"Ashley Walker" was an English people/English Amateur status in first-class cricket/amateur first-class cricketer, who played nine games for Yorkshire County Cricket Club from 1863 to 1870, ten for Cambridge University Cricket Club/Cambridge University from 1864 to 1866, and one match for the North of England cricket team/North of England in 1870. He also played for the South Wales cricket team/South Wales Cricket Club from 1875 to 1876. His cousin, Charles Walker, played one first-class match for the Gentlemen of the North.

Born in Bowling, Bradford, Yorkshire, England, Walker was a right-handed batsman, who scored 531 first-class runs at 15.61, with a top score of 65 against the Marylebone Cricket Club/MCC. He took eighteen wickets with his right arm slow roundarm bowling at 16.05, with his best analysis being 6 for 89 against Surrey County Cricket Club/Surrey.

He also played for Staffordshire County Cricket Club/Staffordshire but, in 1875, he moved to Swansea, before serving in the public education department in Sri Lanka/Ceylon from 1876 to 1901. Whilst there he played cricket, especially at the Royal College Colombo and, in 1885 and 1886, Walker Captain (cricket)/captained teams to Chennai/Madras and Mumbai/Bombay. He also played for the Yorkshire Gentlemen team in its early days.

More Ashley Walker on Wikipedia.

If we are not in each other's suites, we are always yelling out the windows into the courtyard at one another.

She'll be on the floor running the show. As a point guard, she'll act as the eyes and ears for our team, be the quarterback.

Coach Carroll personally told me that he was going to sign an extension at the end of the year; he promised me he would be there for the whole time.

This game was definitely an eye-opener for us. This game teaches us you have to be ready to play all 40 minutes.

We've never played in a game that's this big.

Once they hit, we didn't step up. We just missed it a little.

The system is moving on out.