County cricket
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Inter-county cricket matches have been played since the early 18th century, involving teams that are representative of the historic counties of England and Wales.
Two county championship competitions have existed since the late 19th century at different levels: the County Championship, a first-class competition which involves 18 clubs, of which 17 are English and one is from Wales; and the National Counties Championship, with 19 English clubs and one club representing several Welsh counties.
County clubs have also played limited-overs competitions since the 1960s. The first edition of the Gillette Cup in 1963 was the world's first List A cricket tournament. The Sunday League existed from 1969 to 2009, mostly as a 40-overs-per-side league. The 2003 Twenty20 Cup was the world's first Twenty20 tournament. Currently, the main limited-overs county competitions are the One-Day Cup, Women's One-Day Cup, T20 Blast and Women's T20 Blast.
History
[edit]County cricket started in the 18th century; the earliest known inter-county match was played in 1709, though an official County Championship was not instituted until 1890.
Development of county cricket
[edit]Inter-county cricket was popular throughout the 18th century, although the best teams, such as Kent in the 1740s and Hampshire in the days of the famous Hambledon Club, were usually acknowledged as such by being matched against All-England. The most successful county teams were Hampshire, Kent, Middlesex, Surrey and Sussex. There was, however, often a crossover between town and county, with some strong local clubs tending at times to represent a whole county. Examples are London, which often played against county teams and was in some respects almost a county club in itself; Slindon, which was for a few years in the 1740s effectively representative of Sussex as a county; Dartford, sometimes representative of Kent; and the Hambledon Club, certainly representative of Hampshire and also perhaps of Sussex. One of the best county teams in the late 18th century was Berkshire, which no longer has first-class status.
Qualification rules
[edit]An important year was 1873, when player qualification rules came into force, requiring players to choose at the start of each season whether they would play for the county of their birth or their county of residence. Before this, it was quite common for a player to play for both counties during the course of a single season. At The Oval on 9 June 1873, the following rules were decided on:
- That no cricketer, whether amateur or professional, shall play for more than one county during the same season.
- Every cricketer born in one county and residing in another shall be free to choose at the commencement of each season for which of those counties he will play, and shall, during that season, play for the one county only.
- A cricketer shall be qualified to play for the county in which he is residing and has resided for the previous two years: or a cricketer may elect to play for the county in which his family home is, so long as it remains open to him as an occasional residence.
- That should any question arise as to the residential qualification, the same shall be left to the decision of the Marylebone Cricket Club.[1]
The rules were gradually relaxed, but they still affected or delayed moves between counties by players, such as Tom Graveney in 1961 and Bob Willis in 1972.[2] The removal in 1968 of residential duration rules for overseas players led to an influx of star names: Garfield Sobers, Clive Lloyd, Barry Richards and Richard Hadlee all signed for English counties.[3][4] Yorkshire kept its own rule that players must have been born locally until 1992.[2]
Modern county cricket
[edit]All County Championship matches prior to 1988 were scheduled for three days, normally of a nominal six hours each plus intervals, but often with the first two days lengthened by up to an hour and the final day shortened, so that teams with fixtures elsewhere on the following day could travel at sensible hours. The exception to this was the 1919 season, when there was an experiment with two-day matches played over longer hours, up to nine o'clock in the evening in mid-summer. This experiment was not repeated. From 1988 to 1992 some matches were played over four days. From 1993 onward, all County Championship matches have been scheduled for four days.
Due to falling attendances in the Championship in the 1950s, the English and Welsh county clubs decided to play their first one-day cricket competition, the Gillette Cup, in 1963. This was accompanied by the John Player League annually from 1969 and the Benson & Hedges Cup from 1972. In the 21st century, the ECB has founded other limited-overs competitions: the Twenty20 Cup (now T20 Blast), the ECB 40 and the One-Day Cup.
Women's county cricket
[edit]Under the Women's Cricket Association, founded in 1926,[5] the first women's county match took place in 1930, Durham v Lancashire & Cheshire at Castle Eden.[6] Yorkshire's women's team first played in 1935.[7] The Women's Area Championship (1980–1996) involved county teams and regional ones. The Women's County Championship was a 50-over competition, played each year from 1997 to 2019. The Twenty20 Super League (2016–2019) included some county teams, in a divisional structure.[8] From 2020 to 2024, women's top-level domestic cricket was regionalised, as teams comprised multiple counties. County teams returned in 2025, now in professional competitions, the Women's One-Day Cup and T20 Blast.
