Derbyshire County Cricket Club

Derbyshire County Cricket Club
One-day name Derbyshire Falcons
Personnel
Captain Billy Godleman
Coach Director of Cricket:
Kim Barnett
1st XI Support Coach:
Steve Stubbings
T20 Specialist Coach: John Wright
Development Coach:
Mal Loye
Player/Coach:
Tony Palladino
Overseas player(s) Imran Tahir
Matt Henry
Team information
Founded 1870
Home ground County Ground, Derby
Capacity 9,500 (4,000 seated)
History
First-class debut Lancashire
in 1871
at Old Trafford
Championship Division One wins 1
Championship Division Two wins 1
Pro40 wins 1
FP Trophy wins 1
B&H Cup wins 1
Official website: www.derbyshireccc.com

1st kit

2nd kit

3rd kit

Derbyshire County Cricket Club is one of eighteen first-class county clubs within the domestic cricket structure of England and Wales. It represents the historic county of Derbyshire. Its limited overs team is called the Derbyshire Falcons in reference to the famous peregrine falcon which nests on the Derby Cathedral (it was previously called the Derbyshire Scorpions until 2005 and the Phantoms until 2010).[1] Founded in 1870, the club is classified by substantial sources as holding important match status from its first match in 1871 until 1887. Because of poor performances and lack of fixtures in some seasons, Derbyshire then lost its important status for seven seasons until it was invited into the County Championship in 1895.[2][3] Derbyshire is classified as an official first-class team from 1895 by Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the County Championship clubs;[4] classified as a List A team since the beginning of limited overs cricket in 1963;[5] and classified as a senior Twenty20 team since 2003.[6]

Simon Storey, Chief Executive of Derbyshire County Cricket Club.
Simon Storey, Chief Executive of Derbyshire County Cricket Club.

The club is based at the County Cricket Ground, previously known as the Racecourse Ground, in the city of Derby. In 2006, for the first time in eight years, county cricket returned to Queen's Park, Chesterfield with a County Championship game against Worcestershire and a one-day league game against Surrey. Other first-class cricket grounds used in the past have included Buxton, Saltergate in Chesterfield, Heanor, Ilkeston, Blackwell, Abbeydale Park in Sheffield, Wirksworth and Burton upon Trent (3 grounds), which is actually in Staffordshire. One-day contests have been played at Darley Dale, Repton School, Trent College, Leek, Staffordshire and Knypersley (also in Staffordshire).

Honours

Division Two (1) – 2012

History

Earliest cricket in Derbyshire

Cricket may not have reached Derbyshire until the 18th century. The earliest reference to cricket in the county is a match in September 1757 between Wirksworth and Sheffield Cricket Club at Brampton Moor, near Chesterfield.

Origin of club

The formation of Derbyshire County Cricket Club took place on 4 November 1870 at a meeting in the Guildhall, Derby. The Earl of Chesterfield, who had played for and against All-England, was the first President, G. H. Strutt was Vice-President and Walter Boden, who had campaigned for the club's foundation for three years, was secretary. When Chesterfield died the following year, William Jervis became President.[7]

Derbyshire's opening season was 1871 when the club played its initial important match versus Lancashire at Old Trafford Cricket Ground on 26 and 27 May 1871 and joined the (then unofficial) County Championship.

Club history

Although the club had some good results in its early seasons, it struggled for the most part and before the 1888 season, following a run of disastrous results, Derbyshire was demoted from first-class status, which was then based on the number of matches against other teams of similar standing. Derbyshire recovered first-class status in 1894 and rejoined the County Championship in 1895.

Although the county then had a quite strong team due to the bowling of George Davidson, Joseph Hulme and George Porter and the batting and wicket-keeping of William Storer, William Chatterton and Bagshaw, within three years they had hit rock-bottom, going through 1897 without a win due to their best bowlers losing their powers.

