• Source: 1786 English cricket season
  • The 1786 English cricket season was the 15th in which matches have been awarded retrospective first-class cricket status and the last before the Marylebone Cricket Club was founded in 1787. The season saw five top-class matches played in the country.


    Matches


    Five first-class matches for which scorecards exist were played during the year, four of them involving sides playing under the name of Kent. The season saw the first "great" matches played by the White Conduit Club, the direct predecessor of the Marylebone Cricket Club which was formed the following year. One of these matches saw Tom Walker scored 95 and 102 runs in his two innings, a pair of scores considered "an astonishing double by the standards of the day".
    In another match, Tom Sueter of Hampshire was given out hit the ball twice, the first time that this method if dismissal is recorded in a first-class scorecard.


    First mentions


    Harry Walker
    Tom Walker


    References




    Further reading


    Altham, H. S. (1962). A History of Cricket, Volume 1 (to 1914). George Allen & Unwin.
    Birley, Derek (1999). A Social History of English Cricket. Aurum.
    Bowen, Rowland (1970). Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development. Eyre & Spottiswoode.
    Major, John (2007). More Than A Game. HarperCollins.
    Underdown, David (2000). Start of Play. Allen Lane.

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