyable ad dress and regretted tiie decline in the support of cricket, add ing that in his younger days he had to go early to a cricket match at Chatburn Road other wise he would not get a seat He thought the Tecent television coverage of youth encroachment on the playing pitch at Head ingley in the Test match ‘
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