fbpx
Wikipedia

Lionel Palairet

Lionel Charles Hamilton Palairet (27 May 1870 – 27 March 1933) was an English amateur cricketer who played for Somerset and Oxford University. A graceful right-handed batsman, he was selected to play Test cricket for England twice in 1902. Contemporaries judged Palairet to have one of the most attractive batting styles of the period. His obituary in The Times described him as "the most beautiful batsman of all time".[1] An unwillingness to tour during the English winter limited Palairet's Test appearances; contemporaries believed he deserved more Test caps.

Lionel Palairet
Palairet n about 1895
Personal information
Full name
Lionel Charles Hamilton Palairet
Born(1870-05-27)27 May 1870
Grange-over-Sands, Lancashire, England
Died27 March 1933(1933-03-27) (aged 62)
Exmouth, Devon, England
BattingRight-handed
Bowling
Relations
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 134)24 July 1902 v Australia
Last Test11 August 1902 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1890–1909Somerset
1890–1893Oxford University
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class
Matches 2 267
Runs scored 49 15,777
Batting average 12.25 33.63
100s/50s 0/0 27/83
Top score 20 292
Balls bowled 8,781
Wickets 143
Bowling average 33.90
5 wickets in innings 2
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 6/84
Catches/stumpings 2/– 248/14
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 19 November 2012

Palairet was educated at Repton School. He played in the school cricket team for four years, as captain in the latter two, before going to Oriel College, Oxford. He achieved his cricketing Blue in each of his four years at Oxford, and captained the side in 1892 and 1893. For Somerset, he frequently opened the batting with Herbie Hewett. In 1892, they shared a partnership of 346 for the first wicket, an opening stand that set a record for the County Championship and remains Somerset's highest first-wicket partnership.[a] In that season, Palairet was named as one of the "Five Batsmen of the Year" by Wisden.

Over the following decade, he was one of the leading amateur batsmen in England. He passed 1,000 first-class runs in a season on seven occasions, and struck two double centuries. His highest score, 292 runs against Hampshire in 1895, remained a record for a Somerset batsman until 1948. His only Test matches were the fourth and fifth Tests against Australia in 1902: Australia won the fourth Test by three runs, and England won the fifth Test by one wicket. After 1904, he appeared infrequently for Somerset, though he played a full season in 1907 when he was chosen to captain the county. He retired from first-class cricket in 1909, having scored over 15,000 runs.

Early life edit

Lionel Palairet was born in Grange-over-Sands, a popular seaside resort in Lancashire, on 27 May 1870.[2] He was the oldest of five children born to Henry Hamilton Palairet and Elizabeth Anne Bigg.[3] His father, of Huguenot ancestry, was five times archery champion of England, and a keen cricketer who made two first-class appearances for the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in the late 1860s.[4] Palairet was educated first at the Reverend S. Cornish's School in Clevedon, Somerset, where he once took seven wickets in seven successive deliveries, and then at Repton School.[5] At Repton he developed a reputation as an all-round sportsman: he broke the school's running records in the two-mile, mile and half-mile distances, and played cricket in the school's first eleven from 1886 to 1889, captaining the team in his final two years. In 1889, he was adjudged the school's second best sportsman, behind only C. B. Fry.[6] During his final year at Repton, he had a batting average of over 29, and took 56 wickets at an average of under 13.[7]

Some of Palairet's early success can be attributed to his father, who paid the professionals Frederick Martin and William Attewell, both later Wisden Cricketers of the Year, to bowl at his two sons during the Easter holidays, to help them prepare for the upcoming cricket season.[8] During the later part of the 1889 season, Palairet made his first appearances for Somerset County Cricket Club.[9] At the time, Somerset were a second-class county, and their fixture list that summer was against a variety of first- and second-class opposition.[10] Although a Lancastrian by birth, Palairet's family home was at Cattistock in Dorset, and it was in the south west that he chose to play his cricket.[8] On completion of his studies at Repton, he attended Oriel College, Oxford.[2]

Cricket career edit

University and county cricketer edit

Palairet was selected for the university cricket team during his first year at Oxford, and made his first-class debut against the touring Australians in May 1890.[11] Palairet scored six and nought and took one wicket in the match which Australia won by an innings.[12] In his next match, Palairet improved, top-scoring for Oxford in their first innings against the Gentlemen with his first half-century in first-class cricket, 54 runs batting at number eight.[13] He only passed 50 runs in one other innings for Oxford that summer, a score of 72 against the MCC,[14] and in all matches for the university that season scored 285 runs at an average of 19.00.[15] Batting averages in 1890 were lower than usual due to the poor weather, and Palairet's average placed him fourth among Oxford's team; his 285-run total was the team's second highest aggregate. Palairet won his Blue—the awarding of the Oxford "colours" to sportsmen—by appearing in the 1890 University match against Cambridge, a game in which he had little success.[16] Somerset played thirteen matches in the season, won twelve of them and tied the other. Palairet played in ten of these games, and on his first appearance scored a century against Leicestershire. Somerset's achievements led to their admission to first-class cricket for 1891.[8]

Oxford's batting was described by the Oxford cricket historian Geoffrey Bolton as "unreliable" during 1891, Palairet's second year at the university. Palairet's batting average of 15.78 placed him fifth amongst his peers, and he once again struggled in the university match, scoring two and eleven.[17] Although he generally batted as part of the middle order for Oxford, he invariably opened the innings for Somerset alongside his captain, Herbie Hewett. In this role he thrived for Somerset;[7] his average for the county in ten matches was 31.11, placing him among the top ten batsmen in the County Championship.[18] He scored his debut century in first-class cricket that year, with 100 runs against Gloucestershire.[19] Palairet had agreed to tour North America with Lord Hawke's party, but he demurred late, and was replaced by Somerset teammate Sammy Woods.[20]

In 1892 Palairet was elected captain of the Oxford team, and according to Wisden, "had a most brilliant season."[7] Palairet used himself heavily as a bowler for the university; only George Berkeley bowled more deliveries.[21] He took five wickets in an innings for the first of two occasions during his career in the first innings of Oxford's match against the Gentlemen,[22] and followed it up with four wickets in each innings against Lancashire, a match in which he also scored a half-century.[23] He recorded the best bowling figures of his first-class career in the return match against Lancashire, taking six wickets for 84 runs at Old Trafford,[24] and in the following game against Sussex, Bolton says, "Palairet played two beautiful innings and bowled to some effect".[21] Facing Cambridge in the university match, he was out without scoring in the first innings, but centuries from Malcolm Jardine and Vernon Hill took Oxford to 365. Cambridge were dismissed for 160, and were forced to follow on, whereupon they reached 388, leaving Oxford requiring 184 runs to win. Palairet, who had injured himself while fielding, opted not to open the batting, promoting Frank Phillips in his place. Oxford started poorly, falling to 17 for two, but coming in at number five, Palairet batted for an hour and a half to score 71 runs and help his side to victory. He topped the batting averages for Oxford in 1892, scoring 509 runs at 36.35, and his 28 wickets came at 22.28.[21]

 
Palairet (left) with Herbie Hewett after their record first-wicket partnership of 346 against Yorkshire in 1892

Palairet's university performances were good enough to earn him selection for the Gentlemen against the Players in the prestigious matches at Lord's and The Oval.[11] Returning to Somerset, he struck a century against Gloucestershire in early July,[25] In late August, playing Yorkshire, Palairet scored 132 out of a partnership of 346 with Hewett,[26] establishing a record for the first wicket in first-class cricket, surpassing W. G. Grace and Bransby Cooper's 1869 total of 283.[27] Although their record has since been beaten in first-class cricket, it remains Somerset's record partnership for the first wicket.[a][28] Their partnership was described as "Pure grace at one end, sheer force at the other", in H.S. Altham and E. W. Swanton's A History of Cricket.[29] At the time, The Daily Telegraph reported that the pair remained together for three and a half hours, during which Palairet scored one six and nineteen fours.[30] At the end of the season, he was selected in two representative sides: appearing for the West against the East, and once again for the Gentlemen against the Players, on this occasion at Hastings.[11] In all first-class matches that year, he scored 1,343 runs, the third most of any cricketer.[31] He was named as one of the Five Batsmen of the Year by the Wisden Cricketers' Almanack in 1893, which noted that "there can be little doubt that even greater distinction awaits him in the cricket world."[7]

