Middlesex County Cricket Club

Middlesex County Cricket Club
Personnel
Captain Eoin Morgan
Coach First-Class
List A
Richard Scott
t20
Daniel Vettori
Overseas player(s) First-Class
List A
Adam Voges
t20
Brendon McCullum
Tim Southee
Chief executive Richard Goatley
Team information
Colours List A: Harlequin shirts and Blue trousers
t20: Pink shirts and Blue trousers
Founded 1864
Home ground Lord's
Capacity 30,000
History
First-class debut Sussex
in 1864
at Cattle Market Ground, Islington
Championship wins (11) (plus 2 shared)
Sunday League wins (1)
Benson & Hedges Cup wins (2)
One Day Cup wins (4)
Twenty20 Cup wins (1)
Official website: Middlesex CCC 13 April 2017

Test kit

ODI kit

T20 kit

Middlesex 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 Middlesex.

Middlesex teams formed by earlier organisations since the early 18th century always had senior status and so the county club is rated accordingly from inception: i.e., classified by substantial sources as holding important match status from 1864 to 1894;[1][2] classified as an official first-class team from 1895 by Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the County Championship clubs;[3] classified as a List A team since the beginning of limited overs cricket in 1963;[4] and classified as a senior Twenty20 team since 2003.[5]

The club plays most of its home games at Lord's Cricket Ground in St John's Wood, which is owned by Marylebone Cricket Club. The club also plays some games around the historic county at the Uxbridge Cricket Club Ground and the Old Deer Park in Richmond (historically Surrey). Until October 2014, the club played limited overs cricket as the Middlesex Panthers, changed from Middlesex Crusaders in 2009 following complaints.[6] However, on 24 October 2014, the club announced that they would use the name Middlesex County Cricket Club in all forms of the sport, with immediate effect.[7] Limited-overs kit colours are dark blue and pink quarters and from 2007, Middlesex have worn exclusive pink shirts during their Twenty20 matches in support of the Breakthrough Breast Cancer charity.

Middlesex have won thirteen County Championships (including 2 shared titles), two Benson & Hedges Cups, four one-day cricket titles, one National League and the Twenty20 Cup, through which they became the first county club to qualify for both the Stanford Super Series and the Twenty20 Champions League.

Middlesex CCC has an indoor school based in Finchley, the Middlesex Academy and a project at Radlett Cricket Club.

Honours

Division Two (1) – 2011
Division Two (1) – 2004

Second XI honours

History

Earliest cricket

It is almost certain that cricket reached London, and thereby Middlesex, by the 16th century. Early references to the game in London or Middlesex are often interchangeable and sometimes it is not clear if a particular team represents the city or the county.

See: History of cricket to 1696 and History of cricket 1697 - 1725

The first definite mention of cricket in London or Middlesex dates from 1680. It is a clear reference to "the two umpires" (the earliest mention of an umpire in what seems to be a cricket connection) and strongly suggests that the double wicket form of the game was already well known in London.[11]

The earliest known match in Middlesex took place at Lamb's Conduit Fields in Holborn on 3 July 1707 involving teams from London and Croydon.[12] In 1718, the first reference is found to White Conduit Fields in Islington, which later became a very famous London venue.[11]

The earliest known reference to a team called Middlesex is on 5 August 1728 when it played London Cricket Club "in the fields behind the Woolpack, in Islington, near Sadlers Wells, for £50 a side".[12] This was also the earliest known first-class match involving a Middlesex team.[13]

For information about Middlesex county teams before the formation of Middlesex CCC, see: Middlesex county cricket teams

Origin of club

There are references to earlier county organisations, especially the MCC Thursday Club around 1800, but the definitive Middlesex club is the present Middlesex CCC. The club was informally founded on 15 December 1863 at a meeting in the London Tavern. Formal constitution took place on 2 February 1864. The creation of the club was largely through the efforts of the Walker family of Southgate, which included several notable players including the famous V. E. Walker, who in 1859 became the first player to take 10 wickets in an innings and score a century in the same match.

