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Worcestershire County Cricket Club

Worcestershire 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 Worcestershire. Its Vitality Blast T20 team has been rebranded the Worcestershire Rapids, but the county is known by most fans as 'the Pears'. The club is based at New Road, Worcester. Founded in 1865, Worcestershire held minor status at first and was a prominent member of the early Minor Counties Championship in the 1890s, winning the competition three times. In 1899, the club joined the County Championship and the team was elevated to first-class status.[1] Since then, Worcestershire have played in every top-level domestic cricket competition in England.

Worcestershire County Cricket Club
One Day nameWorcestershire Rapids
Personnel
CaptainBrett D'Oliveira
CoachAlan Richardson
Overseas player(s)Azhar Ali
Michael Bracewell (T20)
Mitchell Santner (T20)
Team information
Founded1865
Home groundNew Road
Capacity5,500
History
First-class debutYorkshire
in 1899
Championship wins5
Pro40 wins4
FP Trophy wins1
VitalityHealth Twenty20 Cup wins1
B&H Cup wins1
Official websiteWCCC

First-class

One-day & T20

Honours

First XI honours

  • County Championship (5) – 1964, 1965, 1974, 1988, 1989
Division Two (1) – 2003, 2017
  • Gillette/NatWest/C&G/Friends Provident Trophy (1) – 1994
  • Vitality T20 Blast (1) – 2018
  • Sunday/Pro 40 League (4) – 1971, 1987, 1988, 2007
  • Benson & Hedges Cup (1) – 1991
  • Minor Counties Championship (3) – 1896, 1897, 1898; shared (1) – 1895

Second XI honours

  • Second XI Championship (3) – 1962, 1963, 1982
  • Second XI Trophy (1) – 2004

History

Earliest cricket

Cricket may have been played in Worcestershire during the 18th century, however the earliest reference to cricket in the county is 1829[2] and the county cricket club was not formed until 1865.[3]

A match on 28 August 1844 at Hartlebury Common between Worcestershire and Shropshire is the earliest known instance of a county team in Worcestershire. Two years later, XXII of Worcestershire played William Clarke's All-England Eleven at Powick Hams.[4]

Origin of the club

Worcestershire CCC was formed on 4 March 1865 at the Star Hotel in Worcester.

The club owes much to Paul Foley who was from a family of iron masters in Stourbridge. He also owned an agricultural estate at Stoke Edith in Herefordshire. He became involved with the club in the 1880s and helped to establish the Minor Counties Championship which began in 1895. Worcestershire shared the inaugural title with Durham and Norfolk before winning outright in 1896, 1897 and 1898.

With this success behind it, the club applied for first-class status and entered the County Championship in 1899. Worcestershire CCC played its initial first-class match versus Yorkshire CCC on 4, 5 & 6 May 1899.

The first-class county

The inclusion of Worcestershire increased the County Championship to 15 teams. At first they performed moderately despite the superb batting of Tip Foster, who could rarely play after 1901. Weak bowling on perfect New Road pitches was responsible for this, but in 1907 when Tip Foster played regularly for three months their batting, considering the difficulty of the pitches, was among the finest of any county team. Their best performance that year was an innings of 567 on a somewhat difficult pitch against Fielder and Blythe of Kent CCC. After that year, however, the batting was never strong enough to make up for woefully weak bowling.

Worcestershire were so weak the club could not compete in the Championship in 1919, and their form in 1920 – when they lost three successive games by an innings and over 200 runs – was probably the worst of any county side. Their form, with one remarkable exception, was woeful up to the early thirties. Fred Root, one of the first exponents of leg theory bowling, took over 1,500 wickets for the county and was a Test standard player in an otherwise fourth-rate team. In Cyril Walters and the Nawab of Pataudi the team acquired its first class batsmen since the Fosters, but both had to give up the game after playing brilliantly in 1933 – when the bowling was briefly very weak.