In contrast to the previous year, 1893 was an unsuccessful one for Oxford. The university side failed to win a single match, and despite favourable batting conditions, none of the batsmen scored a century. Palairet was second in the batting averages, scoring 276 runs at 21.23. Bolton questioned the team selections that year under Palairet's captaincy, particularly for the university match, in which he believed a stronger team could have been chosen.[32] Cambridge had a powerful team, containing eight of their players from the previous year, and adding Arthur Jones and K. S. Ranjitsinhji. Oxford lost the match by 266 runs, with only Palairet and Fry scoring more than 12 runs for the side.[33]

In his four years at Oxford, Palairet appeared for the university 31 times in first-class cricket and accrued 1,291 runs at an average of 23.05. He scored nine half-centuries, with a top-score of 75 not out.[34] He claimed 52 wickets at 25.03—significantly lower than his career average—and took the only five-wicket hauls of his career.[35] While at Oxford, he also gained a Blue in athletics, running in the three-mile race against Cambridge in 1892. The same year, he played association football for Corinthians, and there were also appearances for Combined Universities and London.[2][5] An injury prevented Palairet from playing against Cambridge, and thus earning his Blue in football.[8]

Leading amateur batsman edit

Over the following seasons, Palairet moved to "the front rank of amateur batsmen," according to W. G. Grace.[36] He played for Arthur Shrewsbury's England XI against Australia in 1893, and scored 71 runs as the English side won by an innings and 153 runs.[37][b] He scored five half-centuries for Somerset that summer, and his batting average of 28.94 in the County Championship was bettered only by Hewett among his teammates.[38] The next year, Palairet made a big score against his former university. Facing a team that included his brother, Richard Palairet, and was captained by Fry, he made 181 runs in Somerset's second innings, the highest first-class score of his career to that point.[39] He also scored a century against Nottinghamshire, making 119 runs before being out leg before wicket to his old trainer Attewell.[40] He fell just short of 1,000 first-class runs in 1894; though two half-centuries scored against the touring South Africans in matches not considered first-class would have taken him over the milestone.[41][42]

 
Palairet, pictured in Cricket of Today and Yesterday in 1902

In 1895, Palairet was fourth in the national batting averages,[c] having scored 1,313 runs at 46.89. The three batsmen above him, Archie MacLaren, Grace and Ranjitsinhji all appeared for England that year.[43] Palairet scored three centuries during the season; two against Middlesex, on the latter occasion batting undefeated through the whole Somerset innings,[44][45] and one against Yorkshire, when he struck 165.[46] He passed a thousand runs again the following year, maintaining a batting average in excess of 40.[41] A fourth-innings score of 83 not out that season drew praise from Ranjitsinhji; on a difficult pitch, Palairet farmed the strike and rescued a draw for his side.[47] Just over a month later, he reached his highest total in first-class cricket, scoring 292 runs against Hampshire. It was his first double century,[48] and the highest score by any Somerset batsman in first-class cricket at that time.[49][d] One newspaper in Australia, reporting on his innings, declared that; "should he retain his form he will certainly be worthy of a place ... in the final Test match at the Oval."[48] Either side of that match against Hampshire, he appeared for the Gentlemen against the Players at The Oval and Lord's, but made little impact on either game.[51][52] He returned to form against Sussex on their visit to Taunton, sharing a 249-run partnership with his brother, and scoring 154 runs himself.[53] The match was played shortly before the final Test match against Australia, but despite the comments in the Australian press, Palairet was not selected for the match. He did appear twice against the tourists that summer,[11] for Somerset he scored six across two innings,[54] and chosen to play for Charles Thornton's XI during the Scarborough Festival, he scored 71 runs in an innings victory.[55]

In 1897 Palairet made fewer first-class appearances, playing in only 12 matches. He scored 593 runs at an average just below 30, the only time between 1895 and 1906 that his average was below that value.[41] Despite this relatively quiet season, Somerset still relied heavily on him; he led the county batting averages in the 1897 County Championship.[56] In 1898, Palairet topped 1,000 first-class runs for the third season out of four.[41] He struck 179 not out against Gloucestershire in Bristol,[57] and late in the season, also against Gloucestershire, he captained Somerset for the first time, leading them to victory by an innings and 169 runs.[58] He played in two matches during the Scarborough Festival, in which he scored 54, his highest innings for the Gentlemen against the Players,[59][60] and also appeared for Thornton's "England XI" against that season's county champions, Yorkshire.[11]

Palairet missed all of the 1899 season through appendicitis;[8][61] Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes suggested that but for this he might have appeared for England against Australia that summer.[8] He returned in 1900, scoring 947 runs at an average of 35.07.[41] His only century came against Hampshire, when he scored 161 runs,[62] and shared a partnership of 262 with Charles Bernard.[63]

The subsequent 1901 season was, statistically, his best. He trailed only Fry and Ranjitsinhji in the national batting averages,[c] and drew particular acclaim for his innings of 173 against Yorkshire.[5] The all-conquering Yorkshire were reigning County Champions, unbeaten in 1900; the match against Somerset at Headingley was the only one they lost in 1901.[64] Somerset were dismissed for 87 in their first innings, and Yorkshire reached 325 to lead by 238 runs on first innings. Palairet and his fellow opener Len Braund—both of whom had been out without scoring in the first innings—then scored 222 runs together in 140 minutes at the start of Somerset's second innings, each scoring a century. After the dismissal of Braund for 107, Palairet continued, eventually being caught and bowled for 173. Frank Phillips added a third century (122), and Somerset reached a total of 630. Yorkshire were bowled out on a wearing pitch for 113, with Braund and Beaumont Cranfield each taking four wickets, and Somerset won by 279 runs.[65] The Yorkshire captain, Lord Hawke, declared that it was "one of the best matches I ever lost."[66] In the same year, Palairet scored 182 against Lancashire and 194 against Sussex.[67][68] Altogether he scored five centuries and eleven half-centuries in 1901, averaging 57.75 for his 1,906 runs—the highest season's total of his career.[41]

England recognition edit

 
Palairet caricatured by Spy for Vanity Fair, 1903

The English summer of 1902 was badly affected by rain, making batting more difficult.[69] Through the whole season, Palairet did not score a first-class century, though he did score over 1,000 runs.[41] He was once again instrumental in inflicting defeat on Yorkshire: on what Sir Home Gordon described as a "rain-ruined wicket", Palairet scored 25 and 24 during a match in which only Braund also reached double-figure scores in both innings. Wisden described the pair's batting as "admirable", and it helped secure a Somerset victory by 34 runs; for the second successive year, Somerset were the only side to beat Yorkshire in the County Championship.[70]

Palairet was selected to appear for the Marylebone Cricket Club against the touring Australians in the week prior to the first Test of the series. He scored 39 and 44 in a drawn match.[71] He was not chosen to play in any of the first three Tests, but was called up for the fourth match, at Old Trafford. Palairet, Ranjitsinhji and Fred Tate replaced Fry, George Hirst and Gilbert Jessop; the Wisden match report indicates that dropping Fry was a necessary decision, but that Hirst and Jessop should both have played.[72] In A History of Cricket, Altham is more direct in claiming that Palairet should not have been chosen: "The selectors, it is now agreed, made a questionable choice in preferring Lionel Palairet to an all-rounder such as Hirst."[73] On his Test debut, Palairet opened the batting and scored six runs in the first innings, one of five victims to fall to Jack Saunders and Hugh Trumble in the first 45 minutes of England's innings. In the second innings, Palairet once again opened, though with a different partner: MacLaren replaced Bobby Abel. The pair made scored 44 runs together, though Wisden noted that "the difficulty they experienced in playing the bowling made one apprehensive". Palairet was bowled by Saunders, and England were eventually dismissed for 120, four runs short of victory.[72]

