 Sir Leonard Hutton - Kennington Oval, London, UK
N 51° 28.988 W 000° 06.803
30U E 700422 N 5707505
This relief is just inside the Hobbs Gate entrance to the Oval Cricket Ground the home of Surrey County Cricket Club. The sculpture, made from bricks, shows Len Hutton one of Yorkshire and England's greatest cricketers.
Waymark Code: WMHH5Z
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 07/11/2013
Views: 1
This piece that is made from brick is a little under three
metres square. The red bricks are laid with their ends showing and these have
been carved to form the relief. I tshows Hutton in a familiar pose, in his
cricket gear with his bat held high no doubt after playing another glorious
stroke. His name and three lions of England are shown in the top left corner.
So why was a Yorkshire player remembered at a rival
ground? The answer goes back to the last testmatch of the 1938 series with
England playing against Australia at The Oval.
Wikipedia
tells us:
Test Record Score
The last Test was played at The Oval and began on 20 August 1938. Hammond
won the toss on a very good pitch for batting, and after an early wicket
fell, Hutton and Maurice Leyland, his Yorkshire teammate, took the score to
347 for one wicket after the first day. Hutton was unbeaten on 160 although
Australia missed a chance to dismiss him, stumped, when he had scored 40.
After a rest day, the Yorkshire batsmen took their partnership to 382 before
Leyland was out. Hutton then shared substantial partnerships with Hammond
and Joe Hardstaff junior, taking his personal score to 300 at the end of the
second day, out of a total of 634 for five. In the process he surpassed the
previous highest Test score by an England batsman in a home match. Hutton
maintained caution throughout; Wisden commented that his dominance of the
bowling had become slightly monotonous after two days, although it
recognised his skill. On the third day (23 August), the Australians made a
concerted effort to dismiss Hutton before he broke Bradman's 1930 record
Ashes score of 334; although the record score in a Test match was Hammond's
336 not out against New Zealand, it was compiled against what was perceived
as inferior bowling, and Bradman's total was more prestigious. Although
showing nerves as he approached the record, Hutton passed Bradman's score
with a cut off Chuck Fleetwood-Smith, and extended his score to 364 before
he was out, caught. Lasting for more than 13 hours, Hutton's innings was the
longest in first-class cricket at the time. It was only the sixth Test of
his career. The innings was the highest individual score in a Test until
Garfield Sobers scored 365 in 1958; in 2013 it remains the 6th highest in
Tests and is the most runs scored in an innings by an English player.
England eventually scored 903, the highest team total in a Test at that
time, before Hammond declared the innings closed. Australia were bowled out
twice and England won by an innings and 579 runs to draw the series with one
victory apiece.
Commentators mainly praised Hutton's concentration and stamina; his slow
scoring, particularly when compared to Bradman's innings of 334, was excused
on the grounds that the Oval match was played without a time limit, and run
accumulation was more important than fast scoring. Furthermore, Hammond had
instructed Hutton to bat as long as possible. Among views expressed by Test
cricketers, Les Ames believed that while Hutton had shown great skill, a
combination of a very easy wicket for batting and an unusually weak bowling
attack presented an ideal opportunity. Former England captain Bob Wyatt
described the innings as one of the greatest feats of concentration and
endurance in the history of the game. Some critics expressed distaste at
England's approach, but this opinion was not widely shared. In the aftermath
of the innings, Hutton became famous, in constant demand from the public and
press who compared him to Bradman. Hutton later described the acclamation he
received as one of the worst things that happened to him, not least because
expectations were unreasonably high every time he subsequently batted. When
the season ended, Hutton had scored 1,874 runs in all matches at an average
of 60.
Beneath the relief there is a stone that has, etched upon
it, Hutton's batting diagram for that innings showing where each of his runs
were scored. (See
photo).
Your impression of the sculpture?: 
 Date Sculpture was opened for vewing?: 01/01/1993
 Website for sculpture?: [Web Link]
 Where is this sculpture?: Oval Cricket Ground Kennington Oval London, United Kingdom
 Sculptors Name: Walter Ritchie

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