The emergence of Dick Howorth and Reg Perks in the 1930s, however, was built up so well that by 1947 Worcestershire were sufficiently strong in bowling to be competitive at county level even if their batting was not adequate for high honours. Roly Jenkins, with 183 wickets in 1949, gave them briefly the best attack in county cricket, but they soon declined again and their form in the 1950s was indifferent at best.

Their first period of great success came in the 1960s under the Presidency of Sir George Dowty and the captaincy of Don Kenyon, when the county won two County Championships thanks to the achievements of such players as Norman Gifford, Tom Graveney, Jack Flavell, Len Coldwell and Basil D'Oliveira. They were also losing finalist in the first ever Gillette Cup Final in 1963 – the inaugural limited overs knockout competition in England.[5] In 1971 Worcestershire won their first ever Sunday League title thanks largely to the bowling of Vanburn Holder and the New Zealander Glenn Turner was instrumental in Worcestershire's third championship win in 1974. In the 1980s, the prodigious batting feats of Graeme Hick and the arrival of Ian Botham paved the way for two more county titles in 1988 and 1989 – the same year in which they beat the touring Australians inside two days.[6] Worcestershire also won the Sunday League in 1987 and 1988.

Worcestershire's success continued into the 1990s, with a first ever success in the Benson and Hedges Cup in 1991, following final defeats in 1973, 1976 and 1990. Captained by Phil Neale, the Pears beat Lancashire by 65 runs in the final at Lord's, gaining revenge for defeat against Lancashire in the previous year's competition.[7] Worcestershire's next title came in 1994 when they won the Natwest Trophy, beating arch-rivals Warwickshire in the final.[8] Not only did they avenge their defeat at the hands of Warwickshire in the B&H Cup Final earlier that summer but it was also their first success in the competition after three previous final defeats. Worcestershire's best showing in the County Championship came in 1993 when they finished second to Middlesex. Worcestershire finished 15th in 1999, the final year of single division County Championship cricket, meaning they would start the new millennium in Division Two.

The modern day (2000–present)

Worcestershire failed to gain promotion in 2000, despite overseas signing Glenn McGrath taking 76 Championship wickets at an average of 13.77.[9] In 2003, Worcestershire were promoted to County Championship Division One for the first time after winning the Division Two title.[10] Worcestershire also reached the final of the Cheltenham & Gloucester trophy, beating Lancashire in a memorable semi-final at New Road on 9 August 2003.[11] There was disappointment in the Lord's final, though, as Worcestershire lost by seven wickets and the Pears were also relegated from Division One of the National League. 2004 was a yo-yo year with Worcestershire relegated in the County Championship, promoted back to Division One in the rebranded totesport League and losing finalists again in the C&G Trophy. Vikram Solanki scored centuries in both the semi-final win against Warwickshire[12] and the final against Gloucestershire, but the 'Gladiators' won by eight wickets at Lord's.[13]

In 2006, Worcestershire won promotion to the first division of the Championship on the last day of the season by beating Northamptonshire while their rivals for second promotion spot, Essex, lost to Leicestershire. However, their 2007 season began badly, including an innings-and-260-run loss to Yorkshire, Worcestershire's worst innings defeat since 1934.[14] A flood-hit season inflicted serious financial damage, and on-field results in the Championship gave little cheer as Worcestershire were relegated. However, in the Pro40 First Division things were very different, and victory over Gloucestershire in mid-September brought the title to New Road, the county's first trophy since 1994.[15] The feat was all the more remarkable for the fact that every one of Worcestershire's games was played away from their New Road home, due to the floods, with 'home' games played at Edgbaston, Taunton and Kidderminster.[16]

2008 saw Worcestershire promoted back to Division One, despite losing their final game of the season.[17] 2008 was also Graeme Hick's last season at Worcestershire, having scored 136 first-class centuries in 25 seasons at New Road.[18] 2009 proved disastrous in first-class cricket, with Worcestershire finishing bottom of the First Division without a single victory, the first time the county had failed to win a Championship match since 1928.[19]