For the next Test match—the fifth and final of the series—Palairet retained his place, with Hirst and Jessop restored to the side.[74] The Australians batted throughout the first day for a total of 324 runs. Overnight rain then made batting difficult, and England totalled 183 on the second day. Palairet was dismissed for 20 by Trumble, whose bowling Altham praised as magnificent.[75] Australia also struggled in their second innings, and England required 263 runs to win the match. Palairet was dismissed for six, the third batsman to be bowled by Trumble in the innings, at which point England's score was 10 for 3 wickets. Lower order runs from the recalled Jessop and Hirst recovered the innings, and England won by one wicket.[74] In Palairet's only other match against Australia that summer, for Somerset, he scored 44 and 90 in a drawn game at Taunton.[76] He made no further Test appearances, and completed his brief Test career with 49 runs at an average of 12.25,[77] against an Australian side that has been described as among the best Test teams prior to the Second World War.[78]

Later county career edit

In 1903, Palairet played eleven first-class matches. His only century of the season came against Surrey, when he scored 114 in the second innings, having struck a half-century in the first.[79] He passed 50 on three other occasions, and finished the year with 637 runs at 35.38.[41] He appeared more frequently the following year, in which he scored 1,000 first-class runs in a season for the final time of his career.[41] He opened the season with a century against Gloucestershire, scoring 166 runs.[80] During the Bath cricket festival, he scored 111, and shared an opening partnership of 161 with Braund during a ten-wicket loss to Lancashire.[81] Against Worcestershire later that month, he scored the second, and final, first-class double century of his career. Opening the batting for Somerset, he reached 203; more than Worcestershire had managed in their first innings, before being dismissed. Somerset won the match by an innings and 114 runs.[82] The cricket historian David Foot describes 1904 and the subsequent few seasons as undistinguished for Somerset;[83] between then and the First World War, the club never finished higher than tenth in the County Championship.[84] Palairet missed most of the cricket in 1905 and 1906, to concentrate on his work as a land agent for the Earl of Devon.[83] He played three times in 1905; against the touring Australians, Kent and Warwickshire, while in 1906 he played one match, against Yorkshire.[11] At the end of 1906, Woods, who had captained Somerset since 1894, retired. Despite his limited appearances over the previous couple of years, Palairet was appointed as Woods' replacement for 1907.[85]

During the 1907 season, Palairet played in all of Somerset's County Championship matches, and also appeared for the county against the touring South African side. The club struggled to find eleven eligible players for some of their matches, and at one stage were forced to recall Ted Tyler to the side – Tyler had not played for Somerset for four years, and had only played five matches since 1900.[85][86] Palairet himself had a disappointing year; his batting average of 21.33 was the lowest in any season in which he played ten or more matches. He passed 50 in an innings on only three occasions,[41] one of these being 116 runs against Kent at Tonbridge,[87] the final century of his first-class career.[41] At the end of the season, in which Somerset finished fourteenth of sixteen teams in the County Championship, Palairet resigned the captaincy. At the club's annual general meeting, in an uncharacteristic outburst he criticised the lack of talent and team spirit .[85] After 1907, made only eight further appearances in first-class cricket, his final match being in 1909 for Somerset against Kent at Taunton, where he scored one run in the first innings and three in the second.[11][88] Palairet invariably wore a Harlequins cricket cap during matches,[89] and was considered aloof by his colleagues.[90] In his complete first-class career he scored 15,777 runs at an average of 33.63, including 27 centuries, and took 143 wickets at a bowling average of 33.91[77]

Style and technique edit

 
Palairet's cover drive was featured in The Jubilee Book of Cricket.

Often considered by commentators to be the benchmark against which other batsmen are compared for attractive, graceful batting, Palairet won many plaudits for his style.[91][92] In his book, The Jubilee Book of Cricket, Ranjitsinhji includes a number of staged photographs of Palairet playing his shots, and describes his methods in places, using them as the model which young players should adopt.[93] He played predominantly off the front foot,[e] and tended to be less effective on soft pitches. He favoured shots on the off side, particularly the off drive and cover drive.[5] During Palairet's career, bowlers favoured a tactic, known as off theory, of bowling the ball just outside the off stump. The strength of Palairet's off side strokes helped him to score effectively against this tactic. Fry suggests that the early practice that Palairet gained against Attewell and Martin, who bowled accurately at the stumps, was a key factor in limiting his range of leg side shots.[95] He favoured lofted shots which were often compared to golf strokes.[96]

For a time early in his career, he attempted to play more powerfully, but then returned to his forward style. Despite this, he remained capable of hitting the ball out of the County Ground in Taunton and into the River Tone at one end or the churchyard at the other.[95] Although considered a stylish batsman, Palairet was described by Foot as having "the minimum of extrovert flourish" and "no quaint mannerisms", both factors he considered relevant in Palairet's limited Test appearances. Throughout his career, Palairet shunned improvisation, and played well-established, orthodox cricket shots. He remained absolutely still at the crease while preparing to play a shot, a feature later seen in Viv Richards' batting.[97]

Personal life edit

Palairet married Caroline Mabel Laverton, the daughter of William Henry Laverton, a prominent cricket patron in Wiltshire, in 1894. The pair had two children: Evelyn Mabel Hamilton, born in 1895, and Henry Edward Hamilton the following year.[3] Palairet's brother, Richard, played first-class cricket for Somerset between 1891 and 1902, albeit without as much success as Lionel.[98] In addition to cricket, Palairet maintained an interest in a range of other sports; a 1901 profile of him in Baily's Magazine records that foxhunting was his primary sporting interest.[8] After his retirement from cricket, Palairet became a prominent golfer in the south-west. He was the first chairman of the Devon County Golf Union upon its formation in 1911, captained Devon at golf either side of the First World War, from 1914 through until 1926, and was also president of the Union from 1923 until 1932.[99] He developed the idea of an inter-club team championship within Devon, and donated the prize, which remains named the Palairet Trophy.[100] During the First World War, he had command of a Remount Depot at Powderham, the seat of the Earl of Devon.[6] He died in Exmouth on 27 March 1933, aged 62.[1][5]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b As of September 2013.
  2. ^ "Arthur Shrewsbury's England XI" was not a representative national side.
  3. ^ a b Amongst batsmen with over 1,000 first-class runs.
  4. ^ Palairet's score was surpassed as the highest for Somerset by Harold Gimblett in 1948, and as of December 2012, is the ninth highest score by a Somerset player.[50]
  5. ^ A batsman is said to "play off the front foot" when their weight is over their front foot, which is the one furthest from the stumps, and closest to the bowler.[94]

