He was schooled at
Westminster, which was where he first became a noted proponent of cricket. He went on to join
Hambledon Cricket Club, based in
Hambledon, Hampshire, which was the leading cricket club of the day. He was joined there by
Sir Horatio Mann, a
Carthusian, and
Lord Tankerville of
Eton and
Surrey, who was his keenest rival.
Dorset gained a reputation as a keen competitor. The
Morning Post in
1773 wrote:
:
The Duke...having run a considerable number of notches from off strokes, the [opposing fielders] very unpolitely swarmed round his bat so close as to impede his making a full stroke; his Grace gently expostulated with them on this unfair mode, and pointed out their danger, which having no effect, he, with proper spirit made full play at a ball and in so doing brought one of the gentlemen to the ground.
In the same year, Dorset presented the
Vine Cricket Ground, at
Knole, Sevenoaks, Kent to the town, at a peppercorn rent, in the literal sense. It is one of the oldest cricket grounds in England. The first nationally reported cricket match had taken place here in
1734 when "The Gentlemen of Kent" beat "The Gentlemen of Sussex". Sevenoaks Town Council still has the Vine Cricket Club, though the rent doubled to two peppercorns with the pavilion was built in the
19th century. They must also pay the
Lord Sackville (if asked) one cricket ball on the 21st July each year.
In
1775 a full-scale riot broke out at the
Artillery Ground when Dorset's side was not performing too well. In
1782 the
Morning Chronicle noted that "His Grace is one of the few noblemen who endeavour to combine the elegance of modern luxury with the more manly sports of the old English times".
Dorset's patronage of cricket was expensive — the
Whitehall Evening Post in
1783 noted that the cost to Dorset of maintaining his team, before bets, was £1,000 a year. This was a lot, but less than the amounts some of his contemporaries were spending on racing.