Early history

Middlesex CCC played its initial first-class match versus Sussex CCC at Islington on 6 & 7 June 1864. In the same season, the club was a contender for the title of "Champion County". Middlesex played at Lillie Bridge Grounds from 1869 before leaving in 1872 due to the poor quality of the turf. The club nearly folded at this time, a vote for continuing being won 7–6. They played at Prince's Cricket Ground from 1872 to 1876, and began using Lord's Cricket Ground in 1877.

20th century

The Club has produced several noted players, particularly the great batsmen Patsy Hendren, Bill Edrich and Denis Compton.

Bill Edrich scored 1,000 runs before the end of May in 1938. He needed just 15 innings, with 4 centuries, and every run was scored at Lord's. Don Bradman gave him the chance to score the 10 runs he needed in the Australian tour match with Middlesex by declaring his team's innings early.

Middlesex won the County Championship in 1947 thanks to the unprecedented run scoring of Compton and Edrich. They both passed Tom Hayward's 1906 record of 3518 runs in a season with Compton making 3816 at 90.86 and Edrich 3539 at 80.43 with a dozen centuries. Compton's 18 centuries surpassed Jack Hobbs' former record of 16, set in 1925. Together with Jack Robertson's 2214 runs and Syd Brown's 1709 and the bowling of Jack Young, Jim Sims, Laurie Gray and Compton and Edrich themselves, the championship was won. The following season Compton and Edrich made their record unbeaten stand of 424 for the 3rd wicket against Somerset at Lords.

Middlesex's most successful period coincided with the captaincies of Mike Brearley and Mike Gatting from 1971 to 1997. Brearley proved as astute for his county as he did for his country between 1971 and 1982. His team included Gatting and England spin bowlers John Emburey and Phil Edmonds; and overseas fast bowlers such as Wayne Daniel.

Recent history

In 2007 Middlesex had mixed fortunes in Domestic Cricket. In the 4-Day version of the game, the club finished 3rd of the nine teams in Division 2 of the Liverpool Victoria County Championship, narrowly missing out on promotion. However, 3rd place in Division 2 of the NatWest Pro 40 League was enough to earn them a place in the play-off final against Northamptonshire Steelbacks. Middlesex won that game comfortably and therefore gained promotion to Division 1 for the 2008 Season. There was less success in the two knockout cups where Middlesex failed to progress beyond the group stages of either tournament. In the Friends Provident Trophy they finished 7th of the ten teams in the Southern Division. Likewise in the Twenty20 Cup, 5th place of the six teams in the Southern Division was not good enough to see them progress.

In 2008, Middlesex won the Twenty20 Cup by beating Kent in the final at The Rose Bowl. As well as being the club's first major trophy for 15 seasons, the final was also memorable for Middlesex's record breaking 187/6 (the highest ever Twenty20 Cup Finals Day score) with Kent's retort of 184/5 (being second on the all-time list) and ensured that the Cup was decided on the last ball of the match. The victory is also made historic as Middlesex became the first County Cricket Club to gain entry to both the Twenty20 Champions League and the Stanford Super Series.

However 2008 also saw Middlesex suffer relegation in the Pro40 Division One (finishing in last place). And in a copy of their final standings from the previous season, Middlesex both failed to make it past the group stage in the Friends Provident Trophy and finished in 3rd place in the County Championship Division Two, again missing out on promotion by just one position.

It was announced in February 2009 that Middlesex changed their limited overs name from the Middlesex Crusaders, to the Middlesex Panthers, following complaints made by Muslim and Jewish communities.[14] On 24 October 2014, the club announced that the limited overs name will revert to Middlesex County Cricket Club (Middlesex CCC), with immediate effect.[7]

2011 saw a dramatic improvement in form for Middlesex, as they won the LV= County Championship Division Two for the first time in their history, sealing promotion to Division One for the 2012 season. They narrowly missed out on a place in the CB40 semi-finals, after coming joint top of their group with the Sussex Sharks, missing out only via net run-rate.