References edit

  1. ^ a b The Times, Wednesday, 29 March 1933; g. 6; Issue 46405; col D.
  2. ^ a b c "Palairet, Lionel Charles Hamilton". Who Was Who. A & C Black. 1920–2008. Online edition Oxford University Press. December 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2012.(subscription or UK public library membership required)
  3. ^ a b Lart, Charles E. (2002) [1924]. Huguenot Pedigrees. London: Genealogical Publishing Company. p. 71. ISBN 0-8063-0207-0. LCCN 67028595.
  4. ^ "Player Profile: Henry Palairet". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Obituary: Lionel Palairet". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  6. ^ a b Messiter, Minna (1922). "Repton School register : supplement to 1910 edition". London: Edson (Printers) Limited. p. 112. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d "Batsman of the Year – 1893: Lionel Palairet". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "Mr. Lionel Charles Hamilton Palairet". Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes. LXXV (495). London: Vinton. May 1901. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  9. ^ "Miscellaneous Matches played by Lionel Palairet (45)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  10. ^ "Other matches in England 1889". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "First-Class Matches played by Lionel Palairet (267)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  12. ^ "Oxford University v Australians: Australia in England 1890". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  13. ^ "Oxford University v Gentlemen of England: University Match 1890". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  14. ^ "Marylebone Cricket Club v Oxford University: University Match 1890". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  15. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding in England for 1890 (Ordered by Average)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  16. ^ Bolton (1962), pp. 133–135.
  17. ^ Bolton (1962), pp. 136–139.
  18. ^ "Batting and Fielding in County Championship 1891 (Ordered by Average)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  19. ^ "Gloucestershire v Somerset: County Championship 1891". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  20. ^ Coldham, James P. (2003). Lord Hawke: A Cricketing Legend. London: Tauris Park Paperbacks. p. 83. ISBN 1-86064-823-1.
  21. ^ a b c Bolton (1962), pp. 140–144.
  22. ^ "Oxford University v Gentlemen of England: University Match 1892". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  23. ^ "Oxford University v Lancashire: University Match 1892". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  24. ^ "Lancashire v Oxford University: University Match 1892". CricketArchive. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  25. ^ "Gloucestershire v Somerset: County Championship 1892". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  26. ^ "Somerset v Yorkshire: County Championship 1892". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  27. ^ Roebuck (1991), p. 62.
  28. ^ "Highest Partnership for Each Wicket for Somerset". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  29. ^ Altham, Swanton (1938), p. 205.
  30. ^ Barrett, Norman, ed. (1994). "1892". The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Cricket. London: Guinness Publishing. p. 40. ISBN 0-85112-746-0.
  31. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding in England for 1892 (Ordered by Runs)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  32. ^ Bolton (1962), pp. 144–147.
  33. ^ Chesterton, Doggart (1989), p. 114.
  34. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding For Each Team by Lionel Palairet". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  35. ^ "First-class Bowling For Each Team by Lionel Palairet". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  36. ^ Grace, W.G. (1980) [1899]. 'W.G.' Cricketing Reminiscences & Personal Recollections. London: The Hambledon Press. p. 367. ISBN 0-9506882-0-7.
  37. ^ "A Shrewsbury's England XI v Australians: Australia in England 1893". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  38. ^ "Batting and Fielding for Somerset: County Championship 1893". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  39. ^ "Oxford University v Somerset: University Match 1894". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  40. ^ "Nottinghamshire v Somerset: County Championship 1894". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "First-class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Lionel Palairet". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  42. ^ "Somerset v South Africans: South Africa in British Isles 1894". CricketArchive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  43. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding in England for 1895 (Ordered by Average)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  44. ^ "Middlesex v Somerset: County Championship 1895". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  45. ^ "Somerset v Middlesex: County Championship 1895". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  46. ^ "Somerset v Yorkshire: County Championship 1895". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  47. ^ Ranjitsinhji (1897), pp. 194–196.
  48. ^ a b "Palairet's success". The Inquirer & Commercial News. Perth, Western Australia. 28 August 1896. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  49. ^ Parker, Eric (1950). The History of Cricket. Seeley Service. p. 405. OCLC 2603213.
  50. ^ "Most Runs in an Innings for Somerset". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  51. ^ "Gentlemen v Players: Other First-Class matches in England 1896". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  52. ^ "Gentlemen v Players: Other First-Class matches in England 1896". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  53. ^ "Somerset v Sussex: County Championship 1896". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  54. ^ "Somerset v Australians: Australia in England 1896". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  55. ^ "CI Thornton's XI v Australians: Australia in England 1896". CricketArchive. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  56. ^ "Batting and Fielding for Somerset: County Championship 1897". CricketArchive. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  57. ^ "Gloucestershire v Somerset: County Championship 1898". CricketArchive. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  58. ^ "Player Oracle Reveals Results: LCH Palairet as captain in first-class matches where team is Somerset". CricketArchive. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  59. ^ "Gentlemen v Players: Other First-Class matches in England 1898". CricketArchive. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  60. ^ "First-class Batting and Fielding Against Each Opponent by Lionel Palairet". CricketArchive. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  61. ^ Foot (1986), p. 69.
  62. ^ "Hampshire v Somerset: County Championship 1900". CricketArchive. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  63. ^ "Highest Partnerships For Somerset Against Hampshire". CricketArchive. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  64. ^ "Yorkshire v Somerset: County Championship 1901". CricketArchive. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
  65. ^ Green (1980), pp. 277–278.
  66. ^ Ward, Andrew (2005). Cricket's Strangest Matches. London: Robson Books. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-86105-293-3.
  67. ^ "Somerset v Lancashire: County Championship 1901". CricketArchive. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
  68. ^ "Somerset v Sussex: County Championship 1901". CricketArchive. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
  69. ^ Altham, Swanton (1938), p. 244.
  70. ^ Green (1980), pp. 279–280.
  71. ^ "Marylebone Cricket Club v Australians: Australia in British Isles 1902". CricketArchive. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
  72. ^ a b Green (1980), pp. 29–32.
  73. ^ Altham, Swanton (1938), p. 245.
  74. ^ a b Green (1980), pp. 32–35.
  75. ^ Altham, Swanton (1938), pp. 246–247.
  76. ^ "Somerset v Australians: Australia in British Isles 1902". CricketArchive. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
  77. ^ a b "Player Profile: Lionel Palairet". CricketArchive. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
  78. ^ Becca, Tony (2 October 2011). "The greatest team of all time". The Gleaner. Gleaner Company. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
  79. ^ "Somerset v Surrey: County Championship 1903". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  80. ^ "Gloucestershire v Somerset: County Championship 1904". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  81. ^ "Somerset v Lancashire: County Championship 1904". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  82. ^ "Worcestershire v Somerset: County Championship". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  83. ^ a b Foot (1986), p. 79.
  84. ^ Foot (1986), p. 218.
  85. ^ a b c Foot (1986), pp. 82–84.
  86. ^ "First-Class Matches played by Ted Tyler (185)". CricketArchive. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  87. ^ "Kent v Somerset: County Championship 1907". CricketArchive. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  88. ^ "Somerset v Kent: County Championship 1909". CricketArchive. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  89. ^ Foot (1986), p. 37.
  90. ^ Roebuck (1991), p. 48.
  91. ^ Gordon, Sir Home (1939). Background of Cricket. Taylor & Francis. p. 60.
  92. ^ Batchelor, Denzil, ed. (1970). Great Cricketers. Eyre & Spottiswoode (Publishers) Ltd. p. 44. ISBN 0-413-26510-2.
  93. ^ Ranjitsinhji (1897), pp. 53, 151, 157, 185, 301.
  94. ^ Hickey, Julia (2006). Understanding Cricket. Coachwise Limited. p. 57. ISBN 1-905540-08-6.
  95. ^ a b Fry, C. B. (1897). "Cricketers I Have Met". The Windsor Magazine. VI. London: Ward, Lock & Company Limited: 152–158.
  96. ^ Gibson, Alan (13 April 1983). "Master of the classical style". The Times. No. 61505. London. p. 17.
  97. ^ Foot (1986), p. 38.
  98. ^ "Obituaries in 1955". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  99. ^ "Past Officers". Devon County Golf Union. Retrieved 14 December 2012.
  100. ^ "History of the Union". Devon County Golf Union. Retrieved 14 December 2012.