Following a win on the last day of the season against Sussex, Worcestershire were promoted back to Division One in 2010. The following season they avoided relegation for the first time ever, giving them consecutive seasons in Division One.[20] However, at the end of the 2012 season they were relegated back to Division Two.[21] Worcestershire had a mixed campaign in 2013, finished fifth out of nine in Division Two but a bright start to the 2014 saw them second in the table after seven games, following a draw with Surrey in June.[22] Worcestershire returned to Division One for the 2015 season, however their return only lasted one season as they were relegated after picking up only two wins.[23] Worcestershire spent two years back in the second tier, before achieving promotion on 27 September 2017.[24]

Sponsorship

Year Kit Manufacturer Shirt Sponsor
1993 MEB
1994 Powerline
1995 MEB
1996
1997
1998 Crusader Sport Apollo 2000
1999
2000
2001
2002 Midlands Electricity
2003
2004 Haier
2005 Apollo 2000
2006
2007
2008 Fearnley
2009 The Cotswold Group
2010
2011
2012 MKK Sport
2013 allpay
2014 Royal Air Force
2015 Canterbury Arctic Spas
2016
2017 Blackfinch Investments
2018 Gray-Nicolls
2019
2020
2021 Nike Morgan Motor
2022

Players

Current squad

  • No. denotes the player's squad number, as worn on the back of their shirt.
  •   denotes players with international caps.
No. Name Nationality Birth date Batting style Bowling style Notes
Batters
2 Jake Libby   England (1993-01-03) 3 January 1993 (age 30) Right-handed Right-arm off break
7 Ed Pollock   England (1995-07-10) 10 July 1995 (age 27) Left-handed Right-arm off break
17 Jack Haynes   England (2001-01-30) 30 January 2001 (age 22) Right-handed Right-arm off break
27 Kashif Ali   England (1998-02-07) 7 February 1998 (age 25) Right-handed Right-arm leg break
57 Taylor Cornall   England (1998-10-09) 9 October 1998 (age 24) Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox
79 Azhar Ali     Pakistan (1985-02-19) 19 February 1985 (age 38) Right-handed Right-arm leg break Overseas player
Oli Cox   England (2003-11-21) 21 November 2003 (age 19) Right-handed Right-arm off break
Adam Hose   England (1992-10-25) 25 October 1992 (age 30) Right-handed Right-arm medium
All-rounders
6 Matthew Waite   England (1995-12-24) 24 December 1995 (age 27) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
15 Brett D'Oliveira   England (1992-02-28) 28 February 1992 (age 31) Right-handed Right-arm leg break Club captain
74 Mitchell Santner     New Zealand (1992-02-05) 5 February 1992 (age 31) Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox Overseas player (T20 only)
Michael Bracewell     New Zealand (1991-02-14) 14 February 1991 (age 32) Left-handed Right-arm off break Overseas player (T20 only)
Rehaan Edavalath   England (2004-03-04) 4 March 2004 (age 19) Right-handed Right-arm off break
Wicket-keepers
9 Gareth Roderick   South Africa (1991-08-29) 29 August 1991 (age 31) Right-handed Right-arm medium UK Passport
10 Ben Cox   England (1992-02-02) 2 February 1992 (age 31) Right-handed
13 Henry Cullen   England (2003-04-29) 29 April 2003 (age 19) Right-handed
Bowlers
21 Ben Gibbon   England (2000-06-09) 9 June 2000 (age 22) Right-handed Left-arm fast-medium
22 Dillon Pennington   England (1999-02-26) 26 February 1999 (age 24) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
23 Joe Leach   England (1990-10-30) 30 October 1990 (age 32) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
24 Josh Tongue   England (1997-11-15) 15 November 1997 (age 25) Right-handed Right-arm fast
31 Charlie Morris   England (1992-07-06) 6 July 1992 (age 30) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
33 Josh Baker   England (2003-05-16) 16 May 2003 (age 19) Right-handed Slow left-arm orthodox
36 Pat Brown     England (1998-08-23) 23 August 1998 (age 24) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
38 Mitchell Stanley   England (2001-03-17) 17 March 2001 (age 21) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
61 Adam Finch   England (2000-05-28) 28 May 2000 (age 22) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium

