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#annual fixture

4 incidents tagged

Mild

Gentlemen v Players — The Showcase Fixture of the 1840s

Gentlemen vs Players

1844-07-01

Through the 1840s the Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's was the showcase fixture of the English summer — amateurs against professionals, the best of the country against the best of the country, with the professionals winning more often than not. Alfred Mynn straddled the two teams as the great amateur player; Fuller Pilch led the Players' batting; the fixture was the model that all later representative cricket was built on.

#gentlemen-vs-players#lord-s#1844
Mild

Eton v Harrow Becomes Annual — The Fixture Settles at Lord's, 1822

Eton vs Harrow

1822-08-02

The Eton v Harrow cricket match, first played at Lord's in 1805 with Lord Byron in the Harrow side and resumed in 1818, became an annual fixture from 1822 — the foundation date of what would become the longest-running schools cricket fixture in the world. The annual rhythm, briefly interrupted by the 1829-31 ban, has otherwise survived almost unbroken to the modern era.

#eton#harrow#1822
Mild

Gentlemen v Players Revived — The Players Win the First Match Back, 1819

Gentlemen of England vs Players of England

1819-07-08

After a thirteen-year gap forced by the Napoleonic War, the Gentlemen v Players match was revived at Lord's on 7-9 July 1819. The amateurs played the professionals on equal terms — eleven a side, no odds — and the Players won by six wickets. Lord Strathavon, a sponsor of the Players, captained them in person, apparently because he had placed a bet on his side and wanted to be sure of his money. The 1819 revival began the unbroken run of the fixture that would last until 1962.

#gentlemen-vs-players#lord-s#1819
Mild

Eton v Harrow — The Lord's Rematch That Restarted the Annual Fixture, 1818

Eton College vs Harrow School

1818-07-30

Thirteen years after the inaugural 1805 meeting at Thomas Lord's old ground in Dorset Square — the match in which Lord Byron had played for Harrow with a runner — Eton and Harrow met again at the new Lord's at St John's Wood in July 1818. The rematch restarted what would, from 1822, become the longest-running annual schoolboy fixture in cricket. By the late nineteenth century Eton v Harrow at Lord's was one of the great social occasions of the London summer.

#eton#harrow#public-schools