Bibliography edit

  • Altham, H.S.; Swanton, E.W. (1938) [1926]. A History of Cricket (Second ed.). London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd. OCLC 316121857.
  • Bolton, Geoffrey (1962). History of the O.U.C.C. (First ed.). Oxford: Holywell Press Ltd. OCLC 75422.
  • Chesterton, George; Doggart, Hubert (1989). Oxford and Cambridge Cricket. London: Willow Books. ISBN 0-00-218295-5.
  • Foot, David (1986). Sunshine, Sixes and Cider: The History of Somerset Cricket. Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8890-8.
  • Green, Benny, ed. (1979). Wisden Anthology 1862–1900. London: Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0-354-08555-7.
  • Green, Benny, ed. (1980). Wisden Anthology 1900–1940. London: Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0-362-00513-3.
  • Ranjitsinhji, K. S. (1897). The Jubilee Book of Cricket. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons. OCLC 2207619.
  • Roebuck, Peter (1991). From Sammy to Jimmy: The Official History of Somerset County Cricket Club. London: Partridge Press. ISBN 1-85225-085-2.
Sporting positions
Preceded by Somerset County Cricket Captain
1907
Succeeded by

lionel, palairet, lionel, charles, hamilton, palairet, 1870, march, 1933, english, amateur, cricketer, played, somerset, oxford, university, graceful, right, handed, batsman, selected, play, test, cricket, england, twice, 1902, contemporaries, judged, palairet. Lionel Charles Hamilton Palairet 27 May 1870 27 March 1933 was an English amateur cricketer who played for Somerset and Oxford University A graceful right handed batsman he was selected to play Test cricket for England twice in 1902 Contemporaries judged Palairet to have one of the most attractive batting styles of the period His obituary in The Times described him as the most beautiful batsman of all time 1 An unwillingness to tour during the English winter limited Palairet s Test appearances contemporaries believed he deserved more Test caps Lionel PalairetPalairet n about 1895Personal informationFull nameLionel Charles Hamilton PalairetBorn 1870 05 27 27 May 1870Grange over Sands Lancashire EnglandDied27 March 1933 1933 03 27 aged 62 Exmouth Devon EnglandBattingRight handedBowlingRight arm mediumRight arm slow underarm RelationsHenry Palairet father Richard Palairet brother International informationNational sideEnglandTest debut cap 134 24 July 1902 v AustraliaLast Test11 August 1902 v AustraliaDomestic team informationYearsTeam1890 1909Somerset1890 1893Oxford UniversityCareer statisticsCompetition Test First classMatches 2 267Runs scored 49 15 777Batting average 12 25 33 63100s 50s 0 0 27 83Top score 20 292Balls bowled 8 781Wickets 143Bowling average 33 905 wickets in innings 210 wickets in match 0Best bowling 6 84Catches stumpings 2 248 14Source ESPNcricinfo 19 November 2012 Palairet was educated at Repton School He played in the school cricket team for four years as captain in the latter two before going to Oriel College Oxford He achieved his cricketing Blue in each of his four years at Oxford and captained the side in 1892 and 1893 For Somerset he frequently opened the batting with Herbie Hewett In 1892 they shared a partnership of 346 for the first wicket an opening stand that set a record for the County Championship and remains Somerset s highest first wicket partnership a In that season Palairet was named as one of the Five Batsmen of the Year by Wisden Over the following decade he was one of the leading amateur batsmen in England He passed 1 000 first class runs in a season on seven occasions and struck two double centuries His highest score 292 runs against Hampshire in 1895 remained a record for a Somerset batsman until 1948 His only Test matches were the fourth and fifth Tests against Australia in 1902 Australia won the fourth Test by three runs and England won the fifth Test by one wicket After 1904 he appeared infrequently for Somerset though he played a full season in 1907 when he was chosen to captain the county He retired from first class cricket in 1909 having scored over 15 000 runs Contents 1 Early life 2 Cricket career 2 1 University and county cricketer 2 2 Leading amateur batsman 2 3 England recognition 2 4 Later county career 3 Style and technique 4 Personal life 5 Notes 6 References 7 BibliographyEarly life editLionel Palairet was born in Grange over Sands a popular seaside resort in Lancashire on 27 May 1870 2 He was the oldest of five children born to Henry Hamilton Palairet and Elizabeth Anne Bigg 3 His father of Huguenot ancestry was five times archery champion of England and a keen cricketer who made two first class appearances for the Marylebone Cricket Club MCC in the late 1860s 4 Palairet was educated first at the Reverend S Cornish s School in Clevedon Somerset where he once took seven wickets in seven successive deliveries and then at Repton School 5 At Repton he developed a reputation as an all round sportsman he broke the school s running records in the two mile mile and half mile distances and played cricket in the school s first eleven from 1886 to 1889 captaining the team in his final two years In 1889 he was adjudged the school s second best sportsman behind only C B Fry 6 During his final year at Repton he had a batting average of over 29 and took 56 wickets at an average of under 13 7 Some of Palairet s early success can be attributed to his father who paid the professionals Frederick Martin and William Attewell both later Wisden Cricketers of the Year to bowl at his two sons during the Easter holidays to help them prepare for the upcoming cricket season 8 During the later part of the 1889 season Palairet made his first appearances for Somerset County Cricket Club 9 At the time Somerset were a second class county and their fixture list that summer was against a variety of first and second class opposition 10 Although a Lancastrian by birth Palairet s family home was at Cattistock in Dorset and it was in the south west that he chose to play his cricket 8 On completion of his studies at Repton he attended Oriel College Oxford 2 Cricket career editUniversity and county cricketer edit Palairet was selected for the university cricket team during his first year at Oxford and made his first class debut against the touring Australians in May 1890 11 Palairet scored six and nought and took one wicket in the match which Australia won by an innings 12 In his next match Palairet improved top scoring for Oxford in their first innings against the Gentlemen with his first half century in first class cricket 54 runs batting at number eight 13 He only passed 50 runs in one other innings for Oxford that summer a score of 72 against the MCC 14 and in all matches for the university that season scored 285 runs at an average of 19 00 15 Batting averages in 1890 were lower than usual due to the poor weather and Palairet s average placed him fourth among Oxford s team his 285 run total was the team s second highest aggregate Palairet won his Blue the awarding of the Oxford colours to sportsmen by appearing in the 1890 University match against Cambridge a game in which he had little success 16 Somerset played thirteen matches in the season won twelve of them and tied the other Palairet played in ten of these games and on his first appearance scored a century against Leicestershire Somerset s achievements led to their admission to first class cricket for 1891 8 Oxford s batting was described by the Oxford cricket historian Geoffrey Bolton as unreliable during 1891 Palairet s second year at the university Palairet s batting average of 15 78 placed him fifth amongst his peers and he once again struggled in the university match scoring two and eleven 17 Although he generally batted as part of the middle order for Oxford he invariably opened the innings for Somerset alongside his captain Herbie Hewett In this role he thrived for Somerset 7 his average for the county in ten matches was 31 11 placing him among the top ten batsmen in the County Championship 18 He scored his debut century in first class cricket that year with 100 runs against Gloucestershire 19 Palairet had agreed to tour North America with Lord Hawke s party but he demurred late and was replaced by Somerset teammate Sammy Woods 20 In 1892 Palairet was elected captain of the Oxford team and according to Wisden had a most brilliant season 7 Palairet used himself heavily as a bowler for the university only George Berkeley bowled more deliveries 21 He took five wickets in an innings for the first of two occasions during his career in the first innings of Oxford s match against the Gentlemen 22 and followed it up with four wickets in each innings against Lancashire a match in which he also scored a half century 23 He recorded the best bowling figures of his first class career in the return match against Lancashire taking six wickets for 84 runs at Old Trafford 24 and in the following game against Sussex Bolton says Palairet played two beautiful innings and bowled to some effect 21 Facing Cambridge in the university match he was out without scoring in the first innings but centuries from Malcolm Jardine and Vernon Hill took Oxford to 365 Cambridge were dismissed for 160 and were forced to follow on whereupon they reached 388 leaving Oxford requiring 184 runs to win Palairet who had injured himself while fielding opted not to