Lists of players and club captains

County caps awarded

Note: Worcestershire no longer award traditional caps, instead awarding "colours" on a player's Championship debut.
1928: Harold Gibbons
1931: Peter Jackson
1931: Reg Perks
1934: Dick Howorth
1937: Edwin Cooper
1938: Phil King
1939: Roly Jenkins
1939: Charles Palmer
1946: Ronald Bird
1946: Allan White
1946: Bob Wyatt
1947: Don Kenyon
1947: Hugo Yarnold
1948: Laddie Outschoorn
1949: Michael Ainsworth
1950: George Chesterton
1950: George Dews
1951: Bob Broadbent
1952: Peter Richardson
1955: Jack Flavell
1955: Martin Horton
1956: Roy Booth
1956: Dick Richardson
1957: Bob Berry
1959: John Aldridge
1959: Len Coldwell
1959: Derek Pearson
1960: Doug Slade
1961: Norman Gifford
1961: Ron Headley
1962: Tom Graveney
1962: James Standen
1965: Robert Carter
1965: Basil D'Oliveira
1966: Brian Brain
1966: Alan Ormrod
1968: Glenn Turner
1969: Ted Hemsley
 
1970: Rodney Cass
1970: Vanburn Holder
1972: Jim Yardley
1974: John Parker
1976: Imran Khan
1976: John Inchmore
1978: James Cumbes
1978: David Humphries
1978: Phil Neale
1979: Dipak Patel
1979: Younis Ahmed
1980: Paul Pridgeon
1981: Hartley Alleyne
1984: Tim Curtis
1984: David Smith
1985: Damian D'Oliveira
1985: Neal Radford
1986: Graeme Hick
1986: Richard Illingworth
1986: Phil Newport
1986: Steve Rhodes
1986: Martin Weston
1987: Ian Botham
1987: Graham Dilley
1989: Stuart Lampitt
1989: Steven McEwan
1990: Gordon Lord
1991: Tom Moody
1993: Chris Tolley
1994: Gavin Haynes
1994: David Leatherdale
1995: Phil Weston
1997: Alamgir Sheriyar
1997: Reuben Spiring
1998: Vikram Solanki
2000: Glenn McGrath
2001: Andy Bichel
2004: Nadeem Malik
2004: Ray Price

Grounds

This section gives details of every venue at which Worcestershire have hosted at least one match at first-class or List A level. Figures show the number of Worcestershire matches only played at the grounds listed, and do not include abandoned games. Note that the locations given are current; in some cases grounds now in other counties lie within the traditional boundaries of Worcestershire.

Haden Hill Park in Old Hill, West Midlands, was due to host a Benson & Hedges Cup match in 1988. However, this was abandoned without a ball being bowled and no other senior cricket has been played at the ground, so it is not included in the table.

Name of ground Location First-class span Worcs f-c matches List A span Worcs LA matches
Bournville Cricket Ground Bournville, Birmingham 1910–1911 2 N/A 0
Chain Wire Club Ground Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire 1980 1 N/A 0
Chester Road North Ground Kidderminster, Worcestershire 1921–2019 68 1969–2008 5[25]
Evesham Cricket Club Ground Evesham, Worcestershire 1951 1 N/A 0
Blackfinch New Road Worcester 1899–present 1,072[26] 1963–present 425[27]
Racecourse Ground Hereford 1919–1983 5[28] 1983–1987 3
Seth Somers Park Halesowen, West Midlands 1964–1969 2 N/A 0
Tipton Road Dudley, West Midlands 1911–1971 88 1969–1977 14
War Memorial Athletic Ground Stourbridge, West Midlands 1905–1981 61 1969–1982 3
Himley Cricket Club Himley, Staffordshire N/A 0 2007 1
Worcester Royal Grammar School Ground
(Flagge Meadow)
Worcester N/A 0 2007 1

