England in South Africa in 1938–39 | |||
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England | South Africa | ||
Dates | 8 November 1938 – 14 March 1939 | ||
Captains | Wally Hammond | Alan Melville | |
Test series | |||
Result | England won the 5-match series 1–0 | ||
Most runs | Eddie Paynter (653) | Bruce Mitchell (466) | |
Most wickets | Hedley Verity (19) | Norman Gordon (20) |
The England cricket team toured South Africa from 8 November 1938 to 14 March 1939, playing five Test matches against the South Africa national team and (as the Marylebone Cricket Club) 13 tour matches against various provincial sides. England won the third Test by an innings and 13 runs, but the other four Tests finished as draws, including the final timeless Test, which was played over the course of 10 days (not including two rest days). The final Test was declared a draw, as the England team had to leave to ensure they caught the boat home from Cape Town.[1]
Test series
1st Test
24–28 December 1938
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- England won the toss and elected to bat.
- PA Gibb, LL Wilkinson, NWD Yardley (all Eng), GE Bond, N Gordon, A Melville, PGV van der Bijl and WW Wade (all SA) made their Test debuts.
- 25 December was taken as a rest day.
The South African innings of 390 featured an unbalanced scorecard - there were five half-centuries, a single-figure score and five players failed to score.[2]
2nd Test
31 December 1938 – 4 January 1939
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- England won the toss and elected to bat.
- 1 January was taken as a rest day.
3rd Test
20–23 January 1939
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- England won the toss and elected to bat.
- 22 January was taken as a rest day
4th Test
18–22 February 1939
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- England won the toss and elected to bat.
- No play was possible on day 3.
- RE Grieveson (SA) made his Test debut.
- 19 February was taken as a rest day.
5th Test
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- South Africa won the toss and elected to bat.
- No play was possible on day 8.
- RTD Perks (Eng) made his Test debut.
- 5 March and 12 March were taken as rest days.
Tour matches
- 8–9 November (The Strand): Marylebone Cricket Club (589/8d) vs Western Province County District (140 & 107). MCC won by an innings and 342 runs.
- 12–15 November (Newlands, Cape Town): Western Province (174 & 169) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (276 & 69/2). MCC won by 8 wickets.
- 19–22 November (Athletic Club Ground, Kimberley): Marylebone Cricket Club (676) vs Griqualand West (114 & 273). MCC won by an innings and 289 runs.
- 26–28 November (Ramblers Cricket Club Ground, Bloemfontein): Orange Free State (128 & 260) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (412/6d). MCC won by an innings and 24 runs.
- 3–6 December (Kingsmead, Durban): Natal (307 & 30/0) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (458). Match drawn.
- 10–13 December (Berea Park, Pretoria): North Eastern Transvaal (161 & 142) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (379/6d). MCC won by an innings and 76 runs.
- 16–19 December (Old Wanderers, Johannesburg): Transvaal (428/8d & 174/2) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (268). Match drawn.
- 7–9 January (St George's Oval, Port Elizabeth): Eastern Province (172 & 111) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (518/6d). MCC won by an innings and 235 runs.
- 13–16 January (Jan Smuts Ground, East London): Border (121 & 275) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (320 & 79/1). MCC won by 9 wickets.
- 27–30 January (Old Wanderers, Johannesburg): Combined Transvaal/Northern Transvaal XI (304 & 220/2) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (434). Match drawn.
- 4–7 February (Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo): Marylebone Cricket Club (307/5d) vs Rhodesia (242). Match drawn.
- 10–13 February (Salisbury Sports Club, Salisbury): Marylebone Cricket Club (180 & 174/2d) vs Rhodesia (96 & 95/6). Match drawn.
- 25–28 February (City Oval, Pietermaritzburg): Natal (295 & 219) vs Marylebone Cricket Club (407 & 110/1). MCC won by 9 wickets.
References
- ^ "Stalemate in the Timeless Test". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ^ Walmsley, Keith (2003). Mosts Without in Test Cricket. Reading, England: Keith Walmsley. p. 357. ISBN 0947540067.
External links
- Tour home at ESPNcricinfo
- England to South Africa 1938-39 at Test Cricket Tours
Further reading
- John Lazenby, Edging Towards Darkness: The Story of the Last Timeless Test, Bloomsbury, London, 2017