281 résultats
1333838794.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1951B7762Brisbane: Queensland Cricket Association. 1951. Stapled wraps. Near Fine. 248x185mm; 18 pages . Queensland Cricket Association paperback
1946F7743Brisbane: Queensland Cricket News. 1946. Stapled wraps. Very Good. Wrappers mildly foxed; 282x220mm; 24 pages . Queensland Cricket News paperback
1946F7744Brisbane: Queensland Cricket News. 1946. Stapled wraps. Very Good. Wrappers mildly foxed; 278x215mm; 24 pages . Queensland Cricket News paperback
193397242Adelaide: South Australian Cricket Association 1933. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Adelaide South Australian Cricket Association 1933. Octavo 96 pages with numerous illustrations and advertisements plus cover advertisements. Attractive pictorial wrappers printed in green and gold; top corner of the outside rear cover lightly stained; centrefold scoring sheet completed neatly in ink with the final results for the last three Tests on the relevant page; short tear to one leaf expertly sealed; an excellent copy. A pre-match publication for the Test that saw bodyline tactics move from controversy to crisis. Padwick 4487. South Australian Cricket Association paperback
2010Q-073871996XMidnight Ink 2010-07-08. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Midnight Ink paperback
1410427994.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1947B7764Brisbane: Queensland Publications. 1947. Stapled wraps. Very Good. Front wrapper foxed; 275x215mm.; 24 pages . Queensland Publications paperback
196024704s.l.: s.n. Very Good with no dust jacket. c1960. Ephemera. No date c1960. On a sheet of paper with "Q.C.A." in red Queensland Cricket Association. Beneath the title is typed "Queensland Team". Dimensions: 205 x 171mm. 13 autographs in blue ink of Queensland team members. . [s.n.] unknown
196524699s.l.: M.C.C. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1965. Ephemera. Some minor foxing and staining.; On a sheet of paper with printed title "M.C.C. Australasian Tour 1965 1966". Dimensions: 228 x 191mm. Beneath the title are 17 printed names with 17 signatures beside them. Signatures include Mike Smith Captain and Colin Cowdrey Vice-Captain. This sheet does not have the signature of the Manageer S. C. Griffith but instead beside the printed name S. C. Griffith is the autograph of B. Knight. "Barry Knight arrived on 6 December when David Larter bruised heel and David Brown pulled side muscles were unfit and Jeff Jones was under threat of an umpire's ban for persistently running down the line of the wickets when bowling." - SportsStats website "Test Cricket Tours - England to Australia 1965-66" accessed February 2023. . M.C.C. unknown
196524698s.l.: M.C.C. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1965. Ephemera. Minor stain to lower corner.; On a sheet of paper with printed title "M.C.C. Australasian Tour 1965 1966". Dimensions: 230 x 191mm. Beneath the title are 17 printed names with 17 signatures beside them. Signatures include Mike Smith Captain and Colin Cowdrey Vice-Captain and S. C. Griffith Manager. . M.C.C. unknown
188023382London: H.P. Robinson 1880. Ephemera. Good overall. Albumen photograph of young British cricket players in a match with observers seated in front of a school building. Stamped on verso is "H. P. Robinson & Son Red Hill". <br /> <br /> Robinson started his career in photography in 1852 opening a studio in 1855 in Leamington Spa then later London. He became known for 'combination printing' or the melding of multiple negatives to create a new single image. <br /> <br /> Image 9 1/8 x 6 1/4" on toned paper wrinkled removed from an album with some old glue on verso closed tear at left margin crease and closed tear on right edge. A pleasant view of an earlier age and favorite pastime. H.P. Robinson unknown
189220326London: Vanity Fair 1892. First printing. Very good condition. Sammy Woods was one of the few players to have played cricket for both Australia and England. He is depicted here with ball in hand ready to bowl. With sheet of text pp 89-90. Published Aug 6th 1892.The illustrator was Stuff and it is signed it in the image. Vanity Fair was an English magazine that published satirical caricatures from 1868-1914. The handsome chromolithographs are prized for their portraits of important scientists sportsmen judges & politicians. Color chromolithograph 10 1/2 x 15 1/2" Vanity Fair unknown