Records

First-class

Batting

Bowling

Highest partnership for each wicket

List A

Fostershire

'Fostershire' was a name jocularly applied to Worcestershire County Cricket Club in the early part of the 20th century, shortly after the county had achieved first-class status and admission into the English County Championship (in 1899). The name came from the fact that seven brothers from this one family played for Worcestershire during the period 1899–1934, three of whom captained the club at some point. Six of the brothers appeared during the seasons 1908–11.

References

  1. ^ ACS (1982). A Guide to First-Class Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles. Nottingham: ACS.
  2. ^ Bowen, p. 270.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 July 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  4. ^ Bowen, p. 273.
  5. ^ Selvey, Mike (1 May 2013). "Fifty years ago the very first Gillette Cup changed cricket for ever". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Smyth, Rob (11 December 2008). "Cricket: Rob Smyth: The forgotten story of … the Combined Universities' 1989 B&H Cup run". The Guardian.
  7. ^ "The Home of CricketArchive". Cricketarchive.com.
  8. ^ "Cricket / Natwest Trophy: Hick and Moody destroy grand slam dream". The Independent. London. 4 September 1994.
  9. ^ "The Home of CricketArchive". cricketarchive.com.
  10. ^ Collis, John (19 September 2003). "Northamptonshire 196 & 379-9 Worcestershire 172-8dec". The Guardian.
  11. ^ "Hall keeps his cool to edge Worcestershire into C&G final". Espncricinfo.com.
  12. ^ Paul Bolton. "Warwickshire tamed by stunning Solanki". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  13. ^ "Gloucs win C&G Trophy". BBC. 28 August 2004.
  14. ^ "Largest Margin of Innings Defeat". CricketArchive.co.uk. Retrieved 14 May 2007.
  15. ^ "Worcestershire clinch Pro40 title". BBC Sport. 13 September 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  16. ^ "Results – Pro40 Division One, 2007 – ESPN Cricinfo". ESPNcricinfo.
  17. ^ "Worcestershire promoted despite loss – LV= County Championship – Domestic – News Archive – ECB". Ecb.co.uk.
  18. ^ "Graeme Hick". ESPNcricinfo.
  19. ^ "Davies bows out with Durham draw". BBC Sport. 26 September 2009. Retrieved 27 September 2009.
  20. ^ "Worcestershire stay up as Durham title hopes end". BBC Sport.
  21. ^ "Worcestershire relegated as Bears seal title triumph | Worcester Standard". Archived from the original on 8 June 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  22. ^ "Zafar Ansari ensures Surrey scrape draw against Worcestershire". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  23. ^ "County Championship: Worcs relegated after defeat by Durham". BBC. 17 September 2015. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  24. ^ "Worcestershire v Durham: Promoted leaders seek victory for Division Two title". BBC. 27 September 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  25. ^ Four other List A matches, all involving Worcestershire Cricket Board, have been played at Kidderminster.
  26. ^ One other first-class match, a 1972 England v Rest of England Test trial, has been played at New Road.
  27. ^ Three One Day Internationals have also been played at New Road: West Indies v Zimbabwe in the 1983 World Cup, and Australia v Scotland and Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe in the 1999 World Cup. The 2003 C&G Trophy game between Worcestershire Cricket Board and Worcestershire is included in this figure, although it was technically a Worcs CB home fixture.
  28. ^ One other first-class match, between HK Foster's XI and the Australian Imperial Forces, has been played at the Racecourse Ground.
  29. ^ "The Home of CricketArchive". Cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
  30. ^ "The Home of CricketArchive". Cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 26 November 2021.

