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#warwickshire

6 incidents tagged

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
Mild

Tibby Smith — England's Inter-War Wicketkeeper

Warwickshire and England

1922-09-15

Ernest 'Tibby' or 'Tiger' Smith of Warwickshire kept wicket for England in 11 Tests between 1911 and 1914 and remained one of the most respected glove technicians in county cricket through the 1920s — keeping in 21 first-class seasons before becoming a coach to Don Bradman in his 1948 tour.

#tibby-smith#tiger-smith#warwickshire
Explosive

Percy Jeeves Killed on the Somme — The Cricketer Who Inspired Wodehouse's Butler, July 1916

Warwickshire

1916-07-22

Percy Jeeves, the Warwickshire fast-medium bowler whose name P.G. Wodehouse borrowed for the most famous butler in English fiction, was killed in action at High Wood on the Somme on 22 July 1916. He was 28 and had no known grave.

#percy-jeeves#world-war-i#death
Serious

Frank Foster's Motorcycle Accident — Career Ended at 26, 1915

England

1915-08-15

Frank Foster, the Warwickshire left-armer who had taken 32 wickets on the 1911-12 Ashes tour as Sydney Barnes' new-ball partner, was injured in a motorcycle accident on military duty in August 1915. He never played first-class cricket again. He was 26.

#frank-foster#world-war-i#motorcycle-accident
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