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Durham County Cricket Club - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Durham County Cricket Club

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Durham County Cricket Club
One-day Name: Durham Dynamos
Coach: Flag of England Geoff Cook
Captain: Flag of South Africa Dale Benkenstein
Overseas Player(s): Flag of South Africa Neil McKenzie
Founded: 1882
Home Ground: Riverside Ground
Capacity: 15,000
First-class debut: Leicestershire
in 1992
at Riverside Ground
Championship wins: 0
Pro40 wins: 1
FP Trophy wins: 1
Twenty20 Cup wins: 0
Official Website: DurhamCCC

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

The club is based at the Riverside Ground in Chester-le-Street.

Granted first-class status in 1991, Durham is English cricket's newest first-class county. The County Ground at the Riverside is also the newest addition to the English Test match circuit; hosting its first match, England v Zimbabwe in the second Test, from 5 June to 7 June 2003.

Durham CCC is playing in Division One of the LV County Championship and division one of the NatWest Pro40 League in 2008.

Contents

[edit] Honours

  • County Championship (0) - ; shared (0) -
Division Two (0)- ; shared (0) -
  • FP Trophy[1] (1) - 2007
  • National League[2] (0) -
Division Two (1) - 2007
  • Twenty20 Cup (0) -

[edit] Second XI honours

  • Second XI Championship (0) - ; shared (0) -
  • Second XI Trophy (0) -

[edit] Records

[edit] Earliest cricket

Cricket probably did not reach Durham until the 18th century. The earliest reference is a game at Raby Castle on or soon after 5 August 1751 between the Earl of Northumberland’s XI and the Duke of Cleveland’s XI. The game was commemorated by a ballad which starts:

Durham City has been dull so long,
No bustle at all to show;
But now the rage of all the throng
Is at cricketing to go.

As it happens, there was a return game soon afterwards at Stanwick, near Richmond, and that is the earliest reference to cricket in Yorkshire.

The first recorded match of representative cricket in the county took place in 1848 at Sunderland, between an All England XII and a Bishopwearmouth 22. Despite their extra numbers the cricketers of Bishopwearmouth were comprehensively outplayed as All England's scores of 129 and 143 dwarfed their own 56 and 59.

The first team to carry the name of 'Durham County' played an MCC team in 1876 and went on to take on the touring Australians in 1878, winning by 71 runs, and again in 1880, losing by an innings and 38 with the great Fred Spofforth taking 17 wickets for 66.

[edit] Origin of club

Durham CCC was founded as an official entity on 23 May 1882, and the nascent club played its first competitive match on June 12 of that year, beating Northumberland by 4 wickets at the Ashbrooke Ground, Sunderland. The club established an enviable record as a minor county: becoming the first minor county to beat a first-class county in the Gillette Cup; winning the Minor Counties Championship a record-equalling seven times between 1901 and 1984; and putting together a record of 65 matches without defeat between 1976 and 1982 that remains unbroken to the present day.

[edit] Durham as a first-class county

Test player Paul Collingwood
Test player Paul Collingwood

Early in 1989, the Club began the process of applying to become a first-class cricketing county and join the County Championship. First-class status was awarded on 6 December 1991, with Durham becoming the first new first-class county for 70 years. Their first season in the County Championship was the 1992 season.

Durham have not been distinguished by marked success as a first-class county. In the 2004 season they finished bottom of the two-division County Championship, sixth out of ten teams in the one-day National Cricket League and fifth out of six teams in the Northern Division of the Twenty20 Cup.

However in 2005 under the captaincy of Australian Mike Hussey Durham finished second and achieved promotion in both the County Championship and the one-day National Cricket League. Hussey was prevented from returning to the Riverside in 2006 as he is contracted to the Australian international team; and with vice-captain Paul Collingwood away on English international team duty Dale Benkenstein was captain for 2006.

Durham had mixed success in the 2006 season, finishing second in the North Division of the C&G Trophy. However, Durham were poor in the Twenty20 cup, finishing last in the North Division and only managing 2 victories, both against Lancashire. The Pro40 campaign started fairly well, with Durham taking 4 points from the first 4 games with a win, a loss, a tie and a no result. However, several defeats left them needing a win against the champions elect, Essex, in the final game of the season. They managed the victory, but other results did not go their way and they ended up being relegated in 8th place. The Championship season also began with success, but mediocre results in the middle of the season left Durham hanging above the relegation zone by just half a point going into the last game of the season. Durham needed more points than their rivals Yorkshire, but looked in trouble when Darren Lehmann hit a career-best 339 in the first innings. Achieving just one bowling bonus point meant that Durham needed to score 400 without losing more than 5 wickets and then draw the game.

However, one other team could also be relegated. Nottinghamshire needed just 3 points to avoid the drop at the start of the matches, but only managed 1 point as they were soundly beaten by Sussex. This meant that Durham needed only to score 400 (for maximum batting points) and force a draw. At 191-6 this looked unlikely. But a record-breaking stand of 315 between Benkenstein and Ottis Gibson made it possible. Gibson was out for 155, the highest first-class score in his career. Durham then collapsed again to 518 all out, needing work to be done in the second innings. This was provided by Garry Park, who hit a maiden first-class century (100*) as Durham played out a draw, leaving themselves and Yorkshire in the first division.

In recent times, Durham has seen a number of their top players make an impact on the England side. Collingwood (who is the first Durham CCC player to hit a Test century and double century), Steve Harmison and Liam Plunkett have all established themselves in the national squad. The recent addition of Graham Onions may be a sign that this trend will continue for the foreseeable future and is an indication of Durham's admirable youth system.