Further reading

External links

  • Worcestershire County Cricket Club Official Website
  • Worcestershire CCC history
  • Grounds in England from CricketArchive. Retrieved 9 December 2006.
  • Worcestershire CCC Fans' Forum

worcestershire, county, cricket, club, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scho. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Worcestershire County Cricket Club news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Worcestershire 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 Worcestershire Its Vitality Blast T20 team has been rebranded the Worcestershire Rapids but the county is known by most fans as the Pears The club is based at New Road Worcester Founded in 1865 Worcestershire held minor status at first and was a prominent member of the early Minor Counties Championship in the 1890s winning the competition three times In 1899 the club joined the County Championship and the team was elevated to first class status 1 Since then Worcestershire have played in every top level domestic cricket competition in England Worcestershire County Cricket ClubOne Day nameWorcestershire RapidsPersonnelCaptainBrett D OliveiraCoachAlan RichardsonOverseas player s Azhar Ali Michael Bracewell T20 Mitchell Santner T20 Team informationFounded1865Home groundNew RoadCapacity5 500HistoryFirst class debutYorkshirein 1899Championship wins5Pro40 wins4FP Trophy wins1VitalityHealth Twenty20 Cup wins1B amp H Cup wins1Official websiteWCCCFirst classOne day amp T20 Contents 1 Honours 1 1 First XI honours 1 2 Second XI honours 2 History 2 1 Earliest cricket 2 2 Origin of the club 2 3 The first class county 2 4 The modern day 2000 present 3 Sponsorship 4 Players 4 1 Current squad 5 Lists of players and club captains 6 County caps awarded 7 Grounds 8 Records 8 1 First class 8 1 1 Batting 8 1 2 Bowling 8 1 3 Highest partnership for each wicket 8 2 List A 9 Fostershire 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHonours EditSee also List of the competitive honours won by county cricket clubs in England and Wales First XI honours Edit County Championship 5 1964 1965 1974 1988 1989Division Two 1 2003 2017Gillette NatWest C amp G Friends Provident Trophy 1 1994 Vitality T20 Blast 1 2018 Sunday Pro 40 League 4 1971 1987 1988 2007 Benson amp Hedges Cup 1 1991 Minor Counties Championship 3 1896 1897 1898 shared 1 1895Second XI honours Edit Second XI Championship 3 1962 1963 1982 Second XI Trophy 1 2004History EditEarliest cricket Edit Cricket may have been played in Worcestershire during the 18th century however the earliest reference to cricket in the county is 1829 2 and the county cricket club was not formed until 1865 3 A match on 28 August 1844 at Hartlebury Common between Worcestershire and Shropshire is the earliest known instance of a county team in Worcestershire Two years later XXII of Worcestershire played William Clarke s All England Eleven at Powick Hams 4 Origin of the club Edit Worcestershire CCC was formed on 4 March 1865 at the Star Hotel in Worcester The club owes much to Paul Foley who was from a family of iron masters in Stourbridge He also owned an agricultural estate at Stoke Edith in Herefordshire He became involved with the club in the 1880s and helped to establish the Minor Counties Championship which began in 1895 Worcestershire shared the inaugural title with Durham and Norfolk before winning outright in 1896 1897 and 1898 With this success behind it the club applied for first class status and entered the County Championship in 1899 Worcestershire CCC played its initial first class match versus Yorkshire CCC on 4 5 amp 6 May 1899 The first class county Edit The inclusion of Worcestershire increased the County Championship to 15 teams At first they performed moderately despite the superb batting of Tip Foster who could rarely play after 1901 Weak bowling on perfect New Road pitches was responsible for this but in 1907 when Tip Foster played regularly for three months their batting considering the difficulty of the pitches was among the finest of any county team Their best performance that year was an innings of 567 on a somewhat difficult pitch against Fielder and Blythe of Kent CCC After that year however