Records

First-class

Team records

Batting records

Most runs for Middlesex
Qualification – 20,000 runs [15]

BatsmanRuns
Patsy Hendren 40,302 (1907–1937)
Mike Gatting 28,411 (1975–1998)
Jack Hearne 27,612 (1909–1936)
Jack Robertson 27,088 (1937–1959)
Bill Edrich 25,738 (1937–1959)
Clive Radley 24,147 (1964–1987)
Eric Russell 23,103 (1956–1972)
Denis Compton 21,781 (1936–1958)
Peter Parfitt 21,302 (1956–1972)

Bowling records

16–114 G Burton v Yorkshire at Bramall Lane, Sheffield 1888
16–114 JT Hearne v Lancashire at Old Trafford, Manchester 1898

Most wickets for Middlesex
Qualification – 1,000 wickets [16]

BowlerWickets
Fred Titmus 2,361 (1949–1982)
JT Hearne 2,093 (1888–1923)
JW Hearne 1,438 (1909–1936)
Jim Sims 1,257 (1929–1952)
John Emburey 1,250 (1973–1995)
Jack Young 1,182 (1933–1956)
Jack Durston 1,178 (1919–1933)
Alan Moss 1,088 (1950–1963)
Frank Tarrant 1,005 (1904–1914)

Wicketkeeping records

Most dismissals for Middlesex
Qualification – 500 dismissals [17]

WicketkeeperDismissals
John Murray 1,223 (1,023 catches & 200 stumpings) (1952–1975)
Fred Price 940 (629 catches & 311 stumpings) (1926–1947)
Joe Murrell 765 (502 catches & 263 stumpings) (1906–1926)
Leslie Compton 566 (437 catches & 129 stumpings) (1938–1956)
Paul Downton 546 (483 catches & 63 stumpings) (1980–1991)

Best partnership for each wicket

Partnership Runs Players Opposition Venue Season
1st wicket 372 Mike Gatting & Justin Langer v Essex Southgate 1998
2nd wicket 380 Frank Tarrant & Jack Hearne v Lancashire Lord's 1914
3rd wicket 424* Bill Edrich & Denis Compton v Somerset Lord's 1948
4th wicket 325 Jack Hearne & Patsy Hendren v Hampshire Lord's 1919
5th wicket 338 Robert Lucas & Tim O'Brien v Sussex Hove 1895
6th wicket 270 John Carr & Paul Weekes v Gloucestershire Lord's 1994
7th wicket 271* Patsy Hendren & Frank Mann v Nottinghamshire Nottingham 1925
8th wicket 182* Mordaunt Doll & Joe Murrell v Nottinghamshire Lord's 1913
9th wicket 172 Gareth Berg & Tim Murtagh v Leicestershire Leicester 2011
10th wicket 230 Richard Nicholls & Mickey Roche v Kent Lord's 1899
Source: Highest Partnership for Each Wicket for Middlesex CricketArchive.com; Last updated: 23 October 2015

* – Indicates that the partnership was unbroken

List A

Team records

Batting records

Bowling records

Best partnership for each wicket

* Denotes not out/unbroken partnership

Current squad

The Middlesex squad for the 2017 season consists of:

