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Kent County Cricket Club in 1906

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Captain
  
CHB Marsham

Most runs
  
KL Hutchings (1,454)

Most catches
  
J Seymour (43)

County Championship
  
1st

Most wickets
  
A Fielder (172)

Kent County Cricket Club in 1906

Ground(s)
  
Canterbury Catford Tonbridge Tunbridge Wells Gravesend Maidstone

Kent County Cricket Club's 1906 season was the seventeenth season in which the county competed in the County Championship and saw the county win their first Championship title. Kent played 25 first-class cricket matches during the season, losing only four matches overall and only two matches in the 1906 County Championship. They finished equal on points with Yorkshire and Surrey but won the title on the percentage of finished matches won.

Contents

Wisden considered that there was a "general consensus" Kent were "the best county side of the year" and that they had "shown the most brilliant form", whilst The Guardian wrote that "a more brilliant side it would be hard to imagine". The title was sealed with a final game victory by an innings against Hampshire, the team's twelfth successive victory. Two of the county's players, Arthur Fielder and Kenneth Hutchings were selected as Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1907 as a result of their performances during the season.

The Championship victory was the first of four by Kent during the Golden Age of cricket in the years leading up to the First World War. It was celebrated by the club by the commissioning of a famous oil painting Kent vs Lancashire at Canterbury which now hangs in the Long Room in the Lord's Pavilion.

1906 season

Kent started the season with a match against the MCC at Lord's which they lost by 69 runs. The first four County Championship matches of the season saw losses to Yorkshire and Lancashire, a draw with Essex and a sole win away at Sussex. These were the only losses the side would suffer in the Championship during the season and a run of four wins, including a one wicket win against Surrey which is generally considered the turning point of the season, and three draws led up to the visit of the touring West Indian side to Catford in mid July. A victory by an innings and 14 runs was the first of twelve successive wins leading up to the end of the championship season.

Eleven of the matches won successively were in the County Championship, but despite the long winning streak Kent could not have won the title without Yorkshire losing at least one game towards the end of the season. On 25 August, with only two matches remaining in the season, Kent won against Worcestershire and Yorkshire lost by a single run against Gloucestershire. After a victory against Middlesex, the championship was clinched with a win in the county's final match against Hampshire. The match saw Kent score 610 runs, their highest first-class score at the time, surpassing the 576 they had scored at Worcester in July, and remains the highest total made at Dean Park. A loss in the Champion County match against the Rest in September at The Oval completed the season.

Kent scored quickly throughout the year at a rate that averaged 80 runs an hour with a style that is claimed aimed to win matches rather than draw them. The core of the side was formed of professionals who had been coached at the County's Tonbridge Nursery.

Painting

At a celebratory dinner in London in October, the Kent chairman, George Harris, 4th Baron Harris, suggested that the club commission a painting to celebrate the championship victory. Kent selected Albert Chevallier Tayler as the artist. Tayler was paid 200 guineas by Kent for the painting. Harris suggested that the painting should show an action shot of a match at the St Lawrence Ground, Canterbury, and suggested that the bowler in the painting should be Colin Blythe. Kent had only played three matches at Canterbury during the 1906 season and the match against Lancashire in July was chosen to be depicted. Blythe had taken eight wickets during the match which was part of the annual Canterbury Cricket Week.

The painting, entitled Kent vs Lancashire at Canterbury, remained at the St Lawrence Ground until 1999, at which time it was moved to the Lord's Pavilion as Kent could no longer afford the insurance. In 2006 the painting was sold to a charity foundation at auction for £680,000 and remains on display in the Long Room at Lord's on long-term loan.

Players

The 1906 side was captained by Cloudesley Marsham and featured England international players Colin Blythe and Arthur Fielder. Blythe had toured South Africa over the 1905–06 winter and Fielder toured Australia in 1903–04. Both bowlers would go on to tour Australia in 1907–08 as would batsman Kenneth Hutchings who played his first full season in 1906. Fielder and Hutchings were selected as two of Wisden's five Cricketers of the Year in 1907 as a result of their 1906 performances. Future Kent great Frank Woolley made his First XI debut in 1906 and the team also featured Wally Hardinge in the early years of his career. Woolley is Kent's all time leading run scorer and has made the most appearances for the County in first-class cricket whilst Hardinge, who at the time also played football for Newcastle United, is second on both lists. James Seymour, who played in all 22 Championship matches during the season, is the fourth leading run scorer in the County's history and has made the third most appearances for Kent.

The side also included Jack Mason, who captained the side in the one game Marsham did not play, and Cuthbert Burnup, both past county captains as well as Arthur Day, who went on to be one of the Cricketers of the Year in 1910 and Alec Hearne who had been similarly honoured by Wisden in 1894. Hearne made his final appearance for Kent during July at the Nevill Ground. The main wicket-keeper was Fred Huish, considered to be "first of a line of exceptional Kent wicket-keepers". Woolley and reserve wicket-keeper and batsman Jack Hubble were both awarded their county caps during the season.

The season also saw the penultimate appearance for Kent of George Harris, 4th Baron Harris during the tour match against the West Indies. Harris, who was 55 at the time of the game, was a major figure in Kent and English cricket. Raymond Munds also played only one non-championship game for the county during the season, the opening match against MCC.

Statistics

During 1906 Kent played 25 first-class matches, including 22 in the County Championship. They won 17, drew four and lost four matches, including only two losses in the Championship.

Kenneth Hutchings led the county in run scoring in his first full county season, with a total of 1,454 runs, including 1,358 in the County Championship. Both Cuthbert Burnup, with 1,116 runs, and James Seymour, with 1,096, also scored more than 1,000 Championship runs. Burnup led the County's Championship averages with 69.75 and made Kent's highest score of the year, 179. Both Burnup and Hutchings, who averaged 64.66 in the Championship, scored four centuries during the season.

Arthur Fielder was Kent's leading wicket taker in 1906. He took 172 wickets in total for Kent during the season, including 158 in the County Championship at an average of 19.74. Colin Blythe took 90 championship wickets at 19.16 and 111 wickets in total for Kent during the season despite not being able to play in seven matches due to an injury to his bowling hand. Both Fielder and Blythe took seven wicket hauls during the season, as did Punter Humphreys who returned the best bowling figures of Kent's Championship campaign, 7/33 against Middlesex in June at Tonbridge. Fielder took 10/90 during the Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's, at the time the only bowler to take 10 wickets in an innings in the fixture, and took six wickets or more on 13 occasions during the season.

Fred Huish took 56 wicket-keeping dismissals for Kent during the season, including 41 catches and 11 stumpings in the County Championship. James Seymour took 34 catches in the Championship as part of Kent's well respected slip cordon. Fielder, Humphreys and Seymour played in all 22 Championship matches with club captain Cloudesley Marsham playing in 21.

Batting statistics

The table below includes all first-class batting during the 1906 season.

Source: CricketArchive statistics and scorecards.

Bowling statistics

The table below includes all first-class bowling during the 1906 season.

Source: CricketArchive statistics and scorecards.

References

Kent County Cricket Club in 1906 Wikipedia