open the batting promoting Frank Phillips in his place Oxford started poorly falling to 17 for two but coming in at number five Palairet batted for an hour and a half to score 71 runs and help his side to victory He topped the batting averages for Oxford in 1892 scoring 509 runs at 36 35 and his 28 wickets came at 22 28 21 nbsp Palairet left with Herbie Hewett after their record first wicket partnership of 346 against Yorkshire in 1892 Palairet s university performances were good enough to earn him selection for the Gentlemen against the Players in the prestigious matches at Lord s and The Oval 11 Returning to Somerset he struck a century against Gloucestershire in early July 25 In late August playing Yorkshire Palairet scored 132 out of a partnership of 346 with Hewett 26 establishing a record for the first wicket in first class cricket surpassing W G Grace and Bransby Cooper s 1869 total of 283 27 Although their record has since been beaten in first class cricket it remains Somerset s record partnership for the first wicket a 28 Their partnership was described as Pure grace at one end sheer force at the other in H S Altham and E W Swanton s A History of Cricket 29 At the time The Daily Telegraph reported that the pair remained together for three and a half hours during which Palairet scored one six and nineteen fours 30 At the end of the season he was selected in two representative sides appearing for the West against the East and once again for the Gentlemen against the Players on this occasion at Hastings 11 In all first class matches that year he scored 1 343 runs the third most of any cricketer 31 He was named as one of the Five Batsmen of the Year by the Wisden Cricketers Almanack in 1893 which noted that there can be little doubt that even greater distinction awaits him in the cricket world 7 In contrast to the previous year 1893 was an unsuccessful one for Oxford The university side failed to win a single match and despite favourable batting conditions none of the batsmen scored a century Palairet was second in the batting averages scoring 276 runs at 21 23 Bolton questioned the team selections that year under Palairet s captaincy particularly for the university match in which he believed a stronger team could have been chosen 32 Cambridge had a powerful team containing eight of their players from the previous year and adding Arthur Jones and K S Ranjitsinhji Oxford lost the match by 266 runs with only Palairet and Fry scoring more than 12 runs for the side 33 In his four years at Oxford Palairet appeared for the university 31 times in first class cricket and accrued 1 291 runs at an average of 23 05 He scored nine half centuries with a top score of 75 not out 34 He claimed 52 wickets at 25 03 significantly lower than his career average and took the only five wicket hauls of his career 35 While at Oxford he also gained a Blue in athletics running in the three mile race against Cambridge in 1892 The same year he played association football for Corinthians and there were also appearances for Combined Universities and London 2 5 An injury prevented Palairet from playing against Cambridge and thus earning his Blue in football 8 Leading amateur batsman edit Over the following seasons Palairet moved to the front rank of amateur batsmen according to W G Grace 36 He played for Arthur Shrewsbury s England XI against Australia in 1893 and scored 71 runs as the English side won by an innings and 153 runs 37 b He scored five half centuries for Somerset that summer and his batting average of 28 94 in the County Championship was bettered only by Hewett among his teammates 38 The next year Palairet made a big score against his former university Facing a team that included his brother Richard Palairet and was captained by Fry he made 181 runs in Somerset s second innings the highest first class score of his career to that point 39 He also scored a century against Nottinghamshire making 119 runs before being out leg before wicket to his old trainer Attewell 40 He fell just short of 1 000 first class runs in 1894 though two half centuries scored against the touring South Africans in matches not considered first class would have taken him over the milestone 41 42 nbsp Palairet pictured in Cricket of Today and Yesterday in 1902 In 1895 Palairet was fourth in the national batting averages c having scored 1 313 runs at 46 89 The three batsmen above him Archie MacLaren Grace and Ranjitsinhji all appeared for England that year 43 Palairet scored three centuries during the season two against Middlesex on the latter occasion batting undefeated through the whole Somerset innings 44 45 and one against Yorkshire when he struck 165 46 He passed a thousand runs again the following year maintaining a batting average in excess of 40 41 A fourth innings score of 83 not out that season drew praise from Ranjitsinhji on a difficult pitch Palairet farmed the strike and rescued a draw for his side 47 Just over a month later he reached his highest total in first class cricket scoring 292 runs against Hampshire It was his first double century 48 and the highest score by any Somerset batsman in first class cricket at that time 49 d One newspaper in Australia reporting on his innings declared that should he retain his form he will certainly be worthy of a place in the final Test match at the Oval 48 Either side of that match against Hampshire he appeared for the Gentlemen against the Players at The Oval and Lord s but made little impact on either game 51 52 He returned to form against Sussex on their visit to Taunton sharing a 249 run partnership with his brother and scoring 154 runs himself 53 The match was played shortly before the final Test match against Australia but despite the comments in the Australian press Palairet was not selected for the match He did appear twice against the tourists that summer 11 for Somerset he scored six across two innings 54 and chosen to play for Charles Thornton s XI during the Scarborough Festival he scored 71 runs in an innings victory 55 In 1897 Palairet made fewer first class appearances playing in only 12 matches He scored 593 runs at an average just below 30 the only time between 1895 and 1906 that his average was below that value 41 Despite this relatively quiet season Somerset still relied heavily on him he led the county batting averages in the 1897 County Championship 56 In 1898 Palairet topped 1 000 first class runs for the third season out of four 41 He struck 179 not out against Gloucestershire in Bristol 57 and late in the season also against Gloucestershire he captained Somerset for the first time leading them to victory by an innings and 169 runs 58 He played in two matches during the Scarborough Festival in which he scored 54 his highest innings for the Gentlemen against the Players 59 60 and also appeared for Thornton s England XI against that season s county champions Yorkshire 11 Palairet missed all of the 1899 season through appendicitis 8 61 Baily s Magazine of Sports amp Pastimes suggested that but for this he might have appeared for England against Australia that summer 8 He returned in 1900 scoring 947 runs at an average of 35 07 41 His only century came against Hampshire when he scored 161 runs 62 and shared a partnership of 262 with Charles Bernard 63 The subsequent 1901 season was statistically his best He trailed only Fry and Ranjitsinhji in the national batting averages c and drew particular acclaim for his innings of 173 against Yorkshire 5 The all conquering Yorkshire were reigning County Champions unbeaten in 1900 the match against Somerset at Headingley was the only one they lost in 1901 64 Somerset were dismissed for 87 in their first innings and Yorkshire reached 325 to lead by 238 runs on first innings Palairet and his fellow opener Len Braund both of whom had been out without scoring in the first innings then scored 222 runs together in 140 minutes at the start of Somerset s second innings each scoring a century After the dismissal of Braund for 107 Palairet continued eventually being caught and bowled for 173 Frank Phillips added a third century 122 and Somerset reached a total of 630 Yorkshire were bowled out on a wearing pitch for 113 with Braund and Beaumont Cranfield each taking four wickets and Somerset won by 279 runs 65 The Yorkshire captain Lord Hawke declared that it was one of the best matches I ever lost 66 In the same year Palairet scored 182 against Lancashire and 194 against Sussex 67 68 Altogether he scored five centuries and eleven half centuries in 1901 averaging 57 75 for his 1 906 runs the highest season s total of his career 41 England recognition edit nbsp Palairet caricatured by Spy for Vanity Fair 1903 The English summer of 1902 was badly affected by rain making batting more difficult 69 Through the whole season Palairet did not score a first class century though he did score over 1 000 runs 41 He was once again instrumental in inflicting defeat on Yorkshire on what Sir Home Gordon described as a rain ruined wicket Palairet scored 25 and 24 during a match in which only Braund also reached double figure scores in both innings Wisden described the pair s batting as admirable and it helped secure a Somerset victory by 34 runs for the second successive year Somerset were the only side to beat Yorkshire in the County Championship 70 Palairet was selected