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Controversies in 1929

14 incidents documented

Mild

Wally Hammond's 905 Runs — 1928-29 Ashes Record

Australia v England

1929-03-08

In the 1928-29 Ashes Wally Hammond scored 905 runs in five Tests at an average of 113.12 — at the time, and for the next 60 years, the most by any batsman in any Test series. England won the series 4-1 under Percy Chapman.

#wally-hammond#ashes#1928-29
Mild

Bradman's 340* for NSW vs Victoria — Sydney, 1929

New South Wales v Victoria

1929-01-11

Two months after his disappointing Test debut at Brisbane, Don Bradman made 340 not out for New South Wales against Victoria at the Sydney Cricket Ground in January 1929 — at the time the highest individual score made at the SCG, and a single innings that doubled his Test team's confidence in him.

#don-bradman#sheffield-shield#nsw
Mild

New Zealand Granted Test Status — Imperial Cricket Conference, 1929

New Zealand and Imperial Cricket Conference

1929-05-31

On 31 May 1929 the Imperial Cricket Conference at Lord's voted to grant New Zealand full Test status, making it the fifth Test-playing nation. The first New Zealand Test was scheduled for January 1930 against MCC at Christchurch — the formal admission of a country whose 1927 tour of England had impressed observers across the counties.

#new-zealand#test-status#imperial-cricket-conference
Mild

George Headley's Caribbean Form — Selected for First Home Test Series, 1929

Jamaica and West Indies

1929-12-15

Through the 1929 Caribbean season the 20-year-old George Headley scored consistently for Jamaica against the visiting Tennyson XI and in inter-colonial matches. By December 1929 he had been selected for the West Indies' first home Test series against MCC the following month — a tour that would produce his breakthrough.

#george-headley#west-indies#jamaica
Mild

Learie Constantine Joins Nelson — Lancashire League, 1929

Nelson Cricket Club / Lancashire League

1929-04-01

In the spring of 1929 Learie Constantine signed a contract with Nelson Cricket Club in the Lancashire League — the first West Indian Test cricketer to take a full professional contract in English league cricket. He stayed with Nelson until 1937 and inspired a wave of Caribbean professionals to follow.

#learie-constantine#lancashire-league#nelson
Mild

South Africa in England 1929 — Cameron's Tourists Lose 2-0

England v South Africa

1929-08-19

Nummy Deane's South Africans played five Tests in England in the long summer of 1929, losing the series 0-2 with three drawn but providing Hammond, Sutcliffe and Woolley with their first sustained run of home Test runs since 1926.

#south-africa#england#1929
Mild

Chapman's Ashes — England Win 4-1 in Australia, 1928-29

Australia v England

1929-03-08

Percy Chapman's England side, led by Hammond's record 905 runs and supported by the new-ball pair of Larwood and George Geary, won the 1928-29 Ashes 4-1 — the first English Ashes win in Australia for 17 years and the series in which a 20-year-old Don Bradman made his Test debut.

#percy-chapman#ashes#1928-29
Mild

Stewie Dempster — New Zealand's Pre-Test Star, 1929

New Zealand v England

1929-12-15

In New Zealand's first home Test series in 1929-30, the 26-year-old Stewie Dempster scored 136 in the second Test at Wellington, partnered by Jackie Mills's 117 in an opening stand of 276 — the highest first-wicket partnership made in a Test by any country to that point and the founding statement of New Zealand Test batting.

#stewie-dempster#new-zealand#test-batting
Mild

The Imperial Cricket Conference Expands — Test Status for India, WI, NZ, 1926-29

Imperial Cricket Conference / Member countries

1929-05-31

Across three Imperial Cricket Conference meetings between May 1926 and May 1929, Test status was granted in turn to the West Indies (1926), India (1929) and New Zealand (1929) — tripling the number of Test nations in three years and transforming international cricket from a three-country game into a six-country one.

#imperial-cricket-conference#icc#test-status
Mild

K.S. Duleepsinhji's Emergence — 333 v Northamptonshire, 1929

Sussex v Northamptonshire

1929-05-15

On 15 May 1929 the 24-year-old K.S. Duleepsinhji — Ranji's nephew and the second member of the family to play county cricket for Sussex — made 333 against Northamptonshire at Hove, then a Sussex record and the highest score made on the south coast in county cricket.

#duleepsinhji#sussex#england
Mild

MCC Tour the West Indies — 1929-30 Series Sets Up Headley

MCC and West Indies

1929-10-15

MCC's 1929-30 tour party, captained by the Honourable Freddie Calthorpe, sailed for the Caribbean in late 1929 — the first Test series ever played in the West Indies. The four-Test series produced the West Indies' first home Test win and the breakthrough series of George Headley.

#west-indies#mcc#1929-30
Mild

Ranji Trophy Discussions Begin — Indian First-Class Structure, 1929

BCCI and Indian provincial cricket associations

1929-08-15

In the first year after its foundation the Board of Control for Cricket in India began discussions on a national first-class competition modelled on the County Championship and Sheffield Shield. The Ranji Trophy was eventually launched in 1934-35, but its founding deliberations began in mid-1929 with the BCCI's first executive meeting.

#ranji-trophy#india#bcci
Mild

Wilfred Rhodes — England's Senior Statesman, 1929 Final Test Year

Yorkshire and England

1929-08-31

By 1929 Wilfred Rhodes was 51 years old and still bowling left-arm orthodox spin for Yorkshire — the senior statesman of English cricket who had bowled to W.G. Grace 30 years earlier and was now coaching the next generation. His final selection for England came in the 1929-30 West Indies tour, by which time he was 52.

#wilfred-rhodes#yorkshire#england
Moderate

Learie Constantine — A Decade in the Lancashire League, 1929-39

Nelson Cricket Club v Lancashire League sides

1929-04-27

From 1929 to 1937 Learie Constantine was the professional at Nelson Cricket Club in the Lancashire League, a contract that paid him substantially more than Test cricket and quietly turned him into the most famous Caribbean man in Britain. He took 793 league wickets at 9.90 and scored 4,397 runs at 37, won Nelson seven titles in eight years, and shifted the social geography of black professionalism in pre-war England. His decade in Nelson was as influential as anything he did in Test whites.

#learie-constantine#lancashire-league#nelson