The Trusty Servant May 2020 Issue 129 | Page 10

No.129 The Trusty Servant 150 th Anniversary of the Opening of New Field in 1870 The Wykehamist 33 reported: We have at last won Eton Match. After a succession of defeats, since so far back as 1859, it has fallen to the lot of the Eleven of 1870 to turn the tide of victory, and they have good reason to be proud of their performance in the match played on the 1st and 2nd July. ‘We shall never win again’ had become quite a common saying, and it was more especially Old Wykehamists who looked upon our cricket as utterly feeble and incompetent, and who comforted themselves by comparing their own gigantic feats with the more effete efforts of their degenerate successors… ‘The new field has seen its first Eton Match’ are the first words of one of the best accounts of our match we have seen. May we be allowed to add that without the new field we could not have won. There was not sufficient room in our former limited space to gain necessary practice, and it seems to be the fact that our hitting is vastly improved now that the batsmen have not Meads wall to shut them in on every side. It is hard adequately to acknowledge the kindness of our Head Master [George Ridding] for having added such a large space of new cricket ground, though perhaps the Eleven have best done so by beginning their first Eton Match there with a victory. The greater grind taken by the Captain and the Eleven is the next most obvious cause of our improvement. No matter how hot the weather was for the last month before the Match, our Eleven played together for an hour every day, Lords XI 1870 practising themselves in fielding and batting. And what was the result? Our bowling and fielding were so far improved that they won us the Match. Winchester (92 & 76-8) beat Eton (46 & 121) by two wickets. Neglected Positives This article was written by RG Gow (Coll, 33-38), who kept wicket for Lords in 1938. It was published in The Wykehamist of February 1942 by his brother Michael, then editor. RG Gow was killed at Arnhem in September 1944. In the days when there were ladies in fashionable clothes, old gentlemen in IZ spats, and lobster salad in large 10 marquees, and for two days through all Ridding’s there was the haze and hum of summer and the distant clopping of bat on ball, there once came forth to bat an Eton captain who will long be remembered for his great charm and talents. He played that day with his own extraordinary grace and detachment, and between shots he discussed, we are told, all manner of things with the Winchester wicket-keeper, who was a good deal better with his tongue than with his hands: the exact capability of Capability Brown, the respective merits of raspberry and strawberry jam, the observances of the Sabbath in the Western Highlands, Mr Altham’s chapter on Mynn and Pitch, the Balfour Declaration.