to appear for the Marylebone Cricket Club against the touring Australians in the week prior to the first Test of the series He scored 39 and 44 in a drawn match 71 He was not chosen to play in any of the first three Tests but was called up for the fourth match at Old Trafford Palairet Ranjitsinhji and Fred Tate replaced Fry George Hirst and Gilbert Jessop the Wisden match report indicates that dropping Fry was a necessary decision but that Hirst and Jessop should both have played 72 In A History of Cricket Altham is more direct in claiming that Palairet should not have been chosen The selectors it is now agreed made a questionable choice in preferring Lionel Palairet to an all rounder such as Hirst 73 On his Test debut Palairet opened the batting and scored six runs in the first innings one of five victims to fall to Jack Saunders and Hugh Trumble in the first 45 minutes of England s innings In the second innings Palairet once again opened though with a different partner MacLaren replaced Bobby Abel The pair made scored 44 runs together though Wisden noted that the difficulty they experienced in playing the bowling made one apprehensive Palairet was bowled by Saunders and England were eventually dismissed for 120 four runs short of victory 72 For the next Test match the fifth and final of the series Palairet retained his place with Hirst and Jessop restored to the side 74 The Australians batted throughout the first day for a total of 324 runs Overnight rain then made batting difficult and England totalled 183 on the second day Palairet was dismissed for 20 by Trumble whose bowling Altham praised as magnificent 75 Australia also struggled in their second innings and England required 263 runs to win the match Palairet was dismissed for six the third batsman to be bowled by Trumble in the innings at which point England s score was 10 for 3 wickets Lower order runs from the recalled Jessop and Hirst recovered the innings and England won by one wicket 74 In Palairet s only other match against Australia that summer for Somerset he scored 44 and 90 in a drawn game at Taunton 76 He made no further Test appearances and completed his brief Test career with 49 runs at an average of 12 25 77 against an Australian side that has been described as among the best Test teams prior to the Second World War 78 Later county career edit In 1903 Palairet played eleven first class matches His only century of the season came against Surrey when he scored 114 in the second innings having struck a half century in the first 79 He passed 50 on three other occasions and finished the year with 637 runs at 35 38 41 He appeared more frequently the following year in which he scored 1 000 first class runs in a season for the final time of his career 41 He opened the season with a century against Gloucestershire scoring 166 runs 80 During the Bath cricket festival he scored 111 and shared an opening partnership of 161 with Braund during a ten wicket loss to Lancashire 81 Against Worcestershire later that month he scored the second and final first class double century of his career Opening the batting for Somerset he reached 203 more than Worcestershire had managed in their first innings before being dismissed Somerset won the match by an innings and 114 runs 82 The cricket historian David Foot describes 1904 and the subsequent few seasons as undistinguished for Somerset 83 between then and the First World War the club never finished higher than tenth in the County Championship 84 Palairet missed most of the cricket in 1905 and 1906 to concentrate on his work as a land agent for the Earl of Devon 83 He played three times in 1905 against the touring Australians Kent and Warwickshire while in 1906 he played one match against Yorkshire 11 At the end of 1906 Woods who had captained Somerset since 1894 retired Despite his limited appearances over the previous couple of years Palairet was appointed as Woods replacement for 1907 85 During the 1907 season Palairet played in all of Somerset s County Championship matches and also appeared for the county against the touring South African side The club struggled to find eleven eligible players for some of their matches and at one stage were forced to recall Ted Tyler to the side Tyler had not played for Somerset for four years and had only played five matches since 1900 85 86 Palairet himself had a disappointing year his batting average of 21 33 was the lowest in any season in which he played ten or more matches He passed 50 in an innings on only three occasions 41 one of these being 116 runs against Kent at Tonbridge 87 the final century of his first class career 41 At the end of the season in which Somerset finished fourteenth of sixteen teams in the County Championship Palairet resigned the captaincy At the club s annual general meeting in an uncharacteristic outburst he criticised the lack of talent and team spirit 85 After 1907 made only eight further appearances in first class cricket his final match being in 1909 for Somerset against Kent at Taunton where he scored one run in the first innings and three in the second 11 88 Palairet invariably wore a Harlequins cricket cap during matches 89 and was considered aloof by his colleagues 90 In his complete first class career he scored 15 777 runs at an average of 33 63 including 27 centuries and took 143 wickets at a bowling average of 33 91 77 Style and technique edit nbsp Palairet s cover drive was featured in The Jubilee Book of Cricket Often considered by commentators to be the benchmark against which other batsmen are compared for attractive graceful batting Palairet won many plaudits for his style 91 92 In his book The Jubilee Book of Cricket Ranjitsinhji includes a number of staged photographs of Palairet playing his shots and describes his methods in places using them as the model which young players should adopt 93 He played predominantly off the front foot e and tended to be less effective on soft pitches He favoured shots on the off side particularly the off drive and cover drive 5 During Palairet s career bowlers favoured a tactic known as off theory of bowling the ball just outside the off stump The strength of Palairet s off side strokes helped him to score effectively against this tactic Fry suggests that the early practice that Palairet gained against Attewell and Martin who bowled accurately at the stumps was a key factor in limiting his range of leg side shots 95 He favoured lofted shots which were often compared to golf strokes 96 For a time early in his career he attempted to play more powerfully but then returned to his forward style Despite this he remained capable of hitting the ball out of the County Ground in Taunton and into the River Tone at one end or the churchyard at the other 95 Although considered a stylish batsman Palairet was described by Foot as having the minimum of extrovert flourish and no quaint mannerisms both factors he considered relevant in Palairet s limited Test appearances Throughout his career Palairet shunned improvisation and played well established orthodox cricket shots He remained absolutely still at the crease while preparing to play a shot a feature later seen in Viv Richards batting 97 Personal life editPalairet married Caroline Mabel Laverton the daughter of William Henry Laverton a prominent cricket patron in Wiltshire in 1894 The pair had two children Evelyn Mabel Hamilton born in 1895 and Henry Edward Hamilton the following year 3 Palairet s brother Richard played first class cricket for Somerset between 1891 and 1902 albeit without as much success as Lionel 98 In addition to cricket Palairet maintained an interest in a range of other sports a 1901 profile of him in Baily s Magazine records that foxhunting was his primary sporting interest 8 After his retirement from cricket Palairet became a prominent golfer in the south west He was the first chairman of the Devon County Golf Union upon its formation in 1911 captained Devon at golf either side of the First World War from 1914 through until 1926 and was also president of the Union from 1923 until 1932 99 He developed the idea of an inter club team championship within Devon and donated the prize which remains named the Palairet Trophy 100 During the First World War he had command of a Remount Depot at Powderham the seat of the Earl of Devon 6 He died in Exmouth on 27 March 1933 aged 62 1 5 Notes edit a b As of September 2013 Arthur Shrewsbury s England XI was not a representative national side a b Amongst batsmen with over 1 000 first class runs Palairet s score was surpassed as the highest for Somerset by Harold Gimblett in 1948 and as of December 2012 is the ninth highest score by a Somerset player 50 A batsman is said to play off the front foot when their weight is over their front foot which is the one furthest from the stumps and closest to the bowler 94 References edit a b The Times Wednesday 29 March 1933 g 6 Issue 46405 col D a b c Palairet Lionel Charles Hamilton Who Was Who A amp C Black 1920 2008 Online edition Oxford University Press December 2007 Retrieved 19 November 2012 subscription or UK public library membership required a b Lart Charles E 2002 1924 Huguenot Pedigrees London Genealogical Publishing Company p 71 ISBN 0 8063 0207 0 LCCN 67028595 Player Profile Henry Palairet CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 a b