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Gloucestershire County Cricket Club

 
Wikipedia: Gloucestershire County Cricket Club
Gloucestershire County Cricket Club
Gloucestershirecricket.jpg
One-day Name: Gloucestershire Gladiators
Coach: New Zealand John Bracewell
Chairman: John Light
Captain: England Alex Gidman
Overseas Player(s): New Zealand James Franklin
Founded: 1870
Home Ground: Nevil Road
Capacity: 8,000 – 16,000
First-class debut: Surrey
in 1870
at County Cricket Ground
Championship wins: 0
Pro40 wins: 1
FP Trophy wins: 5
Twenty20 Cup wins: 0
Official Website: GlosCricket

Gloucestershire County Cricket Club is one of the 18 major county clubs which make up the English domestic cricket structure, representing the historic county of Gloucestershire. Its limited overs team is called the Gloucestershire Gladiators.

The club plays most of its home games at the County Cricket Ground, Bristol. Currently, each season a number of games are played at both the Cheltenham and Gloucester cricket festivals held at the College Ground, Cheltenham and The King's School, Gloucester.

Contents

Honours

  • Champion County (3) - 1874, 1876, 1877; shared (1) - 1873
  • County Championship (0) -
  • Gillette/NatWest/C&G Trophy (5) - 1973, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2004
  • Sunday/National League (1) - 2000
Division Two (2) - 2002, 2006
  • Twenty20 Cup (0) -
  • Benson & Hedges Cup (3) - 1977, 1999, 2000

Second XI honours

  • Second XI Championship (1) - 1959; shared (0) -
  • Second XI Trophy (0) -
  • Minor Counties Championship (0) - ; shared (0) -

Earliest cricket

Cricket probably reached Gloucestershire 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.

A game in Gloucester on 22 September 1729 is the earliest definite reference to cricket in the county. From then until the founding of the county club, very little has been found outside parish cricket.

Origin of club

In the early 1840s, Dr Henry Grace and his brother-in-law Alfred Pocock founded the Mangotsfield Cricket Club which merged in 1846 with the West Gloucestershire Cricket Club, whose name was adopted until 1867. In 1863, a rival club was formed and called the Cheltenham and Gloucestershire Cricket Club.[1]

Dr Grace was able to form the county club in 1870 or 1871 because of the playing strength at his disposal, namely his three sons WG, EM and Fred. Exact details and dates of the club’s foundation have been lost although it celebrated its centenary in 1970. The Cheltenham club was wound up in March 1871.[2]

The new county club played its initial first-class match versus Surrey at Durdham Down near Bristol on 2, 3 & 4 June 1870.[3] Gloucestershire joined the (unofficial) County Championship at this time.

Club history

The early history of Gloucestershire is dominated by the Grace family, most notably W G Grace, who was the club's original captain and held that post until his departure for London in 1899. His brother E M Grace, although still an active player, was the original club secretary. With the Grace brothers and Billy Midwinter in their team, Gloucestershire won three Champion County titles in the 1870s.

Since then Gloucestershire's fortunes have been mixed and they have never won the official County Championship. They struggled in the pre-war years of the County Championship because their best batsmen, apart from Gilbert Jessop and briefly Charlie Townsend, were very rarely available. The bowling, except when Townsend did sensational things on sticky wickets in late 1895 and late 1898, was very weak until George Dennett emerged - then it had the fault of depending far too much on him. Wally Hammond, who still holds many of the county's batting records formed part of an occasionally strong inter-war team, although the highest championship finish during this period was second in 1930 and 1931, when Charlie Parker and Tom Goddard formed a devastating spin attack.

Outstanding players since the war include Tom Graveney, "Jack" Russell and overseas players Mike Procter, Zaheer Abbas and Courtney Walsh.

Gloucestershire enjoyed a run of success in one-day cricket in the late 1990s and early 2000s. They won several titles mainly under the captaincy of Mark Alleyne whilst being coached by John Bracewell.

The club's captain for the 2006 season, Jon Lewis, became the first Gloucestershire player for nearly 10 years to play for England at Test Match level, when he was picked to represent his country in the Third Test against Sri Lanka at Trent Bridge in June 2006. His figures in the first innings were 3-68, including a wicket in his very first over in Test cricket, and he was widely praised for his debut performance.

Gloucestershire reached the final of the 2007 Twenty20 Cup, where they narrowly lost to Kent.

Current Squad

International players in bold.