On August 19th 2007 Durham won their first trophy in First Class County Cricket when they beat Hampshire County Cricket Club in the Final of the Friends Provident Trophy at Lords, which Durham won by 125 runs[1]. Durham broke the record for most runs scored in the final of a 50 overs tournament by scoring 312-5. Hampshire replied with 187 and were bowled out in 41 overs ensuring that Durham won the tie.

[edit] The Riverside Ground

The Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street
The Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street
Main article: Riverside Ground

The club's acceptance into first-class cricket was made conditional on the building of a new Test match-standard cricket ground. Work began on the new ground at the Riverside, a spectacular location overlooked by Lumley Castle, in 1990, and the ground hosted its first game, Durham v Warwickshire, on 18 May 1995.

Development of the Riverside Ground has continued until the present day, and in 2003 the Riverside Ground was raised to test match status. As of 2007 the ground has been used for three England Test matches, against Zimbabwe in 2003, Bangladesh in 2005 and West Indies in June 2007.

[edit] Ground History

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

Name of ground Location Year FC
matches
LA
matches
T20
matches
Total
Riverside Ground Chester-le-Street 1995-present 102 124 15 241
Feethams Cricket Ground Darlington 1964-2003 10 14 0 24
Grangefield Road Stockton-on-Tees 1992-2006 12 11 0 23
The Racecourse Durham City 1992-1994 11 7 0 18
Park Drive Hartlepool 1992-2000 8 9 0 17
Ropery Lane Chester-le-Street 1967-1994 3 7 0 10
Eastwood Gardens Gateshead Fell 1992-1994 4 2 0 6
Green Lane Durham City 1979 0 1 0 1
Source:cricketarchive
Updated: 8 April 2008


[edit] Friends Provident Trophy 2007

During the 2007 season the club won its first major trophy, the Friends Provident Trophy, by beating the 2005 winners Hampshire Hawks in a game which started on [[18 finishing a day later due to rain. The toss between Dale Benkenstein and Shane Warne was won by the latter who sent Durham into bat. Fellow Aussie Michael Di Venuto and wicket-keeper Phil Mustard opened the batting. Mustard looked strong from ball 1 but Di Venuto was a little shaky and was dismissed by Hampshire's West Indies international Daren Powell and caught by Michael Carberry. Ex-Scotland u-19 captain Kyle Coetzer and Shiv Chanderpaul made significant contributions (61 and 78 respectively), the latter being run-out. Captain Benkenstein made a quickfire 61 off 43 deliveries. Durham finished their innings on 312-5.

Michael Lumb and ex-captain John Crawley opened for the Hawks, the latter departing for a diamond duck, caught at second slip by Di Venuto. Zimbabwean Sean Ervine was next in, immediately edging to second slip in identical fashion leaving Ottis Gibson on a hat-trick. Kevin Pietersen survived that ball, but was soon back in the pavillion with 12. John Crawley managed a resilient 68 but was bowled by Paul Collingwood who was to finish with 3-33. The rain came down and play was delayed until the following day.

With the fall of Nic Pothas (47) and Dimitri Mascarenhas (12) the tail was exposed and was quickly disposed of with Hampshire finishing on 187, handing Durham a historic win. Veteran Ottis Gibson was named man of the match for his spell of 3-24 at the start of the Hampshire innings, which included wickets with his first two deliveries.

[edit] Players

Since Durham's induction as a first-class county, each player has been allocated a unique squad number. The first 11 numbers were allocated in batting order from the club's first game, and subsequent numbers have been awarded in order of debut.

[edit] Current Squad

The current Durham squad (for the 2008 season) consists of (players with international caps are listed in bold):

Name Nat Batting Style Bowling Style Notes
Batsmen
Shivnarine Chanderpaul Flag of Guyana LHB LB Overseas player
Kyle Coetzer Flag of Scotland RHB RM
Michael Di Venuto Flag of Australia LHB RM
Neil McKenzie Flag of South Africa RHB RM Overseas player
Gordon Muchall Flag of England RHB RM
Garry Park Flag of South Africa RHB RM
Gary Scott Flag of England RHB RM/OS
Will Smith Flag of England RHB OS
Mark Stoneman Flag of England LHB
All-rounders
Dale Benkenstein (c) Flag of South Africa RHB RM/OS
Paul Collingwood Flag of England RHB RM
Gareth Breese Flag of Jamaica RHB OS
Albie Morkel Flag of South Africa LHB RMF Overseas player
Shaun Pollock Flag of South Africa RHB RFM Twenty20 cup only
Will Gidman Flag of England LHB RM
Peter Campbell Flag of England RHB RMF Captian
Wicket-keeper
Lee Goddard Flag of England RHB
Phil Mustard Flag of England LHB
Bowlers
Mitchell Claydon Flag of England LHB RMF
Mark Davies Flag of England RHB RMF
Stephen Harmison Flag of England RHB RF
Neil Killeen Flag of England RHB RMF
Graham Onions Flag of England RHB RFM
Liam Plunkett Flag of England RHB RFM
Callum Thorp Flag of Australia RHB RMF
Paul Wiseman Flag of New Zealand RHB OS

With new ECB restrictions on one overseas player per team, Neil McKenzie will fill the role for the first part of the season, up to the Twenty20 break. Albie Morkel will be used during the Twenty20 Cup, before Chanderpaul joins for the remainder of the season.

[edit] Previous notable players

Other notable cricketers who have played for the club include:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Formerly known as the Gillette Cup (1963-1980), NatWest Trophy (1981-2000) and C&G Trophy (2001-2006)
  2. ^ Formerly known as the Sunday League (1969-1998)

[edit] External sources

[edit] Further reading

  • Derek Birley, A Social History of English Cricket, Aurum, 1999
  • Rowland Bowen, Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1970
  • Simon Hughes, From Minor to Major: Durham's First Year in the Championship, Hodder & Stoughton, 1992, ISBN 0-340-58234-0
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