Dorset County Cricket Club is one of twenty National county clubs within the domestic cricket structure of England and Wales. It represents the historic county of Dorset.
Personnel | |
---|---|
Captain | Luke Webb |
Coach | Ed Ellis (interim) [1] |
Team information | |
Founded | 1896 |
Home ground | Various |
History | |
FP Trophy wins | 0 |
Official website | Dorset County Cricket Club home |
The team is currently a member of the National Counties Cricket Association Championship Western Division 1 and plays in the National Counties Cricket Association Knockout Trophy. Dorset played List A matches occasionally from 1968 until 2004 but is not classified as a List A team per se.[1]
The club is currently without a permanent ground so it uses several club grounds inside the historic county boundaries, where they play their home matches.
Honours
edit- Minor Counties Championship (2) - 2000, 2010
- MCCA Knockout Trophy (1) - 1988
- Gillette/NatWest/C&G (0) -
Earliest cricket
editAn advertisement in the Sherborne Mercury dated Tuesday 9 May 1738 is the earliest reference for cricket in Dorset. Twelve Dorchester men at Ridgway Races challenged twelve men from elsewhere to play them at cricket for the prize of twelve pairs of gloves valued at a shilling a pair.
Origin of club
editAccording to Wisden there was county organisation in existence in either 1862 or 1871. The present Dorset CCC was founded on 5 February 1896 and first entered the Minor Counties Championship in 1902.
Club history
editDorset has won the Minor Counties Championship twice, in 2000 and 2010.
Dorset has won the MCCA Knockout Trophy once since its inception in 1983. It won in 1988.
Notable players
editThe following Dorset cricketers have also had notable careers at first-class level:
- Jimmy Adams
- William Andrew
- Peter Badham
- John Baker
- Tom Barber
- Patrick Barrow
- Leslie Bean
- Rayner Blitz
- Bertie Bolton
- Thomas Bowley
- Derek Bridge
- Charles Brutton
- Paul Carey
- Box Case
- Edgar Chester-Master
- John Claughton
- Alan Coleman
- Robert Coombs
- Geoff Courtenay
- Nigel Cowley
- Len Creese
- Scott Currie
- Ray Dovey
- Charles Fawcus
- Rob Ferley
- Lloyd Ferreira
- Douglas Freeman
- Edward Freeman
- Paul Garlick
- Archie Gibson
- Harold Gimblett
- John Gordon
- James Graham-Brown
- Hubert Greenhill
- Jon Hardy
- Percy Hardy
- Ælfric Harrison
- Geoffrey Hebden
- Bob Herman
- Andrew Hodgson
- Philip Hope
- William Hounsell
- Wilf Hughes
- Eddie Jack
- William Jephson
- Gilbert Jessop
- Charles Johnston
- Chris Jones
- Steffan Jones
- Matthew Keech
- Andrew Kennedy
- Walter Lancashire
- Jack Leach
- Richard Lewis
- Jacob Lintott
- Steve Malone
- Robert Manser
- Dimitri Mascarenhas
- Walter McBride
- Cuan McCarthy
- Lewis McManus
- Richard Merriman
- Jigar Naik
- Geoffrey Ogilvy
- Felix Organ
- Owen Parkin
- David Payne
- Vyvian Pike
- Tom Prest
- Colin Roper
- Lee Savident
- Richard Scott
- Steven Selwood
- Andrew Sexton
- Derek Shackleton
- Julian Shackleton
- Roger Sillence
- Harold Stephenson
- Reginald Swalwell
- David Taylor
- Malcolm Taylor
- Max Waller
- John Watson
- Rev Bourne Webb
- Tom Webley
- Alan Willows
- George Woodhouse
- Larry Worrell
Grounds
editThe club currently plays its home matches at several venues during the season which include:
- Bashley (Rydal) CC, New Milton
- Bournemouth CC, Chapel Gate
- Wimborne CC
- North Perrott Cricket Club
It formerly played at Dean Park Cricket Ground in Bournemouth, which is historically part of neighbouring Hampshire and was once used as a home venue by Hampshire County Cricket Club and Sherborne School Cricket Ground in Sherborne.
References
edit- ^ "List A events played by Dorset". CricketArchive. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
- General
- Rowland Bowen, Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1970
- Tony Percival, Dorset Cricketers, ACS Publications, 2017
- E W Swanton (editor), Barclays World of Cricket, Guild, 1986
- Playfair Cricket Annual – various editions
- Wisden Cricketers' Almanack – various editions