Test Cricket Tours - Australia to
England 1886
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Tour
of England 1886 Captain:
Harry Scott |
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Fourth Australian Test tour Fourth Test-playing tour of England by Australia (March - November 1886) |
The
tour was organised by Mr J G Sutherland of the Melbourne Cricket Club, the
oldest sporting club in Australia, in repayment for Lord Harris's 1878-79
visit to Australia. It was the first
touring venture sponsored by the Melbourne Club rather than privately but at
one stage it looked certain for cancellation. The South Australian and New
South Wales associations were reluctant to be involved in the arrangements,
and Melbourne was dissuaded by possible objections in England to the
inclusion of five members of the 1884 side (throughout the 1884 tour there
had been many instances of team members who described themselves as amateurs
looking for commercial opportunities). Uncertainty was not removed until
December. At Lord's the county secretaries complained about the difficulties
this late decision gave them in making fixtures. Though
hampered by wet weather and playing on green pitches in the first matches,
the Australians won nine times and had the best of most of their drawn
matches. But they were soundly beaten
in the three Test matches, apart from suffering heavy defeats against Surrey
and Yorkshire. It looked like the end of the road for Evans, Spofforth, McIlwraithe, Palmer,
Bonnor and Trumble, as
well as Scott who had already decided to leave cricket to train as a doctor. The
Parsees (from Bombay) also made a tour of England in 1886, playing 28
matches. |
All Australian tours Previous tour England 1884 Next tour England 1888 |
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Members of the Test tour party (13) Opening batsmen:
William Bruce, Sammy Jones, Harry Scott Middle-order batsmen
George Bonnor, John McIlwraithe All-rounder George Giffen Wicket-keepers
Jack Blackham, Affie Jarvis Slow bowlers
Billy Trumble, ‘Ted’ Evans, George Palmer Fast bowlers
Tom Garrett, Fred Spofforth. |
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Colonial representation NSW
- New South Wales (5) S A
- South Australia (2) Vic
- Victoria (6) Average
age of team at time of first Test
match (5
July 1886) : 28 yrs 4 months. Key
to type: RHB
Right-handed bat LM Left-arm medium-paced bowler RFM Right-arm fast medium OB Off break WK Wicket-keeper |
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Test Appearances made before the tour |
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Tour Officials |
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Selectors |
The selection was made by representatives of the tour
organisers, the Melbourne Cricket Club. They held a trial match between
Victoria and An Australian XI at New Year, made meaningless because the NSW
players would not take part. |
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Selection |
As sponsors, the Melbourne Club appointed
Dr Henry Scott as captain. Unavailable: Walter Giffen
was injured in an accident at an engineering works ; Tom Horan;
Harry Boyle; Hugh Massie (all
for business reasons); Fred Spofforth was not
available at first but in mid-January changed his mind. The last three players to be chosen for
the team were Garrett, Jones and Evans. Tour Party Announced : 1 February 1886. Not selected Following a
dispute over fees paid in the 1884-85 season, the Club did not consider the
following three players: Alick Bannerman, Percy McDonnell and Billy Murdoch. |
Time between selection and departure
from Australia
55 days (1 February - 28 March) |
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Travel Adelaide
T
Plymouth ‘’Austral / ‘Adelaide’’ |
After
completing a tour match against 'The Combined Team' on 20 March 1886, the 'Austral'
left the port of Adelaide on Monday 28 March, carrying seven of the players. The
other six left with the manager on the 'Adelaide' on 10 April. All met up at Naples, from where Bonnor travelled overland. The main body of the tour party reached
Plymouth on 4 May. The team took
practice at Chiswick Park. |
Time spent in England 156 days (4 May - 7 October) |
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On-tour selection |
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Reinforcements |
Spofforth dislocated a finger against North of
England and missed a number of matches.
Roly Pope, 22,
who became a regular factotum for Australian touring teams, accompanied the
tour once he had completed studying medicine at Edinburgh University and
often assisted the tourists by making up the numbers or fielding for them; he
was asked to play fully in five matches Bonnor missed all of the matches in August
through injury. Henry Hyslop
(Hampshire) aged 45 (who had played several times as substitute for the 1878
Australians) and J Hardie, a young amateur from
Sydney on a visit to England, appeared in the final match because Garrett and
McIlwraithe were preparing for their early return
home. Manager Ben Wardill
played in one match. |
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Fixtures/Results |
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â€
not
first-class Time
spent in England before First Test: 62 days (4
May - 5 July) |
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Test appearances on tour |
3
- Blackham, Garrett, Giffen, Jarvis,
Jones, Palmer, Scott,
Spofforth, Trumble. 2
- Bonnor, Bruce,
Evans, Jarvis 1
- McIlwraithe
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Highlights |
•
In the first Test Sammy Jones opened the Test series with an innings
of 87 •
George Giffen’s bowling was outstanding
while Spofforth was injured and he took 154 wickets
on the tour •
Though no longer as effective as in 1884, Fred Spofforth
took 16 wickets in the Test matches at 16.25 |
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Tour Summary |
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Return to Australia London T
Melbourne ‘Orizaba’ London T
Hobart
‘Arawa’’ |
Harry Scott remained in England to
complete his medical studies. Spofforth married Phyllis Cadman from Derbyshire
near the end of the tour. Garrett, McIlwraithe and Spofforth, and
their wives left Tilbury docks on the new Orient liner, the 'Orizaba' on
30 September. The remainder of the players - Blackham,
Giffen, Palmer, Jones, Evans, Trumble,
Jarvis, Bruce - accompanied by manager Wardill and
tour promoter J G Sutherland left the Royal Albert Dock, London, on 7 October on the 'Arawa'. The
ship’s departure from Plymouth (where Bonner, who failed to meet the ship at
Gravesend as arranged, joined the Arawa on 9
October) was delayed by bad weather. Sailing via Tenerife and Cape Town, the
team reached at Hobart on 7th? November 1886.
They landed early in the day, and made the
most of their time ashore before immediately resuming their tour by visiting New Zealand in November
and December 1886. Spofforth, Garrett and McIlwraith who had returned to
Melbourne on Sunday by the ‘Orizaba’ rejoined the team, while Major and Mrs Wardill
returned to Melbourne on the ‘Pateena’ because Mr H Atkinson took over as manager. James Phillips also joined the team to act as umpire, and to play if necessary,
while Blackham took the captaincy for the five
matches played. |
Time away from Australia 224
days (28 March to 7 November) |
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Finances |
The Melbourne Club reaped a return of more than £1000 from the tour. |
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Written accounts of the tour |
"The
Australians in England 1886" by
Charles F.Pardon. |
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Postscript |
The
manager B J Wardill denied that the liberal
hospitality they received had hampered the team and insisted that the team
was the most self-restrained set of sportsmen he had travelled with. He would not comment on dissent within the
team except to praise Scott and speak in high terms of his abilities. |
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