16686On his letterhead 'Richie Benaud OBE PO Box 30535 London SW16 5FG'. 5 August 2003. 1p. 8vo. In good condition lightly creased. Although it is 'always difficult to nominate the best of anything' he would say that Bradman was the best batsman Sobers the best allrounder and Warne the best legspinner. 'All the others would be "one of the best."' His biggest influence was his father 'an outstanding club cricketer in Sydney and then when I played first class cricket Keith Miller Arthur Morris and Ray Lindwall'. His hobbies are 'work and golf'. On his letterhead , 'Richie Benaud OBE | PO Box 30535 | London SW16 5FG'. 5 August 2003. unknown
1891Alibris.0033080Edinburgh Scotland: David Douglas. 1891. First edition. . Hard cover. Poor. No dust jacket. ex-library cover wear spine strip detached label on spine strip bookplate inside front cover hinges are coming apart large tear on 1st blank page FFEP embossing stamp on corner of frontispiece photograph photograph shows. 152 p. David Douglas hardcover
20102082702114904799Yoshihiro Nonami Cricket Junichi Kusunoki Kobun Printing Co. Ltd. 2010. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 73p Size: 23x18cm Yoshihiro Nonami (Cricket), Junichi Kusunoki (Kobun Printing Co., Ltd.) paperback
1935CRICKET012237Flicker Productions for Frank Woolley's Cricket School Hildenborough. c 1935. First edition. 12mo. A flicker book i.e. a series of photographs which creates the illusion of movement when you flick through the leaves. Stapled wrappers.Very good indeed. Flicker Productions for Frank Woolley's Cricket School, Hildenborough. unknown
1937137295Sydney: Kavanagh and English Ltd 1937. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Sydney Kavanagh and English Ltd. 1937. Quarto 28 pages. Colour-decorated wrappers lightly rubbed and a little marked; minor signs of age and use including two light stains to one page; a very good copy. Price List Number 326 of an unspecified upper limit. Loosely inserted is a processed circular letter on the company's letterhead 2 leaves rectos only folded for posting the leading edges now creased with a few tiny sealed tears. The letter dated 1 April 1937 outlines the trade terms prefaced with the following paragraph: 'It is regretted that owing to the tremendous increase in the price of metals and other materials together with increased production costs we have been forced to reduce the Discounts applicable to our List'. The letter addressed to L. Cann proprietor of the eponymous hardware store on The Parade at Norwood in suburban Adelaide is signed by 'J.M. Gregory' - none other than Jack Morrison Gregory 1895-1973 the famous Australian Test cricketer. <p>During the First World War he 'had two tours of duty in France. In 1919 he joined the A.I.F. cricket team in England. Under the leadership of H.L. Collins Gregory developed into an all-rounder whose spectacular hitting was matched by fearsome fast bowling and prehensile slip fielding. <p>Discharged from the A.I.F. in March 1920 Gregory played a leading part next summer in the recovery of the Ashes from England with 442 runs at 73 in the five matches including a century at Melbourne 23 wickets at 24 and 15 catches. <p>In December 1928 he broke down with a knee injury in the first Test against England and retired. In 24 Test matches he had taken 85 wickets at 31 made 1146 runs at just under 37 and taken 37 catches. In first-class cricket his figures were 504 wickets at 21 and 5661 runs at 36. <p>He had joined Kavanagh & English Pty Ltd sheet metal manufacturers in the mid-1920s and was a director by 1928' 'Australian Dictionary of Biography'. 2 items. Kavanagh and English Ltd paperback
13778The manuscript poem Littlebourne and Chislet Cricket Clubs both in Kent dated 4 July 1912; the printed poem Fleet Cricket Club Hampshire without printer's details and undated. Manuscript poem: 4pp. 12mo. On bifolium. Titled at head of first page: 'July 4th. 1912.' Forty-eight lines of rhymed verse arranged in twelve four-line stanzas. The first three stanzas read: 'Oh! Thursday last was a day of days If you listen I'll tell you why. In fifty-one and a thousand ways It excelled many days gone by. Well! Littlebourne boasts of a Cricket team. Here lies the pith of our tale For Chislet a challenge sent forth and I deem They had nought to request or bewail. A fine opposition our village sent forth And at twelve on Lee Priory Ground They were ready to show onlookers their worth And determined to win I'll be bound!' The Littlebourne team score 80 runs before 'The tenth man was given "leg before."' A 'luncheon and tea' are then given and the narrator states that 'Of those unbeknown whom I helped to feed Were Pope Hunt Morgan Kirby and Grinstead.' He continues: 'The Doctor was there in his usual trim And his batting was none of the worst. His son bowled a bit so thanks go to him. Then another who fielded was Hirst.' An unnamed bowler who had scored 'a duck' 'Five wickets he took out of ten'. 