c d e Obituary Lionel Palairet ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 19 November 2012 a b Messiter Minna 1922 Repton School register supplement to 1910 edition London Edson Printers Limited p 112 Retrieved 19 November 2012 a b c d Batsman of the Year 1893 Lionel Palairet ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 19 November 2012 a b c d e f g Mr Lionel Charles Hamilton Palairet Baily s Magazine of Sports amp Pastimes LXXV 495 London Vinton May 1901 Retrieved 19 November 2012 Miscellaneous Matches played by Lionel Palairet 45 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Other matches in England 1889 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 a b c d e f g First Class Matches played by Lionel Palairet 267 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Oxford University v Australians Australia in England 1890 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Oxford University v Gentlemen of England University Match 1890 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Marylebone Cricket Club v Oxford University University Match 1890 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 First class Batting and Fielding in England for 1890 Ordered by Average CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Bolton 1962 pp 133 135 Bolton 1962 pp 136 139 Batting and Fielding in County Championship 1891 Ordered by Average CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Gloucestershire v Somerset County Championship 1891 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Coldham James P 2003 Lord Hawke A Cricketing Legend London Tauris Park Paperbacks p 83 ISBN 1 86064 823 1 a b c Bolton 1962 pp 140 144 Oxford University v Gentlemen of England University Match 1892 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Oxford University v Lancashire University Match 1892 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Lancashire v Oxford University University Match 1892 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2012 Gloucestershire v Somerset County Championship 1892 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Somerset v Yorkshire County Championship 1892 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Roebuck 1991 p 62 Highest Partnership for Each Wicket for Somerset CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Altham Swanton 1938 p 205 Barrett Norman ed 1994 1892 The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Cricket London Guinness Publishing p 40 ISBN 0 85112 746 0 First class Batting and Fielding in England for 1892 Ordered by Runs CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Bolton 1962 pp 144 147 Chesterton Doggart 1989 p 114 First class Batting and Fielding For Each Team by Lionel Palairet CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 First class Bowling For Each Team by Lionel Palairet CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Grace W G 1980 1899 W G Cricketing Reminiscences amp Personal Recollections London The Hambledon Press p 367 ISBN 0 9506882 0 7 A Shrewsbury s England XI v Australians Australia in England 1893 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Batting and Fielding for Somerset County Championship 1893 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Oxford University v Somerset University Match 1894 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Nottinghamshire v Somerset County Championship 1894 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k First class Batting and Fielding in Each Season by Lionel Palairet CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 Somerset v South Africans South Africa in British Isles 1894 CricketArchive Retrieved 20 November 2012 First class Batting and Fielding in England for 1895 Ordered by Average CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Middlesex v Somerset County Championship 1895 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Somerset v Middlesex County Championship 1895 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Somerset v Yorkshire County Championship 1895 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Ranjitsinhji 1897 pp 194 196 a b Palairet s success The Inquirer amp Commercial News Perth Western Australia 28 August 1896 Retrieved 21 November 2012 Parker Eric 1950 The History of Cricket Seeley Service p 405 OCLC 2603213 Most Runs in an Innings for Somerset CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Gentlemen v Players Other First Class matches in England 1896 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Gentlemen v Players Other First Class matches in England 1896 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Somerset v Sussex County Championship 1896 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Somerset v Australians Australia in England 1896 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 CI Thornton s XI v Australians Australia in England 1896 CricketArchive Retrieved 21 November 2012 Batting and Fielding for Somerset County Championship 1897 CricketArchive Retrieved 22 November 2012 Gloucestershire v Somerset County Championship 1898 CricketArchive Retrieved 22 November 2012 Player Oracle Reveals Results LCH Palairet as captain in first class matches where team is Somerset CricketArchive Retrieved 22 November 2012 Gentlemen v Players Other First Class matches in England 1898 CricketArchive Retrieved 22 November 2012 First class Batting and Fielding Against Each Opponent by Lionel Palairet CricketArchive Retrieved 22 November 2012 Foot 1986 p 69 Hampshire v Somerset County Championship 1900 CricketArchive Retrieved 24 November 2012 Highest Partnerships For Somerset Against Hampshire CricketArchive Retrieved 24 November 2012 Yorkshire v Somerset County Championship 1901 CricketArchive Retrieved 28 December 2012 Green 1980 pp 277 278 Ward Andrew 2005 Cricket s Strangest Matches London Robson Books p 56 ISBN 978 1 86105 293 3 Somerset v Lancashire County Championship 1901 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2012 Somerset v Sussex County Championship 1901 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2012 Altham Swanton 1938 p 244 Green 1980 pp 279 280 Marylebone Cricket Club v Australians Australia in British Isles 1902 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2012 a b Green 1980 pp 29 32 Altham Swanton 1938 p 245 a b Green 1980 pp 32 35 Altham Swanton 1938 pp 246 247 Somerset v Australians Australia in British Isles 1902 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2012 a b Player Profile Lionel Palairet CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2012 Becca Tony 2 October 2011 The greatest team of all time The Gleaner Gleaner Company Retrieved 25 November 2012 Somerset v Surrey County Championship 1903 CricketArchive Retrieved 6 December 2012 Gloucestershire v Somerset County Championship 1904 CricketArchive Retrieved 6 December 2012 Somerset v Lancashire County Championship 1904 CricketArchive Retrieved 6 December 2012 Worcestershire v Somerset County Championship CricketArchive Retrieved 6 December 2012 a b Foot 1986 p 79 Foot 1986 p 218 a b c Foot 1986 pp 82 84 First Class Matches played by Ted Tyler 185 CricketArchive Retrieved 8 December 2012 Kent v Somerset County Championship 1907 CricketArchive Retrieved 8 December 2012 Somerset v Kent County Championship 1909 CricketArchive Retrieved 8 December 2012 Foot 1986 p 37 Roebuck 1991 p 48 Gordon Sir Home 1939 Background of Cricket Taylor amp Francis p 60 Batchelor Denzil ed 1970 Great Cricketers Eyre amp Spottiswoode Publishers Ltd p 44 ISBN 0 413 26510 2 Ranjitsinhji 1897 pp 53 151 157 185 301 Hickey Julia 2006 Understanding Cricket Coachwise Limited p 57 ISBN 1 905540 08 6 a b Fry C B 1897 Cricketers I Have Met The Windsor Magazine VI London Ward Lock amp Company Limited 152 158 Gibson Alan 13 April 1983 Master of the classical style The Times No 61505 London p 17 Foot 1986 p 38 Obituaries in 1955 ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 17 November 2013 Past Officers Devon County Golf Union Retrieved 14 December 2012 History of the Union Devon County Golf Union Retrieved 14 December 2012 Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lionel Palairet Altham H S Swanton E W 1938 1926 A History of Cricket Second ed London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd OCLC 316121857 Bolton Geoffrey 1962 History of the O U C C First ed Oxford Holywell Press Ltd OCLC 75422 Chesterton George Doggart Hubert 1989 Oxford and Cambridge Cricket London Willow Books ISBN 0 00 218295 5 Foot David 1986 Sunshine Sixes and Cider The History of Somerset Cricket Newton Abbot Devon David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 8890 8 Green Benny ed 1979 Wisden Anthology 1862 1900 London Queen Anne Press ISBN 0 354 08555 7 Green Benny ed 1980 Wisden Anthology 1900 1940 London Queen Anne Press ISBN 0 362 00513 3 Ranjitsinhji K S 1897 The Jubilee Book of Cricket Edinburgh W Blackwood and Sons OCLC 2207619 Roebuck Peter 1991 From Sammy to Jimmy The Official History of Somerset County Cricket Club London Partridge Press ISBN 1 85225 085 2 Sporting positions Preceded bySammy Woods Somerset County Cricket Captain1907 Succeeded byJohn Daniell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lionel Palairet amp oldid 1203153463, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.