Teams
[edit]First-class counties
[edit]
The eighteen first-class counties are the top county cricket teams. They represent 17 historic English counties and one Welsh county.
The first-class counties are:
The full name of each club is the name of the county followed by the words County Cricket Club, often abbreviated as CCC.
Other teams with first-class status
[edit]MCC
[edit]The opening first-class game of an English and Welsh county cricket season has traditionally been played at Lord's between the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the Champion County (the club that won the County Championship the previous year). When the MCC plays against one of the first-class counties, the game is granted first-class status.
MCC Universities
[edit]The six MCC-sponsored University (MCCU) teams were until 2020 also afforded first-class status for some of their matches against a first-class county.[9] They were:
- Cambridge University (1827–2020)
- Oxford University (1827–2020)
- Cambridge MCCU (2001–2019)
- Oxford MCCU (2001–2019)
- Durham MCCU (2001–2019)
- Loughborough MCCU (2003–2019)
- Cardiff MCCU (2012–2019)
- Leeds/Bradford MCCU (2012–2019)
Most of the first-class counties play three-day games against university cricket teams in the early part of the English and Welsh cricket season. This is partly because the start of the cricket season coincides with the end of the university academic year, and partly because the games act as pre-season warm-ups for the county clubs.[10]
National counties
[edit]The National Counties, known prior to 2020 as the Minor Counties, are the cricketing counties of England and Wales that are not afforded first-class status.
A single team represents the counties of Wales other than Glamorgan. There are no representative teams carrying the names of the historic counties of Cumberland and Westmorland which are both covered by Cumbria. Present members are:
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Other teams
[edit]Some teams outside of the English counties have been allowed to take part in some English and Welsh county cricket one-day competitions. They include:
Ireland
Netherlands
Scotland
Denmark
Unicorns
Huntingdonshire club are academy level.[clarification needed]
Competitions
[edit]First-class cricket
[edit]The County Championship is the domestic first-class cricket competition in England and Wales. The tournament currently has a two-division format with ten counties in Division One and eight in Division Two.[11]
One-day cricket
[edit]The One-Day Cup is a 50-overs-per-side competition in county cricket, contested by the 18 first-class counties. The 18 sides are divided randomly into two groups of nine, with each team playing each other once. The top four in each group reach the quarter-finals. The competition replaced the Yorkshire Bank 40-over League. The first winners of the One-Day Cup were Durham in 2014.[12] The ECB has been criticised for neglecting the One-Day Cup since 2020, as it is staged while counties' top players are unavailable.[13]
The Women's One-Day Cup began in 2025 with all 18 major counties competing, in two divisions.
Twenty20 cricket
[edit]The T20 Blast, originally founded as the Twenty20 Cup in 2003,[14] is the top Twenty20 cricket competition contested by the eighteen first-class counties. The games are limited to 20 overs per side, and the emphasis is on fast action.[15][better source needed]
The Women's T20 Blast began in 2025, in close co-operation with the men's competition.[16]
National counties cricket
[edit]The competitions of National Counties cricket, formerly Minor Counties cricket, are the National Counties Cricket Championship and the NCCA Knockout Trophy.[17]
The first league season was in the 19th century, the 1895 Minor Counties Championship.
Four clubs which used to play in the Minor Counties Championship have been granted first-class status: Worcestershire in 1899; Northamptonshire in 1905; Glamorgan in 1921 and Durham in 1992.
References
[edit]- ^ Christopher Martin-Jenkins, The Wisden Book of County Cricket, Queen Anne Press, 1981. ISBN 0-362-00545-1, p. 17.
- ^ a b MacPherson, Will (30 May 2016). "All Out: How a cricket transfer works". ESPN Cricinfo.
- ^ "A brief history of overseas players in county cricket". Wisden. 4 June 2018.
- ^ "Remember when Britain was invaded?". The Cricket Monthly. 12 July 2018.
- ^ "The Women's Cricket Association (WCA) - 1926-1998: Firsts". Women's Cricket History.