'There are still two more I've forgotten to mention Nevill Cheatle and Smith were their names. The former's engaged and needs no apprehension The latter was surrounded with dames.' The outcome of the match is unclear the last stanza reading: 'But Thursday has gone and can ne'er come again. And Chislet were given the wicket But its fun and its joy will longer remain. So 3 cheers for the Littlebourne Cricket.' Printed poem: 1p. 12mo. On one side of printed 'Post Card' without any manuscript text. Arranged in portrait format and headed: 'Mr. C. S. Buckingham has retired from active cricket and is presenting the Fleet Cricket Club with a pair of oak gates. Vide "Hants & Berks Gazette."' Twenty-four rhyming lines arranged in six four-line stanzas. Addressed to Buckingham the poem begins: 'Ye placid waters around Chequers Bridge Reflect the dull dark sorrow: Our cricket hero's bats at rest Alas! What of to-morrow' The subject is described as 'the "Rooster Chief" Of Brother Carey's chicken'. He is also said to have 'Told the world of our bowler bold Biographer of Harris.' Final stanza: 'A pleasant memory yet remains A consolation left us Our flannelled legion will march to fame Through the gates of Claudius Septimus.' The manuscript poem [Littlebourne and Chislet Cricket Clubs, both in Kent] dated 4 July 1912; the printed poem [Fleet Cricket Cl unknown
1850161904. 1850. Unbound. Very Good. Cricket Match - fine decorative watercolour. Mounted on contemporary paper & card with a panel space at the upper edge - maybe for a calendar month as we have had others with the month filled in. Original watercolour most probably by a member of the Waddon-Martyn family of Tonacombe Manor in the mid 19th century. Mounted on contemporary card backing sheet. c9x 7 inches image size Tonacombe is a late medieval manor house built in the early 16th century with 18th century renovations. The main building dates from the marriage of Tomasin Jourden of Tonacombe to John Kempthorne Ley. The house passed through the female line to the Waddon family in the mid 17th century and to the Martyns in the late 18th century. Tonacombe is the original of "Chapel" in 'Westward Ho !' which was partly written there and Charles Kingsley was a frequent visitor. He was born at Holne Vicarage under the brow of Dartmoor Devonshire. <br/> <br/> . unknown
931879Fine. ORIGINAL 12 CHARLES CROMBIE LAWS OF CRICKET HUMEROUS CARICATURES Published by Perrier in 1906. There are only 12 cartoons in the set. Charles Crombie was an editorial cartoonist who was born in Scotland Condition=9/10 unknown
109418The signatories are a'Beckett Fairfax Grimmett Hurwood Kippax Oldfield and Walker. The signatures were collected by the parents of a five year-old boy when the family travelled on the same ship as the cricketers on the voyage to England in early 1930. The leaves are the first two in an album with the printed image of the ship the Orient Line's SS 'Orford' on the front cover; some of the leaves are held in place with clear paper tape but the overall condition is very good. <p>The page was also signed in pencil by Victor Richardson and again by Walker but the young owner went over these signatures in ink after first having tried to erase the second Walker signature written at right angles along the right-hand side at the end of the other signatures. The balance of the squad's signatures on another page are similarly gone over. However among the seven decent signatures there are some famous names as well as some rare and interesting Test players. Ted a'Beckett played in four Tests; Alec Hurwood played in only two Tests; Charlie Walker toured twice 1930 and 1938 without playing in a Test match due to injuries and he was killed in action in a bombing mission over Germany in 1942. unknown
1947B7761Brisbane: Queensland Publications. 1947. Stapled wraps. Fine. 245x187mm; 38 pages . Queensland Publications paperback
171954-nnew. unknown
171954like new. unknown