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#edgbaston

13 incidents tagged

🏏Explosive

Kasprowicz Glove Catch — Ashes 2005 Edgbaston

England vs Australia

4-7 August 2005

Michael Kasprowicz was given out caught behind in one of the closest Ashes matches ever, but replays suggested his glove was off the bat handle when the ball hit it.

#ashes#edgbaston#kasprowicz
🥊Serious

Flintoff vs Ponting — 2005 Ashes Aggression

England vs Australia

4 August 2005

Andrew Flintoff engaged in relentless verbal and physical intimidation of Ricky Ponting throughout the iconic 2005 Ashes series.

#flintoff#ponting#ashes
😂Mild

Glenn McGrath Steps on a Ball and Misses the Edgbaston Ashes Test

England vs Australia

2005-08-04

Glenn McGrath missed the pivotal Edgbaston Ashes Test after stepping on a cricket ball during the warm-up, changing the course of the 2005 Ashes.

#glenn-mcgrath#ankle-injury#rugby-ball
Serious

Lance Klusener — Player of the Tournament, 1999 World Cup

South Africa

1999-06-17

At the 1999 World Cup, Lance Klusener became one of cricket's great individual stories — 281 runs at an average of 140.50 and a strike rate of 122, plus 17 wickets at 20.58. He won four Player of the Match awards in nine matches. Yet South Africa exited at the semi-final stage in the famous Edgbaston tied semi.

#lance-klusener#south-africa#1999-world-cup
Serious

Brian Lara's 501 Not Out — Warwickshire vs Durham, June 1994

Warwickshire vs Durham

1994-06-06

Just seven weeks after his Test world-record 375, Brian Lara scored an unbeaten 501 for Warwickshire against Durham at Edgbaston, breaking Hanif Mohammad's 499 from 1959 to register the highest individual score in first-class history. The innings came off only 427 balls and contained 62 fours and 10 sixes.

#brian-lara#warwickshire#durham
Serious

Botham's 5 for 1 at Edgbaston — The 1981 Ashes

England, Australia

1981-07-30

Set just 151 to win, Australia were cruising at 105 for 4 when Mike Brearley persuaded a reluctant Ian Botham to bowl. Twenty-eight balls and one run later Botham had taken 5 for 1 and Australia had collapsed to 121 all out.

#ian-botham#ashes#edgbaston
Mild

Zaheer Abbas — 274 on First Test in England, Edgbaston 1971

Pakistan vs England

3-8 June 1971

Zaheer Abbas made 274 against England at Edgbaston in June 1971 in only the second Test of his career — and his first in England — batting for nine hours and ten minutes, hitting 38 fours, and taking Pakistan to 608/7 declared. The innings, second only to Hanif Mohammad's 337 in Pakistani Test history at the time, announced Zaheer as the most prolific accumulator of his generation and earned him selection as a Wisden Cricketer of the Year for 1972.

#Zaheer Abbas#double century#Edgbaston
🔥Moderate

Ken Barrington Dropped for 137 — Edgbaston, June 1965

England vs New Zealand

1965-05-27

At Edgbaston in May 1965, England's most prolific batsman of the era spent 437 minutes making 137 against a weak New Zealand attack. Ken Barrington was dropped for the next Test as a public warning about scoring rates — a punishment unprecedented for a Test centurion. He returned a fortnight later, made 163 against the same opposition, and was never disciplined that way again.

#ken barrington#edgbaston#1965
Mild

Maurice Tate Devastates South Africa at Edgbaston — 1924 Tour

England v South Africa

1924-06-16

On a cloudy Edgbaston morning in June 1924, the new Sussex pair of Arthur Gilligan and Maurice Tate skittled South Africa for 30 — the lowest Test innings total ever made by a side that had won the toss. Tate took 4 for 12 and Gilligan 6 for 7, and the partnership with the new ball that would carry England through the mid-1920s was christened.

#maurice-tate#south-africa#england
Mild

Frank Field — Warwickshire's Quiet 1910s Workhorse

Warwickshire

1914-05-15

Frank Field, the Warwickshire fast bowler who partnered Frank Foster in the championship-winning side of 1911 and continued to lead the county attack until the war, was one of the underrated workhorses of the early 1910s — taking over 100 wickets in three consecutive seasons.

#frank-field#warwickshire#1910s
Mild

Frank Foster's Emergence — Warwickshire's Future Captain, 1908-1909

Warwickshire

1909-07-01

Frank Foster, the left-arm fast-medium bowler and middle-order batter from Birmingham, made his Warwickshire first-class debut in 1908. By the close of 1909 he was establishing himself as one of the most promising young all-rounders in England — the foundation for the career that would, two years later, deliver Warwickshire its first county championship and, on the 1911-12 Ashes tour, the new-ball partnership with S.F. Barnes that won the Ashes.

#frank-foster#warwickshire#edgbaston
Serious

Australia 36 All Out — Edgbaston 1902, Rhodes 7-17 in 90 Minutes

England, Australia

1902-05-29

On 29 May 1902 at Edgbaston, on a damp pitch, Wilfred Rhodes (7 for 17) and George Hirst (3 for 15) bowled Australia out for 36 — for almost a century the lowest total in Test cricket. The remarkable bowling, taking 90 minutes, is part of the Edgbaston Test legend; the match was eventually drawn after a thunderstorm washed out two days.

#wilfred-rhodes#george-hirst#australia
Moderate

Johnny Tyldesley's 138 — The Other Story of Edgbaston 1902

England, Australia

1902-05-29

Before Wilfred Rhodes and George Hirst rolled Australia for 36 at Edgbaston on 29 May 1902, the day's foundation had been laid by Johnny Tyldesley's 138 in four and a half hours — an innings that took England to 376 for 9 declared. Tyldesley, the Lancashire professional, was at the height of his powers; the innings is sometimes overlooked because of what followed in the afternoon.

#johnny-tyldesley#lancashire#england