Somerset County Cricket Club

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Somerset County Cricket Club
One-day Name: Somerset Sabres
Coach: Flag of England Andy Hurry
Captain: Flag of Australia Justin Langer
Overseas Player(s): Flag of Australia Justin Langer
Founded: 1875
Home Ground: Taunton
Capacity: 6,500
First-class debut: Lancashire
in 1882
at Old Trafford
Championship wins: 0
Pro40 wins: 1
FP Trophy wins: 3
Twenty20 Cup wins: 1
Official Website: SomersetCountyCC

Somerset County Cricket Club is one of the 18 major county clubs which make up the English domestic cricket structure, representing the historic county of Somerset. Its limited overs team is called the Somerset Sabres. The club has its headquarters at the County Cricket Ground, Taunton. First-class games are also played at Bath. Former grounds include Weston-super-Mare, Frome, Glastonbury, Wells and the Imperial Tobacco ground in south Bristol.

Contents

[edit] Honours

  • County Championship (0) - ; shared (0) -
  • Gillette/NatWest/C&G Trophy (3) - 1979, 1983, 2001
  • Sunday/National League (1) - 1979
  • Twenty20 Cup (1) - 2005
  • Benson & Hedges Cup (2) - 1981, 1982

[edit] Second XI honours

  • Second XI Championship (2) - 1994, 2004; shared (0) -
  • Second XI Trophy (0) -
  • Minor Counties Championship (2) - 1961, 1965; shared (0) -

[edit] Earliest cricket

Cricket probably reached Somerset by the end of the 17th century. It is known that the related sport of "Stow-Ball" aka "Stob-Ball" was played in the county during the 16th century. In this game, the bat was called a "stave". See Alice B Gomme : The Traditional Games of England, Scotland and Ireland.

The earliest confirmed reference to cricket in Somerset is a match on 13 July 1751 that was played in memory of the late Frederick, Prince of Wales who was a noted patron of the sport.

[edit] Origin of club

The formation of Somerset CCC was on 18 August 1875 by a team of amateurs at a meeting in Sidmouth, Devon immediately after a match against a local side. Somerset is the only one of the present first-class counties in English cricket whose county cricket club was founded outside the boundaries of the traditional county.

Somerset CCC played its initial first-class match versus Lancashire CCC at Old Trafford on 8, 9 and 10 June 1882 and joined the (then unofficial) County Championship, but for only four seasons initially.

In 1886, Somerset did not play any other first-class counties and dropped out of the Championship until 1891. Somerset was then able to arrange 12 matches against first-class counties and so force its way back into the Championship, which was now an official competition. Somerset CCC is therefore recognised as a first-class team from 1882 until 1885 and from 1891 to the present day.

There are alternative versions of Somerset's first-class matchlist in the 19th century. For more information, see Variations in First-Class Cricket Statistics.

[edit] Pre First World War

Somerset CCC 1892
Somerset CCC 1892

Somerset was the first of the "new" counties to have enough fixtures against the established county teams to be considered as part of the County Championship. In their second season, 1892, they finished third, but it was to be 66 years before they finished as high again. Bottom of the table 12 times (plus one shared wooden spoon), they enjoyed over many decades a reputation for cheerful inconsistency. Until the Second World War, the team regularly comprised a number of more or less talented amateurs and just a handful of professionals.

Famous names from the pre-First World War period included the England players Sammy Woods, Lionel Palairet and Len Braund, and the fast bowler Tom Richardson also played for the county after his retirement from Surrey.

[edit] Between the Wars

Between the wars, the west Somerset farmer Jack White played for England as an off-spinning all-rounder with some success; lesser international careers were enjoyed by the hard-hitting batsman Harold Gimblett, whose entry into first-class cricket was the stuff of legends, and by Arthur Wellard, fast bowler and a mighty smiter of sixes. The briefest Test match career of them all was "enjoyed" by Jack MacBryan, whose only game for England was the rain-ruined match against the South Africans in 1924, in which he neither batted nor bowled.

