Notts
will make their seventh visit to Trafalgar Road in Southport next summer
chasing their fourth first-class victory on the ground. Notts having lost twice
and drawn once on a ground bordered by the Liverpool and Southport Merseyrail
line.
Cricket
was first played on the ground which is situated near the Royal Birkdale Golf
course in 1874. Lancashire’s first championship game on the ground was in 1959
against Worcestershire. Notts were the second and third visitors respectively
in 1960 and 1961. The form book was turned on his head in August 1960 with
Notts won by three wickets.
Lancashire
were championship runners-up that summer whereas only Leicestershire finished
below Notts in the final table. Notts won the toss and elected to bat on an
easy paced pitch and were bowled out for 264 with skipper Reg Simpson top
scoring with 77, adding 73 for the fourth wicket with John Springall who made 64.
Lancashire, missing Geoff Pullar, Brian Statham and Tommy Greenhough all on
Test Duty, got to the close on 25-0. Most
of the morning session on Day 2 was lost to rain and helped by the sun drying
the pitch, Bomber Wells 4-24 and Cumbrian-born seamer Tom Atkinson 4-37 caused
havoc. Lancashire 83 all out. A rare successful day for Atkinson (116 wickets
@44.45 in 64 first-class appearances for Notts) who decided to leave Trent
Bridge at the end of the season. Following-on, Lancashire fared much better
scoring 300. Rain interfered with the last day which meant Notts needed 120 in
two hours. They were indebted to Simpson (37) and an unbroken eighth wicket
partnership of 16 between Geoff Millman and Mick Morgan with Notts winning in a
breathless and tense finish with three minutes to spare.
Lancashire
gained their revenge the following season beating Notts five wickets at the
same venue. Notts elected to bat and scored 293 (Carlton Forbes 86). Lancashire
replied with 303-6d with opener Geoff Pullar scoring 115. Notts declared on
215-7 having recovered from 77-5, Forbes starring once more with 64 not out and
Norman Hill contributing 65. Lancashire required 206 in 135 minutes to win.
They reached their target in 43.3 overs half-way through the last 30 minutes with
Brian Booth leading the way with 74 with Morgan, who died earlier this year,
with figures of 4.3-0-32-3 in his final first-class appearance. Malcolm Hilton
finishing off the match with a six and two fours off the unfortunate
off-spinner. The Notts annual stating that “(John) Clay’s sporting declaration
keeping the game alive was much appreciated.”
Notts
returned to Southport seven years later and after electing to bat were shot for
93 on a rain-affected pitch. Mike Taylor with figures of 6-36 ensured that the
Lancashire lead was restricted to 48 although the Notts annual bemoaned
“another spate of dropped catches”. Notts were 115-4 in their second innings
but Garry Sobers (77*), in his first year with Notts, shared an unbroken fifth
wicket partnership of 145 with Mike Smedley (58*). Sobers declared with Notts
260-4. Lancashire needed 213 to win in 190 minutes, but Dave Halfyard (5-39), bowling
fast leg breaks, and off-spinner Bob White (3-47) bowled Notts to a 56-run
victory in the TWENTY-FIFTH over of the last hour. Those were the days!
Notts
did not return to Trafalgar Road until 1986, when the game was drawn. Notts won
the toss once more and scored 350-8d -Tim
Robinson 97 and Chris Broad 51. Eddie Hemmings (5-70) ensured Lancashire would
follow-on 168 behind. Hemmings (5-105)
was at it again in the second innings but received little support from his
bowling colleagues (Andy Pick, Kevin Cooper, Peter Such and Clive Rice) as
Lancashire batted out 102 overs to finish on 301-7 - Clive Lloyd (75) the
top-scorer. Four years later, Notts returned in heatwave conditions and lost by
seven wickets. Gehan Mendis lost his middle stump early on but unfortunately
Cooper had over-stepped and he made Notts pay with a 330-ball 180 adding 163
for the third wicket with Neil Fairbrother (93). Lancashire lost their final
wicket to the last delivery of the day but had piled up 452 (Kevin Evans 4-57,
Andy Afford 4-137) having won the toss. Notts struggled against new ball pair
Paul Allott (4-37) and Peter Martin (3-57) and tumbled to 112-7. Chris Broad
stood firm and was eighth man out for 122, but Notts still followed-on 247
behind. Paul Johnson, batting at four, scored an entertaining 102-ball 82 with
Notts scoring 373 in their second innings. Lancashire knocked off their 127
target in 26.4 overs.
Lancashire
were outright champions, for the first time in 77 years, in 2011 but Notts
proved too good for them at Trafalgar Road that season. Notts won the toss but slipped to 69-7, stiff
lower-order resistance followed as Andre Adams (33), Graeme White (32), Darren
Pattinson (35*) and Luke Fletcher (25) saw Notts to a competitive 203 on a
sporting wicket. Pattinson and Fletcher added an invaluable 58 for the last
wicket. Adams (6-71) and Pattinson (3-46) tore into the Red Rose and Notts led
by 24 after the first innings. Alex Hales (50) and unbeaten 54 from number nine
Graeme White saw Notts to 233 all out (Glen Chapple 6-70). Lancashire needed an
unlikely 258 to win but Pattinson (5-44) and Adams (4-51) proved too hot to
handle as they were dismissed for 128. Notts winning with four sessions to
spare by 129 runs. Notts finished that season sixth in the Division 1
standings.
The
game on 30th June 2024 will be Lancashire 48th first-class game on the ground.
Southport and Birkdale CC have also hosted five List A games but none have
involved Notts. MAG
Andre Adams (10-122 in the match) leads Notts off following their victory at Southport in 2011 |
Great photo by JAG I assume ????
ReplyDeleteYoung Fletch Patto(Dazza) Voges and is that Neil Edwards behind Ready ????