From this point up to 1925, Derbyshire were perennially among the weakest counties, losing every single match in 1920 despite the efforts of Sam Cadman and Arthur Morton, persevering professionals. From 1926, the nucleus of a good team emerged around some doughty batting from Denis Smith, Stan Worthington and George Pope. Pope's bowling and that of his brother Alf, leg spinner Tom Mitchell and seam bowler Bill Copson took the team to their one and so far only Championship victory in 1936. They won 13 of their 28 matches outright and five on first innings. Worthington, Les Townsend, Smith and Alderman all passed 1,000 runs and Copson and Mitchell took over 100 wickets, with Alf Pope taking 94. Charlie Elliott, who later became a Test umpire and selector, was another member of this team which was captained by AW Richardson.

There have been more downs than ups in post-war years. Though runs came regularly from Arnold Hamer and less consistently from the West Indian Laurie Johnson and captain Donald Carr, the batting remained the weak point right up to the beginning of covered pitches in the 1980s. However, a series of seam bowlers served England as well as Derbyshire. The list began with Copson and continued with Cliff Gladwin, Les Jackson, Harold Rhodes, Alan Ward, Mike Hendrick and, most recently, Devon Malcolm and Dominic Cork. Spin was in short supply apart from the steady work of Edwin Smith and the under-rated all-rounder Geoff Miller, the current national selector of the England team and noted after-dinner speaker. The signing of Eddie Barlow, the famous South African, in 1976 and the lengthy period under the captaincy of Kim Barnett, starting in 1983, meant the side were rarely uncompetitive.

Derbyshire were crowned LV= County Championship Division Two champions in 2012 after securing a 6-wicket victory over Hampshire on the final day of the season at the County Ground, as Karl Krikken's side won promotion after securing more wins over the course of the season than Yorkshire who also finished the campaign on 194 points.

After the conclusion of the 2013 season, Derbyshire announced a new Elite Cricket Performance model in the next phase of the Club’s quest for sustainable on-field success across all three domestic competitions, combined with the desire to produce England cricketers. Former Derbyshire bowler Graeme Welch [8] was appointed the new Elite Cricket Performance Director in January 2014.

Ground history

This following table gives details of every venue at which Derbyshire have hosted a first-class, List A or Twenty20 match:

The County Ground, Derby, Derbyshire's regular home venue since 1871.
Queen's Park, Chesterfield, Derbyshire's most used outground.
Name of ground Location Year FC
matches
LA
matches
T20
matches
Total
Abbeydale Park Sheffield 1946-1947 2 0 0 2
Bass Worthington Ground Burton upon Trent 1975–1976 2 0 0 2
Burton-on-Trent CC Ground Burton upon Trent 1914-1937 13 0 0 13
County Ground Derby 1871–present 721 293 23 1037
Derby Road Ground Wirksworth 1874 1 0 0 1
Highfield Leek 1986–present 0 3 1 4
Ind Coope Ground Burton upon Trent 1938–1980 38 5 0 43
Miners Welfare Ground Blackwell 1909-1913 7 0 0 7
North Road Ground Glossop 1899-1910 14 0 0 14
Park Road Ground Buxton 1923–1986 45 9 0 54
Queen's Park Chesterfield 1898–present 396 82 2 480
Recreation Ground Long Eaton 1887 1 0 0 1
Repton School Ground Repton 1988 0 1 0 1
Rutland Recreation Ground Ilkeston 1925–1994 93 16 0 109
Saltergate Chesterfield 1874-1875 2 0 0 2
Station Road Darley Dale 1975 0 1 0 1
Tean Road Sports Ground Cheadle 1973–1987 0 2 0 2
Town Ground Heanor 1991–1993 1 8 0 9
Trent College Long Eaton 1975–1979 0 5 0 5
Tunstall Road Knypersley 1985–1990 0 3 0 3
Uttoxeter Road Checkley 1991–1993 0 2 0 2
Source: CricketArchive
Updated: 28 February 2010