[edit] Post Second World War

In postwar cricket, the happy-go-lucky Somerset attitude was no longer sustainable, and the side finished bottom of the Championship for four consecutive seasons from 1952. With the strong possibility of going out of business, drastic change was inevitable. Somerset recruited heavily from other countries, taking Colin McCool and Bill Alley from Australia, and from other counties. In 1958, the side again finished third, and this was repeated in 1963 and 1966. In the mid sixties the team was captained by Colin Atkinson, who would later become headmaster at the nearby Millfield school.

Though County Championship success continued to elude the county, Somerset finally found the makings of a successful one-day team under the combative, inspirational captaincy of Yorkshireman Brian Close. A trio of world class players, Viv Richards, Joel 'Big Bird' Garner and the England all-rounder Ian Botham made the team which, for the first time in its long history, became a formidable trophy winning proposition.

Under the captaincy of left handed opener Brian Rose, Somerset won their first ever silverware by taking the Gillette Cup and the Sunday League in 1979, and qualifying for the quarter final of the Benson and Hedges cup after a controversial strike rate declaration against Worcestershire in a zonal match.[1] Rose also captained the side to lifting the Benson & Hedges Cup in 1981 and 1982, and the renamed NatWest Trophy (formerly the Gillette Cup) in 1983.

New captain Peter Roebuck caused huge controversy in the county when New Zealander Martin Crowe was preferred as overseas pro. Viv Richards and Joel Garner were sacked, despite proving themselves two of the most successful overseas players of modern times, and Ian Botham resigned in protest and moved to Worcestershire.

[edit] Today

Somerset opening batsmen Matthew Wood and Marcus Trescothick walking out to meet Gloucestershire CCC, June 27, 2007
Somerset opening batsmen Matthew Wood and Marcus Trescothick walking out to meet Gloucestershire CCC, June 27, 2007

Success has been elusive in recent years, although New Zealand born Andy Caddick and opener Marcus Trescothick have proved major pillars of the England Test team and overseas stars such as Jamie Cox have given sterling service for the club, resulting in their appearance in the NatWest Trophy in 1999 and the C & G Trophy final in 2001 and 2002, winning in 2001 over Leicestershire. In 2001, the team finished second in the first division of the County Championship, its highest-ever placing. But true to its contrary traditions, the county was relegated to the second division at the end of the following season.

Under the guidance of Director of Cricket Brian Rose, the team has adopted a youth policy, which Rose accepts will lead to a succession of good and bad results in the short term. To balance the youth policy, for two seasons the club was led by high profile overseas stars Ricky Ponting and Graeme Smith to enable coaching of the young group of players. In July 2005, as perhaps a portent of better times to come, the county was the surprise winner of the third Twenty20 Cup, beating Lancashire in the final at The Oval.

The 2006 season was up and down in results, but in June 2006 Rose announced the signing for six weeks of the Australian cricket team opening batsman Justin Langer, while countryman Dan Cullen was on duty with Australia A.[2] Langer responded by hitting the highest score in the county's first-class history, but without him the team struggled in both short and long versions of the game, failed to repeat their Twenty20 success and languished at or near the bottom of both County Championship and Pro40 second division tables.

In 2007 Langer, having returned to the team, was named captain. Cameron White was the other overseas player. Somerset's season began brightly, including a county-record 850/7 declared against Middlesex in their first Championship match, but a few weeks later Somerset were on the wrong end of a huge total when they conceded 801/8 declared to Derbyshire. However, they recovered well from this set-back and achieved promotion, returning to Division One of the Championship for the first time since 2002 after beating Essex at Chelmsford with five sessions to spare. [3] They were also promoted to Division One of the Pro40 league.

