From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from 1757 in sports)

Events in world sport through the years 1756 to 1760.

Boxing

Events

  • 1756 — Bill "The Nailer " Stevens defeated a number of unnamed opponents until 1759. [1][ better source needed]
  • 1757 — George Taylor defeated Tom Faulkner twice. [2][ better source needed]
  • 6 August 1758 — Faulkner defeated Taylor in the 26th round after 1 hour 15 minutes of a fight at St. Alban's. Faulkner claimed the title after the bout. [2][ better source needed]
  • 20 October 1759 — Jack Slack v Jack Moreton at Acton Wells. Slack won after 35 minutes. [3][ better source needed]
  • 19 February 1760 — Bill " The Nailer " Stevens defeated Jacob Taplin in 13 round fight lasting 30 minutes at Marylebone Basin. [1][ better source needed]
  • 17 June 1760 — Jack Slack was defeated by Bill "The Nailer" Stevens in the fourth round of a fight lasting 27 minutes; Slack retired from the ring soon afterwards to open a shop on Chandos Street, London. He lived there for the rest of his life. [3][ better source needed]

Cricket

Events

  • 1756 — Hambledon, almost certainly a local parish organisation at this time, played three matches against the prominent Dartford Cricket Club.[ citation needed]
  • 1757–1760 — Perhaps for the first time, cricket felt the full impact of a major war as it suffered a drain in manpower and investment during the Seven Years' War (to 1763); few first-class matches were recorded with none at all in 1760.[ citation needed]
  • September 1759 — Three Dartford v Rest of England matches were played, a number of well-known names being involved; Dartford won the "series" 2–1.[ citation needed]
  • c.1760 — It is about this time that pitched delivery bowling began; in turn, it necessitated the creation and deployment of the modern straight bat, replacing the old "hockey stick" type which could not cope with a ball that bounced.[ citation needed]

Golf

Events

Horse racing

Events

References

  1. ^ a b "Bill Stevens". Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved 6 October 2017.[ permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b "George Taylor". Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b "Jack Slack". Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved 18 July 2017.

Sources

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from 1757 in sports)

Events in world sport through the years 1756 to 1760.

Boxing

Events

  • 1756 — Bill "The Nailer " Stevens defeated a number of unnamed opponents until 1759. [1][ better source needed]
  • 1757 — George Taylor defeated Tom Faulkner twice. [2][ better source needed]
  • 6 August 1758 — Faulkner defeated Taylor in the 26th round after 1 hour 15 minutes of a fight at St. Alban's. Faulkner claimed the title after the bout. [2][ better source needed]
  • 20 October 1759 — Jack Slack v Jack Moreton at Acton Wells. Slack won after 35 minutes. [3][ better source needed]
  • 19 February 1760 — Bill " The Nailer " Stevens defeated Jacob Taplin in 13 round fight lasting 30 minutes at Marylebone Basin. [1][ better source needed]
  • 17 June 1760 — Jack Slack was defeated by Bill "The Nailer" Stevens in the fourth round of a fight lasting 27 minutes; Slack retired from the ring soon afterwards to open a shop on Chandos Street, London. He lived there for the rest of his life. [3][ better source needed]

Cricket

Events

  • 1756 — Hambledon, almost certainly a local parish organisation at this time, played three matches against the prominent Dartford Cricket Club.[ citation needed]
  • 1757–1760 — Perhaps for the first time, cricket felt the full impact of a major war as it suffered a drain in manpower and investment during the Seven Years' War (to 1763); few first-class matches were recorded with none at all in 1760.[ citation needed]
  • September 1759 — Three Dartford v Rest of England matches were played, a number of well-known names being involved; Dartford won the "series" 2–1.[ citation needed]
  • c.1760 — It is about this time that pitched delivery bowling began; in turn, it necessitated the creation and deployment of the modern straight bat, replacing the old "hockey stick" type which could not cope with a ball that bounced.[ citation needed]

Golf

Events

Horse racing

Events

References

  1. ^ a b "Bill Stevens". Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved 6 October 2017.[ permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b "George Taylor". Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b "Jack Slack". Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved 18 July 2017.

Sources


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