Players

Current squad

No. Name Nationality Birth date Batting Style Bowling Style Notes
Batsmen
1 Billy Godleman  England 11 February 1989 Left-handed Right arm leg break Captain (first-class)
10 Luis Reece  England 4 August 1990 Left-handed Left arm medium
11 Daryn Smit  South Africa 28 January 1984 Right-handed Right arm leg break UK passport
19 Calum Brodrick  England 24 January 1998 Right-handed Right arm medium
23 Thomas Wood  England 11 May 1994 Right-handed Right arm medium
26 Ben Slater  England 26 August 1991 Left-handed Right arm slow
57 Shiv Thakor  England 22 October 1993 Right-handed Right arm medium
77 Wayne Madsen*  England 2 January 1984 Right-handed Right arm off break
All-rounders
3 Charlie Macdonell  England 23 February 1995 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium
14 Greg Cork  England 29 September 1994 Right-handed Left arm medium-fast
18 Alex Hughes  England 29 September 1991 Right-handed Right arm medium
20 Matthew Critchley  England 13 August 1996 Right-handed Right arm leg break
24 Rob Hemmings  England 28 February 1996 Right-handed Right arm medium
88 Jeevan Mendis double-dagger  Sri Lanka 15 January 1983 Left-handed Left arm leg break Overseas player
Wicket-keepers
9 Gary Wilson double-dagger  Ireland 5 February 1986 Right-handed Vice-captain
16 Harvey Hosein  England 12 August 1996 Right-handed
Bowlers
7 Hardus Viljoen double-dagger  South Africa 6 March 1989 Right-handed Right arm fast Kolpak registration
8 Tom Milnes  England 6 October 1992 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium
15 Tom Taylor  England 21 December 1994 Right-handed Right arm medium-fast
17 Alfie Gleadall  England 28 May 2000 Right-handed Right arm medium
21 Matt Henry double-dagger  New Zealand 14 December 1991 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium Overseas player (T20 only)
28 Tony Palladino*  England 29 June 1983 Right-handed Right arm medium
36 Ben Cotton  England 13 September 1993 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium
44 Will Davis  England 6 March 1996 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium
75 Hamidullah Qadri  England 5 December 2000 Right-handed Right arm off break
99 Imran Tahir double-dagger  South Africa 28 March 1979 Right-handed Right arm leg break Overseas player
Gurjit Sandhu  England 24 March 1992 Right-handed Left arm fast-medium
James Taylor  England 19 January 2001 Right-handed Right arm medium

Records

Most first-class runs for Derbyshire
Qualification – 15000 runs[9]

PlayerRuns
Kim Barnett 23854
Denis Smith 20516
Derek Morgan 17842
Leslie Townsend 17667
Stan Worthington 17000
Arnold Hamer 15277

Most first-class wickets for Derbyshire
Qualification – 1000 wickets[10]

PlayerWickets
Les Jackson 1670
Cliff Gladwin 1536
Billy Bestwick 1452
Tommy Mitchell 1417
Derek Morgan 1216
Edwin Smith 1209
Bill Copson 1033

Derbyshire recorded their highest ever score, 801 for eight declared, against Somerset at Taunton in 2007. Their score beat their previous highest ever score of 707 for 7 declared also against Somerset at Taunton in 2005. Simon Katich scored 221, Ian Harvey 153, Ant Botha 101 and James Pipe 106. Derbyshire broke the record despite losing Phil Weston and Chris Taylor to Andy Caddick in the first over without a run on the board.

References

  1. "Derbyshire to take on Falcons title". ECB website. 18 August 2009. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  2. ACS (1981). 'A Guide to Important Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles 1709 – 1863'. Nottingham: ACS.
  3. ACS (1982). 'A Guide to First-Class Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles'. Nottingham: ACS.
  4. Birley, p. 145.
  5. "List A events played by Derbyshire". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  6. "Twenty20 events played by Derbyshire". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  7. Ric Sissons' 'The Players' 1988.
  8. "Start of a new era as Derbyshire attract Welch". Derbyshire County Cricket Club. 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2014-01-07.

Further reading

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