[edit] 2008 Squad

Name Stats Bat/Bowl Notes
DoB Country Born
Omari Banks 17 July 1982 West Indian Anguilla RHB OB Qualified for England (British Passport)
Ian Blackwell 10 June 1978 English Chesterfield LHB SLA
Andrew Caddick 21 November 1968 English Christchurch RHB RFM Vice-Captain
Zander de Bruyn 5 July 1975 South Africa Johannesburg RHB RFM Not qualified for England
Wes Durston 6 October 1980 English Taunton RHB OB
Neil Edwards 14 October 1983 English Treliske, Truro LHB RM
John Francis 13 November 1980 English Bromley LHB SLA
Carl Gazzard 15 April 1982 English Penzance RHB WK Wicket Keeper
James Hildreth 9 September 1984 English Milton Keynes RHB RMF
Steffan Jones 9 February 1974 English Llanelli RHB RMF
Craig Kieswetter 28 November 1987 English Johannesburg RHB WK Wicket Keeper
Justin Langer 21 November 1970 Australia Perth LHB RM Captain/Overseas player
Robin Lett 23 December 1986 English Westminster RHB RM
Michael Munday 22 October 1984 English Nottingham RHB LB
Keith Parsons 2 May 1973 English Taunton RHB RM
Ben Phillips 30 September 1974 English Lewisham LHB RFM
Arul Suppiah 30 August 1983 Malaysia Kuala Lumpur RHB SLA
Andy Sutton 29 November 1985 English Worcester RHB RMF
Alfonso Thomas 9 February 1977 South Africa Cape Town RHB RFM Not qualified for England
Richard Timms 9 September 1984 English Bristol RHB RFM
Peter Trego 12 June 1981 English Weston-super-Mare RHB RM
Marcus Trescothick 25 December 1975 English Keynsham LHB RM
Mark Turner 23 October 1984 English Sunderland RHB RMF
Max Waller 3 March 1988 English Salisbury RHB LB
Charl Willoughby 3 December 1974 South Africa Cape Town LHB LMF Not qualified for England
Robert Woodman 12 October 1986 English Taunton LHB LMF

[edit] Famous Players

  • Bill Andrews — fast-medium bowling partner of Arthur Wellard, later coach and committeeman
  • Bill Alley — Australian all-rounder who joined Somerset when 38 and stayed for a dozen years
  • Colin Atkinson — mid-Sixties captain, and later headmaster at Millfield school
  • Ian Botham — all-rounder who played in over 100 Tests for England from 1977 to 1992
  • Len Braund — all-rounder of Edwardian times who played 23 Tests for England
  • Andy Caddick — former England centrally contracted frontline bolwer
  • Brian Close — former Yorkshire and England captain who joined Somerset after leaving Yorkshire
  • Jamie Cox — regarded as one of the best players never to have played Test cricket for Australia
  • Martin Crowe — one of New Zealand's greatest batsman who was Somerset's overseas player after the sacking of Viv Richards and Joel Garner.
  • Joel 'Big Bird' Garner — West Indian international fast bowler
  • Sunil Gavaskar — Indian cricket legend considered one of the greatest opening batsmen in the history of the sport
  • Harold Gimblett — cavalier opening batsman whose debut was the stuff of legends
  • Sanath Jayasuriya — played for part of the 2005 season, known locally as "The Batman"
  • Colin McCool — Australian whose robust batting bolstered the county in hard times, also a legspin bowler. Son Russel made one appearance in the 1980s
  • Lionel Palairet — opening batsman known for stylish batting
  • Ricky Ponting — Australian captain, considered a modern great.
  • Viv Richards — all-destroying West Indian international batsman, later knighted
  • Tom Richardson — played once for the county after his retirement from Surrey.
  • Brian Rose — captain of the successful 1980s side, now Director of Cricket
  • Graeme Smith — South African captain and Somerset captain for most of the 2005 season, his last game was the Twenty20 cup final at The Oval
  • Marcus Trescothick — former England opening batsman, awarded an MBE after the 2005 Ashes victory
  • Arthur Wellard — England fast bowler and a mighty smiter of the ball as a lower-order batsman
  • Jack White — a farmer who played for England as an off-spinning all-rounder with some success
  • Peter Wight — prolific and stylish batsman, later a First Class umpire
  • Sammy Woods — an Australian who played for both Australia and England and still holds some of the county's batting records. He was also an English Rugby Union International.