the batting was never strong enough to make up for woefully weak bowling Worcestershire were so weak the club could not compete in the Championship in 1919 and their form in 1920 when they lost three successive games by an innings and over 200 runs was probably the worst of any county side Their form with one remarkable exception was woeful up to the early thirties Fred Root one of the first exponents of leg theory bowling took over 1 500 wickets for the county and was a Test standard player in an otherwise fourth rate team In Cyril Walters and the Nawab of Pataudi the team acquired its first class batsmen since the Fosters but both had to give up the game after playing brilliantly in 1933 when the bowling was briefly very weak The emergence of Dick Howorth and Reg Perks in the 1930s however was built up so well that by 1947 Worcestershire were sufficiently strong in bowling to be competitive at county level even if their batting was not adequate for high honours Roly Jenkins with 183 wickets in 1949 gave them briefly the best attack in county cricket but they soon declined again and their form in the 1950s was indifferent at best Their first period of great success came in the 1960s under the Presidency of Sir George Dowty and the captaincy of Don Kenyon when the county won two County Championships thanks to the achievements of such players as Norman Gifford Tom Graveney Jack Flavell Len Coldwell and Basil D Oliveira They were also losing finalist in the first ever Gillette Cup Final in 1963 the inaugural limited overs knockout competition in England 5 In 1971 Worcestershire won their first ever Sunday League title thanks largely to the bowling of Vanburn Holder and the New Zealander Glenn Turner was instrumental in Worcestershire s third championship win in 1974 In the 1980s the prodigious batting feats of Graeme Hick and the arrival of Ian Botham paved the way for two more county titles in 1988 and 1989 the same year in which they beat the touring Australians inside two days 6 Worcestershire also won the Sunday League in 1987 and 1988 Worcestershire s success continued into the 1990s with a first ever success in the Benson and Hedges Cup in 1991 following final defeats in 1973 1976 and 1990 Captained by Phil Neale the Pears beat Lancashire by 65 runs in the final at Lord s gaining revenge for defeat against Lancashire in the previous year s competition 7 Worcestershire s next title came in 1994 when they won the Natwest Trophy beating arch rivals Warwickshire in the final 8 Not only did they avenge their defeat at the hands of Warwickshire in the B amp H Cup Final earlier that summer but it was also their first success in the competition after three previous final defeats Worcestershire s best showing in the County Championship came in 1993 when they finished second to Middlesex Worcestershire finished 15th in 1999 the final year of single division County Championship cricket meaning they would start the new millennium in Division Two The modern day 2000 present Edit Worcestershire failed to gain promotion in 2000 despite overseas signing Glenn McGrath taking 76 Championship wickets at an average of 13 77 9 In 2003 Worcestershire were promoted to County Championship Division One for the first time after winning the Division Two title 10 Worcestershire also reached the final of the Cheltenham amp Gloucester trophy beating Lancashire in a memorable semi final at New Road on 9 August 2003 11 There was disappointment in the Lord s final though as Worcestershire lost by seven wickets and the Pears were also relegated from Division One of the National League 2004 was a yo yo year with Worcestershire relegated in the County Championship promoted back to Division One in the rebranded totesport League and losing finalists again in the C amp G Trophy Vikram Solanki scored centuries in both the semi final win against Warwickshire 12 and the final against Gloucestershire but the Gladiators won by eight wickets at Lord s 13 In 2006 Worcestershire won promotion to the first division of the Championship on the last day of the season by beating Northamptonshire while their rivals for second promotion spot Essex lost to Leicestershire However their 2007 season began