- ^ "Durham Women v Lancashire and Cheshire Women". Cricket Archive. Archived from the original on 14 May 2015.
- ^ "Unlocking The Histories Of Cricket: The Women's Game". Yorkshire County Cricket Club.
- ^ ECB Women's One-Day Championship & County T20 Archived 19 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 25 April 2015
- ^ Derek Pringle (1 December 2021). "Wisden Almanack 2021: The end of first-class university cricket". ESPN Cricinfo.
- ^ "MCC Universities". ecb.co.uk. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014.
- ^ "The home of the England and Wales Cricket Board". English Cricket Board. Retrieved 24 September 2022.
- ^ "Royal London One-Day Cup". ecb.co.uk. Archived from the original on 10 June 2016. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ Dalling, Sam (15 August 2024). "ECB's contempt and neglect of One-Day Cup is a cricketing disgrace". Wisden.
- ^ Mike Selvey (14 June 2003). "New age begins with a bang as cricket sells itself". The Guardian.
- ^ "Vitality Blast". ecb.co.uk. Archived from the original on 24 September 2020. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
- ^ "T20 fixtures include 52 men's and women's double bills". BBC Sport. 21 November 2024.
- ^ "NCCA". play-cricket.com. Archived from the original on 27 January 2021. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
County cricket
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins and early development
County cricket in England originated from informal village and parish matches that gained popularity in the 18th century, particularly in the southeastern counties of Kent, Surrey, and Sussex. These early games, often organized by local clubs and patrons, evolved from rural pastimes into more structured contests between representative sides. A notable example was the match between the Hambledon Club of Hampshire and an England XI on 24-25 June 1772 at Broadhalfpenny Down, where the Hampshire side won by 53 runs, highlighting the growing prowess of regional teams.[5][6] Prominent figures played crucial roles in advancing the sport's organization. Thomas Lord, a Yorkshire-born entrepreneur, established the first Lord's ground at Dorset Square in 1787, hosting its inaugural match between Middlesex and Essex on 31 May of that year, which Middlesex won by 93 runs.[7] The Earl of Winchilsea, a dedicated patron, supported the relocation of elite cricket to London and co-guaranteed Lord's venture in 1786 alongside the Duke of Richmond, fostering a shift toward centralized venues.[8] By the late 18th century, cricket transitioned from village-level play to representative teams bearing county names, driven by aristocratic patronage and wagers on high-stakes games. These sides, such as those from Kent and Surrey, competed in matches that symbolized regional pride, laying the groundwork for formalized county rivalries. The earliest recorded inter-county match occurred on 29 June 1709 between Kent and Surrey at Dartford, marking the beginning of such contests, though results from this era are often incomplete.[9] Surrey and Hampshire also featured in early representative fixtures, with Hampshire's first noted county match against Sussex in 1766.[10] The formation of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in 1787 significantly influenced standardization, as the club adopted and revised the Laws of Cricket at Lord's, promoting uniform rules that benefited emerging county teams. This development helped elevate informal regional play toward more organized inter-county competitions by the early 19th century.[11][12]Formation and qualification of counties
The formation of official county cricket clubs marked a pivotal step in organizing inter-county competition during the 19th century, beginning with Sussex County Cricket Club in March 1839, recognized as England's oldest professional sports club.[13] This was swiftly followed by Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club in the spring of 1841, which formalized its structure to support regular inter-county fixtures under the leadership of figures like William Clarke.[14] Subsequent formations included Kent in 1842, Surrey in 1845, Hampshire in 1863, Yorkshire in 1863, Lancashire in 1864, Middlesex in 1864, Gloucestershire in 1870, Derbyshire in 1870, Somerset in 1875, Essex in 1876, Northamptonshire in 1878, Leicestershire in 1879, and Warwickshire in 1882, culminating in the official County Championship launch in 1890 with eight inaugural members.[2] The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), established as cricket's custodian since 1787, assumed oversight of inter-county matches following their revival in 1825, promoting standardized fixtures and gradually influencing the sport's governance amid growing popularity.[11] By the 1870s, the MCC's involvement deepened, including invitations to counties like Middlesex to use Lord's as a venue in 1877, helping to professionalize the emerging structure.