[edit] Officers & Management

[edit] Officers

  • President: RC Kerslake
  • Chairman: AJ Nash
  • Vice Chairman: DJL Gabbitass
  • Honorary Treasurer: RA O'Donnell
  • Chief Executive: RA Gould
  • Cricket Chairman: VJ Marks

[edit] Committee

  • B Daw, C Dickens, GJ Hepworth, R Parsons, M Powell, RL Roe, MCG Slade,
  • Co-opted: VJ Marks (Cricket), N Engert (Planning & Legal)

[edit] Cricket Management

[edit] Area Committees

  • Bath & Wiltshire
  • Bridgwater & West Somerset
  • Devon & Cornwall
  • Mid Somerset
  • North Somerset & Bristol
  • South Somerset & Dorset
  • Taunton
  • Weston-Super-Mare

[edit] Honorary Life Members

PW Anderson, IT Botham, DB Close, Mrs M Elworthy, AC Emery, J Garner, R Harris, Eric Hill (former opening batsman), MF Hill, AK James (former secretary), JM Jeffrey, L Jones, Roy Kerslake (former captain), Mervyn Kitchen (former opening batsman and Test umpire), Brian Langford (former off-spinner), EH Lawrence, PC Ondaatje, KE Palmer, R Parsons, D Price, HA Rainey, IVA Richards, R Robinson, BC Rose, DR Shepherd, GA Stedall, Harold Stephenson (former wicketkeeper and captain), AH Stringer, C Tate, C Twort, RP Wickham, Peter Wight, KAW Wills

[edit] First Class Records

[edit] Team

  • Highest Total For: 850-7d v Middlesex at Taunton, 2007
  • Highest Total Against: 811 by Surrey at The Oval, 1899
  • Lowest Total For: 25 v Gloucestershire at Bristol, 1947
  • Lowest Total Against: 22 by Gloucestershire at Bristol, 1920

[edit] Batting

Most first-class runs for Somerset
Qualification - 15000 runs[4]

Player Runs
Harold Gimblett 21142
Peter Wight 16965
Bill Alley 16644
Peter Roebuck 16218
Roy Virgin 15458
Frank Lee 15243
Mervyn Kitchen 15213
Maurice Tremlett 15195

[edit] Best Partnership for each wicket

[edit] Bowling

  • Best Bowling: 10-49 E.J.Tyler v Surrey at Taunton, 1895
  • Best Match Bowling: 16-83 J.C.White v Worcestershire at Bath, 1919
  • Wickets in Season: 169, A.W.Wellard, 1938

Most first-class wickets for Somerset
Qualification - 1000 wickets[5]

Player Wickets
Jack White 2165
Arthur Wellard 1517
Brian Langford 1390
Ernie Robson 1122

[edit] Centre of Cricketing Excellence

In line with the club's youth policy, the club has a well developed Centre of Excellence. The Centre of Excellence is an indoor facility and is amongst the best in the South West. The Centre offers coaching for both the County side, the youth team as well as cricket and sports training for all located in the region. Developed under the England and Wales Cricket Board's principles and in conjunction with Sport England, its purpose is to spot and develop cricketing talent and improve overall sports fitness in the region.

[edit] Somerset Facts and Feats

  • Somerset often struggled in their early years. They lost 15 of their 18 matches in the 1910 championship, drawing the other three games.
  • Horace Hazell bowled 105 consecutive balls of slow left arm spin against Gloucestershire at Taunton in 1949 without conceding a run. Most of them were bowled to the usually dashing Tom Graveney. Hazell, 39, finished with 8 for 27 in helpful conditions.
  • Somerset set their highest ever score, 850 for 7 declared in a high scoring drawn against Middlesex at Taunton in the first game of the 2007 season. Justin Langer scored 315, James Hildreth 116, Cameron White 114 and Peter Trego 114. Owais Shah scored 193 for Middlesex and Billy Godleman, David Nash and Ed Smith also scored tons. 1659 runs were scored in four days for the loss of just 13 wickets. Eight centuries in one match is a County Championship record.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External sources

[edit] Further reading

  • H S Altham, A History of Cricket, Volume 1 (to 1914), George Allen & Unwin, 1962
  • Derek Birley, A Social History of English Cricket, Aurum, 1999
  • Rowland Bowen, Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1970
  • Roy Webber, The Playfair Book of Cricket Records, Playfair Books, 1951
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