So let's say average of 45.
Everyone plays each other once.
So an average of 7 or 8 teams.
say average 7.5 teams.
each season say 15 players per team needed
say 100 players in a season.
average career 5 years.
so you need probably 200 people in a decade.
so, why the **** were there 900????????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
In 1864 there were 46 first-class matches in England. 24 different teams. Some only played one match, such as Gentlemen of Kent, Players of South, The England XI and The United England XI.
Surrey played most matches, 11, and used 18 different players. Sussex used 22, Middlesex 26 and Kent 28. Other counties: Cambridgeshire 3 matches, 16 players; Hampshire 9 matches, 21 players; Nottinghamshire 7 matches, 17 players; Yorkshire 7 matches, 20 players. That's 168 players from 8 county teams alone. Actually 167 as John Lillywhite represented both Middlesex and Sussex.
MCC played 7 games, Oxford University 5 and Cambridge University 3. Occasionally cricketers represented more than one team. That happened more often once MCC expanded its fixture list.
235 players appeared in total that year, of whom 72 made their final first-class appearance.
By 1871 three additional counties were playing first-class cricket: Derbyshire, Gloucestershire and Lancashire. Hampshire had dropped out.
240 different players appeared that year. Of the 52 matches staged, Grace appeared in 25, Jupp 24 and Pooley 22. Grace scored 2739 runs, average 78. Next best aggregate was Jupp with 1068 @ 24. Next best average 37 by Daft. Grace scored 10 centuries, nobody else more than one.
All-time career averages at the end of the 1871 season saw Grace averaging 59, with Daft next on 28. Grace had hit 26 hundreds. Jupp was next with 8, having played 185 matches to Grace's 85. Most appearances to date was by John Dean of Sussex: 305 matches between 1835 and 1861.
Seven bowlers had taken 1000 wickets at this point, William Lillywhite leading with 1576. Grace passed Lillywhite's total eleven years later when he was then the third leading wicket-taker after Alfred Shaw and James Southerton.