Simon Ecclestone

Simon Ecclestone
Personal information
Full name Simon Charles Ecclestone
Born 16 July 1971 (1971-07-16) (age 40)
Great Dunmow, Essex, England
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Right-arm medium-pace
Role Initially all-rounder, later just batsman
Relations Brother Giles
Domestic team information
Years Team
1992 Cambridgeshire
1994 Oxford University
1994–1998 Somerset
First-class debut 13 April 1994 Oxford University v Durham
Last First-class 20 June 1998 Somerset v Essex
List A debut 24 June 1992 Cambridgeshire v Northamptonshire
Last List A 14 June 1998 Somerset v Lancashire
Career statistics
Competition First-class List A
Matches 46 68
Runs scored 2277 1834
Batting average 35.03 30.56
100s/50s 3/12 3/8
Top score 133 130
Balls bowled 2427 866
Wickets 33 21
Bowling average 36.60 38.14
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match
Best bowling 4/33 4/31
Catches/stumpings 22/– 11/–
Source: CricketArchive, 12 January 2011

Simon Charles Ecclestone (born 16 July 1971) played first-class and List A cricket for Oxford University and Somerset between 1994 and 1998.[1] He also appeared in 1992 in List A cricket for Cambridgeshire. He was born at Great Dunmow, Essex.

Educated at Bryanston School and at Durham University, Ecclestone was a hard-hitting left-handed middle-order batsman and a right-arm medium pace bowler. From 1990 to 1993 he played Minor Counties cricket for Cambridgeshire, for whom his brother Giles also played and in 1992 he appeared in one List A match, a NatWest Trophy match against Northamptonshire.[2]

In 1994, he was at Oxford University and in addition to appearing in first-class matches for the university side, he also played in one List A match for the Combined Universities cricket team. He won a blue by appearing in the annual University Match against Cambridge University. After the university cricket season was over, he appeared in a handful of List A and first-class matches for Somerset. In 1995, he appeared irregularly in Somerset's first team in both County Championship and one-day matches, but in 1996, he became a regular in List A games and made two centuries in them. In a Benson and Hedges Cup match against Middlesex he made an unbeaten 112 and put on 188 for the second wicket with Mark Lathwell.[3] Little over a week later he made 130 in a 40-over Sunday League game against Surrey, this time putting on 183 for the second wicket with Peter Bowler and hitting 11 fours and 5 sixes.[4]

In 1997, Ecclestone played first-class matches more regularly for Somerset and also deputised as captain when Bowler was injured. He himself suffered a knee injury in the match against Kent when he was captaining the side, but he returned after retiring hurt in the first innings and made 123, his only County Championship century, and followed that with 94 in the second innings.[5] Earlier in the same season he had made 133, his highest first-class score, in the match against Oxford University.[6] He also scored 102 not out against the Pakistan A side that toured England playing first-class matches in 1997.[7] In the season as a whole, he made 951 first-class runs at an average of 45.28 and was awarded his Somerset county cap.[8] The journalist David Foot, writing in Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, suggested that Ecclestone had "a future in captaincy".[9]

But that did not happen. In 1998, Ecclestone's knee injury got worse and restricted him to just five first-class games and five List A matches. He was forced to retire from cricket at the end of the season.

Since retirement, Ecclestone has appeared in occasional minor matches and in 2002 he toured Malaysia and Singapore as a member of a MCC side.

References