[11] Player eligibility was formalized through qualification rules introduced in 1873 by an MCC sub-committee, stipulating that a cricketer must have resided in the county for the previous two years or could elect to represent their birth county, provided no prior play for another since April 1, 1873; this prevented dual-county representation in a single season and aimed to foster local loyalty.[15] These rules applied to the active counties, with inter-county matches involving around nine to ten teams by that year, though club formations had reached over a dozen.[2] Controversies arose over player poaching, where counties enticed professionals from rivals with better terms, disrupting stability and prompting tighter regulations.[16] In 1887, amid ongoing disputes, the rules were amended by the newly formed County Cricket Council under MCC auspices to strengthen residency requirements and limit transfers, allowing the committee authority to modify qualifications as needed to curb exploitative recruitment.[16] This expansion continued, with the number of recognized first-class counties growing to 14 in 1895, with further additions including Worcestershire in 1899 and Northamptonshire in 1905, before reaching 17 in 1921 with Glamorgan's admission as the sole Welsh representative.[17]20th-century evolution
The 20th century brought significant disruptions to county cricket, primarily due to the two World Wars, which halted first-class fixtures and altered the sport's structure and participation. During World War I, the County Championship was partially played in 1914 before being fully suspended from 1915 to 1918, with no official matches occurring as players were called to military service; the competition resumed in 1919 but with a reduced schedule of 28 fixtures across the 16 counties, reflecting the loss of talent and infrastructure strain.[18] World War II caused an even more profound interruption, with the 1939 season abbreviated before a complete suspension from 1940 to 1945, during which grounds were repurposed for wartime efforts and many cricketers served in the armed forces; post-war resumption in 1946 featured a shortened format with only 20-24 matches per county to accommodate rebuilding and player shortages.[19] Parallel to these interruptions, county cricket underwent increasing professionalization, transitioning from a mix of amateurs and paid players to a predominantly professional model. By the early 1900s, professionals formed the core of county squads, with most teams relying on full-time contracts to ensure consistent performance and travel; this shift accelerated in the 1920s, as counties standardized wages—typically £5-£6 per match plus bonuses—and eliminated the amateur-professional divide in dressing rooms, fostering a more merit-based environment.[20] The abolition of official amateur status by the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in 1962 further solidified this, making all first-class players professionals and aligning county cricket with modern sporting economics.[21] Structural expansions continued into the 20th century, completing the roster of participating counties. Northamptonshire regained first-class status in 1905 after years of competitive minor county play, joining the Championship as the 16th team and stabilizing its position through consistent performances in subsequent decades.[2] Glamorgan became the 17th and final county to achieve full admission in 1921, following a post-World War I campaign that secured MCC approval, marking the end of major territorial expansions and enabling a more balanced national competition.[17] To revitalize interest amid declining attendances, the 1960s introduced national knockout tournaments and relaxed player qualifications. The Gillette Cup, launched in 1963 as the first limited-overs county competition with 65 overs per side, featured all 17 counties in a knockout format and proved an instant success, drawing larger crowds and culminating in Sussex's victory over Worcestershire at Lord's.[22] Complementing this, qualification rules were eased in 1968 to permit overseas players with residential ties—requiring just two years' residency—allowing global talents like Garfield Sobers and Clive Lloyd to join counties without prior birthplace restrictions, thereby enhancing competitiveness and international flavor.[20]Introduction of limited-overs formats
The introduction of limited-overs formats to English county cricket in the late 1960s and early 1970s represented a pivotal shift from the traditional multi-day first-class structure, designed to deliver conclusive results within a single day and mitigate the frustrations of unfinished matches. This change was driven by declining spectator attendance at county fixtures, where interest in drawn games—often exacerbated by unpredictable English weather—had waned amid broader post-war challenges in the sport's popularity.[23] By compressing play into fixed overs, these formats encouraged faster-paced action, appealing to casual fans and providing a counterpoint to the slower, weather-vulnerable County Championship.