War Memorial Athletic Ground
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The War Memorial Athletic Ground, often referred to as simply the War Memorial Ground, is a sports ground in the Amblecote region of Stourbridge, West Midlands, England. It plays host to both cricket and football, being the home of Stourbridge Cricket Club and Stourbridge Football Club.
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[edit] Cricket
[edit] International
Two ICC Trophy matches have been played at the War Memorial Ground: Bermuda v Papua New Guinea in 1979, and Argentina v East Africa in 1986. The ground also hosted a match in the 1997 Triple Crown Tournament, between an England Cricket Board XI and Ireland.
[edit] Domestic
Worcestershire County Cricket Club played 61 first-class matches at the ground: 60 between 1905 and 1962, and a further one in 1981. All these games were in the County Championship. Only three List A games have been played here, in 1969, 1970 and 1982, again all involving Worcestershire. The county played Second XI cricket at the ground into the early 1990s.
On this ground in 1911, Worcestershire lost to Lancashire by 372 runs, which as of the end of the 2006 season remains the county's largest ever defeat in terms of runs. [1]
[edit] Records
[edit] First-class
- Highest team total: 592/9 declared by Lancashire v Worcestershire, 1909
- Lowest team total: 43 by Worcestershire v Kent, 1913
- Highest individual innings: 217 by Frederick Bowley for Worcestershire v Leicestershire, 1905
- Best bowling in an innings: 9-40 by Reg Perks for Worcestershire v Glamorgan, 1939
[edit] List A
- Highest team total: 164/9 (40 overs) by Worcestershire v Leicestershire, 1970[2]
- Lowest team total: 104 (37.5 overs) by Glamorgan v Worcestershire, 1969
- Highest individual innings: 58 by Nigel Briers for Leicestershire v Worcestershire, 1982
- Best bowling in an innings: 4-24 by Bob Carter for Worcestershire v Leicestershire, 1970[2]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Largest Margin of Runs Defeat. CricketArchive. Retrieved on 2007-01-06.
- ^ a b Same match.
[edit] References
- Amblecote, Stourbridge from CricketArchive. (This is the only name CA gives to the ground.) Retrieved 19 December 2006.