Ridgeway (Sussex cricketer)

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Ridgeway (first name and dates of birth and death unknown) was a noted English cricketer of the mid-18th century who played for Sussex and All-England.

He is first recorded in 1743 when he was reported to be one of the six best players in England. This was when he was due to play in a big "threes" match at the Artillery Ground that attracted high stakes and a crowd in excess of 10,000 (according to the London Evening Post). Ridgeway did not play in the match, however, probably due to injury, and he was replaced by John Cutbush.

In 1744, Ridgeway played for Slindon against London Cricket Club in the match from which the earliest known scorecard has survived.

In 1745, after Sussex lost to Surrey at Arundel, Lord John Philip Sackville in a letter dated 14 September to the Duke of Richmond, Sussex's patron said: I wish you had let Ridgeway play instead of your stopper behind it might have turned the match in our favour.

That is the last we hear of this considerable player, whose career probably began in the 1720s or 1730s when match reports did not include much detail.


English cricketers of 1701 to 1760

Edward Aburrow senior | William Anderson | Robert Bartholomew | William Bedle | John & Thomas Bell | "Little" & "Tall" Bennett
John Bowra | Thomas Brandon | Alan Brodrick | James & John Bryant | Robert Colchin | John Cutbush | Stephen Dingate
Durling | Robert Eures | Tom Faulkner | John Frame | Frederick, Prince of Wales | Sir William Gage | Stephen Harding
John & Joseph Harris | William Hodsoll | George Jackson | Thomas Jure | Kipps | John Larkin | Robert Lascoe
J Mansfield | John Mills | Richard Newland | Tom Peake | Duke of Richmond | Ridgeway | Val Romney
Lord John Sackville | William Sawyer | George Smith | Edward Stead | Thomas Waymark

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