[24] A key milestone came in 1969 with the launch of the John Player League, the first national one-day league competition involving all 17 first-class counties, played on Sundays with each side limited to 40 overs. Sponsored by the John Player tobacco company, it introduced regular league play on a rest day, drawing larger crowds through its brevity and the novelty of televised matches on BBC.[25] This format quickly gained traction, offering counties a predictable schedule that contrasted with the timeless nature of first-class cricket. In 1972, the Benson & Hedges Cup debuted as a sponsored zonal knockout tournament, featuring 55 overs per innings and dividing counties into regional groups to reduce travel, further embedding limited-overs play into the domestic calendar.[26] The evolution continued in 1981 with the NatWest Trophy, a 60-over knockout competition that replaced the longstanding Gillette Cup (which had run since 1963), maintaining the single-elimination structure but under new sponsorship to sustain its prominence. By 1983, the third edition of the NatWest Trophy exemplified this format's maturity, with Somerset defeating Kent in the final at Lord's, underscoring its role as a high-stakes alternative to league play. These innovations collectively revitalized county schedules, integrating limited-overs games alongside traditional formats to balance commercial appeal with the sport's heritage. The early impacts of these formats were profound, fostering higher scoring rates as batsmen adopted more aggressive tactics to maximize limited opportunities, with average run rates in one-day county matches rising notably from the 1970s onward. This shift also spurred the emergence of specialist one-day batsmen by the 1980s, players who prioritized quick scoring and innovative shots over defensive technique suited to multi-day games, thereby diversifying county squads and influencing broader playing styles.[27]Teams
First-class counties
The first-class counties represent the pinnacle of domestic cricket in England and Wales, comprising 18 professional clubs that have held first-class status since the late 19th or early 20th century. These counties compete in multi-format competitions, including the four-day County Championship, and are responsible for nurturing talent that often progresses to the England national team. Established primarily as member-owned organizations, they operate under the governance of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), emphasizing tradition, community engagement, and competitive excellence.[28][29] The following table summarizes the 18 first-class counties, including their full names, formation years, primary home grounds, and notable achievements in major competitions such as the County Championship:| County | Full Name | Formation Year | Home Ground | Notable Achievements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Derbyshire | Derbyshire County Cricket Club | 1870 | County Ground, Derby | 2 County Championships (1936, 1978) |
| Durham | Durham County Cricket Club | 1882 | Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street | 3 County Championships (2007–2009) |
| Essex | Essex County Cricket Club | 1876 | County Ground, Chelmsford | 8 County Championships (most recent 2019) |
| Glamorgan | Glamorgan County Cricket Club | 1888 | Sophia Gardens, Cardiff | 1 County Championship (1948); first Welsh county |
| Gloucestershire | Gloucestershire County Cricket Club | 1870 | Bristol County Ground | 0 County Championships; strong historical rivalries |
| Hampshire | Hampshire County Cricket Club | 1863 | Rose Bowl, Southampton | 3 County Championships (most recent 2022) |
| Kent | Kent County Cricket Club | 1870 | St Lawrence Ground, Canterbury | 7 County Championships (most recent 1978) |
| Lancashire | Lancashire County Cricket Club | 1864 | Old Trafford, Manchester | 9 County Championships (most recent 2011) |
| Leicestershire | Leicestershire County Cricket Club | 1879 | Grace Road, Leicester | 3 County Championships (most recent 1999) |
| Middlesex | Middlesex County Cricket Club | 1864 | Lord's, London | 11 County Championships (most recent 1947) |
| Northamptonshire | Northamptonshire County Cricket Club | 1878 | County Ground, Northampton | 0 County Championships; multiple runner-up finishes |
| Nottinghamshire | Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club | 1841 | Trent Bridge, Nottingham | 7 County Championships (most recent 2025) |
| Somerset | Somerset County Cricket Club | 1875 | County Ground, Taunton | 1 County Championship (2016) |
| Surrey | Surrey County Cricket Club | 1845 | The Oval, London | 22 County Championships (most recent 2024) |
| Sussex | Sussex County Cricket Club | 1839 | County Cricket Ground, Hove | 3 County Championships (most recent 2007) |
| Warwickshire | Warwickshire County Cricket Club | 1882 | Edgbaston, Birmingham | 7 County Championships (most recent 2021) |
| Worcestershire | Worcestershire County Cricket Club | 1865 | New Road, Worcester | 3 County Championships (most recent 1988) |
| Yorkshire | Yorkshire County Cricket Club | 1863 | Headingley, Leeds | 32 County Championships (most recent 2014–15) |