Name Nat Batting Style Bowling Style Notes
Batsmen
Kadeer Ali England RHB LS
Grant Hodnett South Africa RHB England qualified (by residence) Leaving the club in the near future
Hamish Marshall New Zealand RHB RM Former New Zealand Test and ODI player
William Porterfield Republic of Ireland LHB OB Ireland Captain and ODI player
Craig Spearman New Zealand RHB Former New Zealand Test and ODI player
Chris Taylor England RHB OS
All-rounders
David Brown England RHB RM
Alex Gidman (c) England RHB RM
James Franklin New Zealand LHB LFM New Zealand Test and ODI player
Robert Woodman England LHB LMF
Wicket-keepers
Stephen Adshead England RHB
Steve Snell England RHB
Bowlers
Vikram Banerjee England LHB SLA
Richard Dawson England RHB OB Former England Test player
Anthony Ireland Zimbabwe RHB RM Kolpak player, former Zimbabwe ODI player
Steve Kirby England RHB RFM England 'A'
Jon Lewis England RHB RM Former England Test and ODI player
Ian Saxelby England RHB RM

International players

Wally Hammond scored 33664 runs for Gloucestershire

Among the international players who have represented Gloucestershire are:

Club captains

WG Grace dominated the club's early history. He made 22808 runs and took 1339 wickets for the county.

Records

Most first-class runs for Gloucestershire
Qualification - 20000 runs [1]

Player Runs
Wally Hammond 33664
Arthur Milton 30218
Alfred Dipper 27948
Ron Nicholls 23607
Martin Young 23400
WG Grace 22808
George Emmett 22806
Jack Crapp 22195
Charlie Barnett 21221

Most first-class wickets for Gloucestershire
Qualification - 1000 wickets [2]

Player Wickets
Charlie Parker 3170
Tom Goddard 2862
George Dennett 2082
Sam Cook 1768
John Mortimore 1696
WG Grace 1339
Tony Brown 1223
Reg Sinfield 1165
David Smith 1159
The County Ground, Ashley Down, Bristol

Team totals

  • Highest Total For - 653-6 declared v Glamorgan at Bristol (Greenbank) 1928
  • Highest Total Against - 774-7 declared by the Australians at Bristol 1948
  • Lowest Total For - 17 v the Australians at Cheltenham (Spa) 1896
  • Lowest Total Against - 12 by Northamptonshire at Gloucester 1907

Batting

  • Highest Score - 341 Craig Spearman v Middlesex at Gloucester in 2004
  • Most Runs in Season - 2860 WR Hammond in 1933
  • Most Runs in Career - 33664 WR Hammond 1920-1951
  • Most Hundreds in Career - 113 WR Hammond 1920-1951

Best Partnership for each wicket

  • 1st - 395 DM Young & RB Nicholls v Oxford University at Oxford 1962
  • 2nd - 256 CTM Pugh & TW Graveney v Derbyshire at Chesterfield 1960
  • 3rd - 336 WR Hammond & BH Lyon v Leicestershire at Leicester (Aylestone Road) 1933
  • 4th - 321 WR Hammond & WL Neale v Leicestershire at Gloucester 1937
  • 5th - 261 WG Grace & WO Moberly v Yorkshire at Cheltenham 1876
  • 6th - 320 GL Jessop & JH Board v Sussex at Hove 1903
  • 7th - 248 WG Grace & EL Thomas v Sussex at Hove 1896
  • 8th - 239 WR Hammond & AE Wilson v Lancashire at Bristol 1938
  • 9th - 193 WG Grace & SAP Kitcat v Sussex at Bristol 1896
  • 10th - 131 WR Gouldsworthy & JGWT Bessant v Somerset at Bristol 1923

Bowling

  • Best Bowling - 10-40 EG Dennett v Essex at Bristol 1906
  • Best Match Bowling - 17-56 CWL Parker v Essex at Gloucester 1925
  • Wickets in Season - 222 TWJ Goddard in 1937 and 1947
  • Wickets in Career - 3170 CWL Parker 1903-1935

Facts and Feats

  • William Brain performed a hat-trick of stumpings off Charlie Townsend, a 16-year-old Clifton schoolboy playing for Gloucestershire v Somerset at Cheltenham while on holiday in 1893.
  • Mike Procter twice took an all lbw hat trick.

References

  1. ^ Simon Rae, W G Grace, Faber & Faber, 1998.
  2. ^ Rae, p.89.
  3. ^ CricketArchive – match scorecard. Retrieved on 24 November 2008.

External links

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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