On this day in 1939: The last timeless Test

The Test in Durban between South Africa and England saw 43 hours and 16 minutes of play, with 1,981 runs being scored spread over 12 days.

Published : Mar 14, 2020 18:34 IST

England batsman Bill Edrich scored a double century in the longest Test match ever played which saw 43 hours and 16 minutes of play.
England batsman Bill Edrich scored a double century in the longest Test match ever played which saw 43 hours and 16 minutes of play.
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England batsman Bill Edrich scored a double century in the longest Test match ever played which saw 43 hours and 16 minutes of play.

1939 A timeless Test that lasted 12 days

The longest recorded game of cricket was the Test match between England and South Africa held at Durban. It holds the Guinness world record for the same. It was the last ‘timeless Test’ — meaning there was no limitation on time, and the match was played until there was a result — and abandoned after nine days of play.

The reason for stopping the game? The ship that was supposed to take the English team home was due to leave from South Africa.

The match was played over 12 days, from March 3-14, which included two rest days (March 5 and 12), and play on one day (March 11) was abandoned due to rain. The match saw 43 hours and 16 minutes of play, with 1,981 runs being scored and 5,447 deliveries bowled.

Match details

South Africa won the toss and decided to bat. The home side scored 530 runs in the first innings, with Pieter van der Bijl (125) and Dudley Nourse (103) the top scorers. England’s Reg Perks picked up five wickets.

 

It took a first-innings lead of 214 runs after England was bowled out 316. Les Ames (84) was the top scorer while leg-spinner Eric Dalton registered bowling figures of 4 for 59. The Proteas notched up 481 runs in the second innings, with skipper Alan Melville (103) scoring a century. Fast bowler Ken Farnes was England's best bowler, taking 4 for 74.

Set a target of 696, England batted for six days — including two days which didn’t see any action.

Lionel-Messi
Lionel Messi scored a brace against Chelsea to notch up a century of goals in the Champions League. - GETTY IMAGES
 

On March 14, with the visitor on 654 for 5 — just 42 runs shy of its target, rain interrupted the play after tea, after which the teams agreed to end the game in a draw. Bill Edrich scored a double century while Paul Gibb and Wally Hammond scored centuries.

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