1890 English cricket season

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1890 English cricket season
1889
1891

1890 was the 104th season of cricket in England since the foundation of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the first in which the County Championship was held as an official competition, following agreement between MCC and the leading county clubs at a meeting in December 1889. Surrey became the first official county champions after winning nine out of fourteen games. [1] [2]

Contents

In Test cricket, England, captained by W. G. Grace, defeated Australia in a three-match series by 2–0 to win The Ashes. It was the 13th Test series between the sides. [1] William Gunn of Nottinghamshire was the season's highest run-scorer (1,621); George Lohmann of Surrey took the most wickets (220).

Honours

Ashes tour

England won the three-match Test series 2–0. Only two matches were completed as one was abandoned due to persistent heavy rain:

Cumulative record - Test wins1876-1890
England 18
Australia 10
Drawn4

County Championship

Overall first-class statistics

Leading batsmen

1890 English cricket season - leading batsmen
NameTeam(s)MatchesRunsAverage100s50s
Billy Gunn England, MCC, North, Nottinghamshire, Players 301,62134.4833
Arthur Shrewsbury England, North, Nottinghamshire, Players 251,56841.2629
W. G. Grace England, Gentlemen, Gloucestershire, MCC, South 301,47628.3819
Billy Murdoch Australia 331,39424.4526
Bobby Abel Surrey 321,22624.0309

Leading bowlers

1890 English cricket season - leading bowlers
NameTeam(s)MatchesBalls bowledWickets takenAverage
George Lohmann England, Players, South, Surrey 328,80122013.62
Frederick Martin England, Kent, MCC, South 298,50719013.05
John Ferris Australia 307,72718614.28
Charles Turner Australia 317,52817914.21
Bobby Peel England, North, Players, Yorkshire 337,75517113.07

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian cricket team in England in 1890</span> International cricket tour

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The 1890 County Championship was the first County Championship held as an official competition, following agreement between Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the leading county clubs at a meeting in December 1889. Surrey became the first official county champions after winning nine out of fourteen games.

References

  1. 1 2 Wynne-Thomas, Peter (1983). The Hamlyn A-Z of Cricket Records. Hamlyn Publishing Group. ISBN   0-600-34667-6.
  2. Engel, Matthew (2004). Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2004. John Wisden & Company Ltd. pp. 493–494. ISBN   0-947766-83-9.

Bibliography