Cricket in England
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Cricket was invented in England and is England's most popular summer sport, it is also the national sport.
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[edit] History
- History of English cricket to 1696
- 1697 to 1725 English cricket seasons
- Overview of English cricket 1726 - 1815
- Overview of English cricket 1816 - 1918
[edit] Domestic competitions
There are eighteen professional county clubs, seventeen of them in England and one in Wales. All seventeen English counties are named after, and were originally representative of, historic English counties.
Each summer the county clubs compete in the first class County Championship, which consists of two leagues of nine teams and in which matches are played over four days.
The same teams also play the one day Pro40, a one day knock out competition called the Friends Provident Trophy, and the short-form Twenty20 Cup. These clubs are heavily dependent on subsidies from the England and Wales Cricket Board, which makes its money from television and endorsement contracts and attendances at international matches.
The Minor Counties Cricket Championship is a season-long competition in England for county clubs that do not have first-class status. There are nineteen teams representing historic English counties along with a Welsh minor counties team.
Below the county game, there are a raft of club competitions organised on a regional basis.
[edit] Derbies
The following games are considered derbies:-
- War of the Roses - Lancashire v Yorkshire
- Battle of London (cross-Thames derby) - Middlesex v Surrey
- South Coast Special - Hampshire v Sussex
[edit] Cricket grounds
- See main article: List of cricket grounds in England and Wales
English cricket grounds are smaller than the largest in some other countries, especially India and Australia, but the best of them have been modernised to a high standard, and two new international grounds have been built in recent years. The largest English cricket ground, Lord's in London, is internationally regarded as the "home of cricket".
The following other stadiums also have Test match status The Oval ( South London ), Old Trafford ( Manchester ), Trent Bridge ( Nottingham ), Headingley ( Leeds ), Edgbaston ( Birmingham ) and Riverside ( Durham ).
On November 24, 2006, the Rose Bowl, Southampton was awarded provisional test venue status by the England and Wales Cricket Board, with the prospect of the ground hosting its first test match in 2010.
[edit] Governing body
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) is the governing body of cricket in England and Wales. It was created on 1 January 1997 combining the roles of the Test and County Cricket Board (TCCB), the National Cricket Association (NCA) and the Cricket Council.
They are full members of the International Cricket Council.
[edit] National team
England is a founding Test cricket, One Day International and Twenty20 nation. England played in the first ever Test match in 1877 (against Australia in Melbourne) and also the first ever One-day International in 1971 (also against Australia in Melbourne).
Each summer two foreign national teams visit England to play seven test matches and numerous one-day internationals. In the British winter the England team tours abroad. The highest profile rival of the England cricket team is the Australian team, with which it competes for The Ashes, one of the most famous trophies in British sport.
[edit] Popularity
Cricket is probably the second most widely covered sport, and the fortunes of the England team are closely followed by many people who never attend a live game.
In 2005 the ECB concluded a commercial arrangement with BSkyB which gave Sky the exclusive television rights for live Test cricket in England for four years (the 2006 to 2009 seasons). This deal, which took live Test cricket for home England matches away from terrestrial television for the first time generated substantial future revenues for English cricket, but was criticised by many England cricket supporters and others.
The Cricket Writers' Club Young Cricketer of the Year is an annual award voted by the Cricket Writers' Club for the best young cricket player in England and Wales, and has been awarded since 1950.
[edit] References
This article or section is missing citations or needs footnotes. Using inline citations helps guard against copyright violations and factual inaccuracies. (February 2007) |
[edit] See also
- Sport in England
- Cricket in Ireland
- Cricket in Scotland
- Cricket in Wales
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