No. Name Nationality Birth date Batting Style Bowling Style Notes
Batsmen
3 Nick Compton* double-dagger  England 26 June 1983 Right-handed Right arm off break
4 Max Holden  England 18 December 1997 Left-handed Right arm off break On loan to Northamptonshire
11 Ryan Higgins  England 6 January 1995 Right-handed Right arm off spin
12 Sam Robson* double-dagger  England 1 July 1989 Right-handed Right arm leg break
16 Eoin Morgan* double-dagger  England 10 September 1986 Left-handed Right arm medium England ODI and t20I captain
Acting Middlesex t20 captain
18 Nick Gubbins*  England 31 December 1993 Left-handed Right arm leg break
29 Dawid Malan* double-dagger  England 3 September 1987 Left-handed Right arm leg break t20 vice-captain
32 Adam Voges* double-dagger  Australia 4 October 1979 Right-handed Slow left-arm orthodox Overseas player
39 Paul Stirling* double-dagger  Ireland 3 September 1990 Right-handed Right arm off break
42 Brendon McCullum double-dagger  New Zealand 27 September 1981 Right-handed Right arm medium t20 captain
Overseas player
All-rounders
2 Ollie Rayner*  England 1 November 1985 Right-handed Right arm off break
17 George Scott  England 6 November 1995 Right-handed Right-arm medium Summer contract
24 Martin Andersson  England 8 September 1996 Right-handed Right arm medium-fast Summer contract
74 James Franklin* double-dagger  New Zealand 7 November 1980 Left-handed Left arm fast medium Club captain
Irish passport
Wicket-keepers
14 Robbie White  England 15 September 1995 Right-handed Summer contract
20 John Simpson*  England 13 July 1988 Left-handed
27 Tom Lace  England 27 May 1998 Right-handed Summer contract
28 Stephen Eskinazi  England 28 March 1994 Right-handed
Bowlers
5 James Harris*  England 16 May 1990 Right-handed Right arm medium-fast
7 Tom Helm  England 7 May 1994 Right-handed Right arm medium-fast
9 Steven Finn* double-dagger  England 4 April 1989 Right-handed Right arm fast England test contract
15 Arthur Godsal  England 23 September 1997 Right-handed Right-arm medium-fast Summer contract
21 Toby Roland-Jones* double-dagger  England 29 January 1988 Right-handed Right arm medium-fast
23 Harry Podmore  England 23 July 1994 Right-handed Right arm medium-fast
25 Tom Barber  England 8 August 1995 Right-handed Left arm fast-medium
26 James Fuller  England 24 January 1990 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium
34 Tim Murtagh* double-dagger  Ireland 2 August 1981 Left-handed Right arm fast-medium
36 Ravi Patel  England 4 August 1991 Right-handed Slow left-arm orthodox
38 Tim Southee double-dagger  New Zealand 11 December 1988 Right-handed Right-arm medium-fast Overseas player (T20 only)
72 Nathan Sowter  Australia 12 October 1992 Right-handed Right-arm leg break UK passport; summer contract

Source:[18]

Officers

Club presidents

Club chairmen

Executive Board

Source: Middlesex Executive Board Richard Sykes and Eddie Villiers co-opted to the Executive Board

Staff

Club captains

Club coaches

Club scorers

Club secretaries

Chief executives

Managing directors of cricket

See also

References

Notes

  1. ACS (1981). A Guide to Important Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles 1709 – 1863. Nottingham: ACS.
  2. ACS (1982). A Guide to First-Class Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles. Nottingham: ACS.
  3. Birley, p. 145.
  4. "List A events played by Middlesex". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  5. "Twenty20 events played by Middlesex". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  6. Middlesex Crusaders cricket team changes name after complaints from Muslims and Jews http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/4434777/Middlesex-Crusaders-cricket-team-changes-name-after-complaints-from-Muslims-and-Jews.html
  7. 1 2 http://www.middlesexccc.com/articles/2014-10-24/middlesex-county-cricket-club-renames-its-one-day-side
  8. An unofficial seasonal title sometimes proclaimed by consensus of media and historians prior to December 1889 when the official County Championship was constituted. Although there are ante-dated claims prior to 1873, when residence qualifications were introduced, it is only since that ruling that any quasi-official status can be ascribed.
  9. Formerly known as the Gillette Cup (1963–1980), NatWest Trophy (1981–2000) and C&G Trophy (2001–2006).
  10. Formerly known as the Sunday League (1969–1998).
  11. 1 2 G. B. Buckley, Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket, Cotterell, 1935.
  12. 1 2 H. T. Waghorn, The Dawn of Cricket, Electric Press, 1906.
  13. Classification of cricket matches from 1697 to 1825
  14. "Middlesex Crusaders cricket team changes name after complaints from Muslims and Jews", The Daily Telegraph, 2 February 2009.
  15. Most Runs for Middlesex Cricket Archive
  16. Most Wickets for Middlesex Cricket Archive
  17. The Middlesex Cricket Archive Cricket Archive
  18. Middlesex CCC Players

Bibliography

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