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The last double

1988 Needing 210 runs in his last match to achieve the double of 1000 runs and 100 wickets in the same English season, Nottinghamshire's West Indian allrounder Franklyn Stephenson scored 111 and 117 against Yorkshire at Trent Bridge

Wisden Cricinfo staff
17-Sep-2003
All Today's Yesterdays - September 17 down the years
1988
Needing 210 runs in his last match to achieve the double of 1000 runs and 100 wickets in the same English season, Nottinghamshire's West Indian allrounder Franklyn Stephenson scored 111 and 117 against Yorkshire at Trent Bridge. He finished with a flourish by also taking ten wickets in the match, and completed a rare quadruple-century by conceding a hundred in each innings as a bowler. His compensation: 11 wickets in this amazing match, which Notts lost by 127 runs. Stephenson and Richard Hadlee (1984) are the only players to do the double since the number of County Championship matches was reduced in 1969.
1982
Some Test firsts at Madras. On the opening day of the inaugural Test between India and Sri Lanka, Sunil Gavaskar lost the toss for the ninth consecutive time. Duleep Mendis scored 105 in the day. He also scored 105 in the second innings to become the only batsman to hit identical hundreds in the same Test. The match was drawn.
1940
One of England's most hard-working pace bowlers was born. Although Peter Lever took 6 for 38 to win the sixth Test at Melbourne in 1974-75, the series had been decided by then. Ironically, after the mayhem caused that winter by Dennis Lillie and Jeff Thomson, it was Lever who came closest to inflicting a real tragedy. His bouncer at Auckland was deflected into the temple of New Zealand debutant Ewen Chatfield, who suffered a fractured skull and needed heart massage and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. A distraught Lever had had brighter moments in Australia four years earlier. While John Snow's hostility and 31 Test wickets were hogging the headlines, he owed a big debt to the Plank, who seemed to be forever bowling uphill or into the wind. He finished with 13 wickets at 33.76 and played a major part in regaining the Ashes. At The Oval in 1970, he took 7 for 83 against a scary Rest of the World batting line-up, in what he was originally led to believe was his Test debut.
1996
In a Sahara Cup match at Toronto, Mohammad Azharuddin scored his 6000th run in ODIs. His partnership of 161 with Rahul Dravid seemed to have won India the match - but Saeed Anwar top-scored with 80 off 78 balls, Salim Malik made an unbeaten 70, and Pakistan won by two wickets to level the series.
1924
A man of positively spooky patience was born. Leslie Watt was happy to take six hours to score his highest first-class score of 96, for Otago v Auckland at Auckland in 1950-51. At the other end, Bert Sutcliffe was scoring the bulk of a first-wicket stand of 373. Watt didn't get the chance to demonstrate his staying power at Test level. In his only appearance for New Zealand, against England at Dunedin in 1954-55, he made 0 and 2.
1994
The list of players given out handled the ball in first-class cricket is still a relatively short one. One of the most recent names on it is that of Zimbabwean Andy Waller, who was given out while batting for Mashonaland County Districts v Mashonaland Under-24 at Harare in 1994-95.
1862
Somebody should have done their homework on Ken Burn, who was born today. He was chosen as reserve wicketkeeper for the trip to England in 1890 - and it wasn't until the Australians were on board their ship that anyone discovered he'd never kept wicket in his life. Despite averaging only 10.14 in England, he made it into the Test team as a batsman. He scored 0 and 19 at Lord's, and 7 and 15 at The Oval, so at least his average didn't suffer.
1994
The final of the Singer World Series was ruined by rain. In every sense. Originally scheduled for the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, it was moved to the Sinhalese Sports Club - and then reduced to only 25 overs because the ground was wet there too. Put in to bat, Sri Lanka made 98 for 9 in their 25 overs. Thanks to a top score of 45 in 58 balls by their captain Mohammad Azharuddin, India reached 99 for 4, and won by six wickets.
Other birthdays
1908 Ernest Bock (South Africa)
1909 Frank "Nipper" Nicholson (South Africa)