badly including an innings and 260 run loss to Yorkshire Worcestershire s worst innings defeat since 1934 14 A flood hit season inflicted serious financial damage and on field results in the Championship gave little cheer as Worcestershire were relegated However in the Pro40 First Division things were very different and victory over Gloucestershire in mid September brought the title to New Road the county s first trophy since 1994 15 The feat was all the more remarkable for the fact that every one of Worcestershire s games was played away from their New Road home due to the floods with home games played at Edgbaston Taunton and Kidderminster 16 2008 saw Worcestershire promoted back to Division One despite losing their final game of the season 17 2008 was also Graeme Hick s last season at Worcestershire having scored 136 first class centuries in 25 seasons at New Road 18 2009 proved disastrous in first class cricket with Worcestershire finishing bottom of the First Division without a single victory the first time the county had failed to win a Championship match since 1928 19 Following a win on the last day of the season against Sussex Worcestershire were promoted back to Division One in 2010 The following season they avoided relegation for the first time ever giving them consecutive seasons in Division One 20 However at the end of the 2012 season they were relegated back to Division Two 21 Worcestershire had a mixed campaign in 2013 finished fifth out of nine in Division Two but a bright start to the 2014 saw them second in the table after seven games following a draw with Surrey in June 22 Worcestershire returned to Division One for the 2015 season however their return only lasted one season as they were relegated after picking up only two wins 23 Worcestershire spent two years back in the second tier before achieving promotion on 27 September 2017 24 Sponsorship EditYear Kit Manufacturer Shirt Sponsor1993 MEB1994 Powerline1995 MEB199619971998 Crusader Sport Apollo 20001999200020012002 Midlands Electricity20032004 Haier2005 Apollo 2000200620072008 Fearnley2009 The Cotswold Group201020112012 MKK Sport2013 allpay2014 Royal Air Force2015 Canterbury Arctic Spas20162017 Blackfinch Investments2018 Gray Nicolls201920202021 Nike Morgan Motor2022Players EditCurrent squad Edit No denotes the player s squad number as worn on the back of their shirt denotes players with international caps No Name Nationality Birth date Batting style Bowling style NotesBatters2 Jake Libby England 1993 01 03 3 January 1993 age 30 Right handed Right arm off break7 Ed Pollock England 1995 07 10 10 July 1995 age 27 Left handed Right arm off break17 Jack Haynes England 2001 01 30 30 January 2001 age 22 Right handed Right arm off break27 Kashif Ali England 1998 02 07 7 February 1998 age 25 Right handed Right arm leg break57 Taylor Cornall England 1998 10 09 9 October 1998 age 24 Left handed Slow left arm orthodox79 Azhar Ali Pakistan 1985 02 19 19 February 1985 age 38 Right handed Right arm leg break Overseas player Oli Cox England 2003 11 21 21 November 2003 age 19 Right handed Right arm off break Adam Hose England 1992 10 25 25 October 1992 age 30 Right handed Right arm mediumAll rounders6 Matthew Waite England 1995 12 24 24 December 1995 age 27 Right handed Right arm fast medium15 Brett D Oliveira England 1992 02 28 28 February 1992 age 31 Right handed Right arm leg break Club captain74 Mitchell Santner New Zealand 1992 02 05 5 February 1992 age 31 Left handed Slow left arm orthodox Overseas player T20 only Michael Bracewell New Zealand 1991 02 14 14 February 1991 age 32 Left handed Right arm off break Overseas player T20 only Rehaan Edavalath England 2004 03 04 4 March 2004 age 19 Right handed Right arm off breakWicket keepers9 Gareth Roderick South Africa 1991 08 29 29 August 1991 age 31 Right handed Right arm medium UK Passport10 Ben Cox England 1992 02 02 2 February 1992 age 31 Right handed 13 Henry Cullen England 2003 04 29 29 April 2003 age 19 Right handed Bowlers21 Ben Gibbon England 2000 06 09 9 June 2000 age 22 Right handed Left arm fast medium22 Dillon Pennington England 1999 02 26 26 February 1999 age 24 Right handed Right arm fast medium23 Joe Leach England 1990 10 30 30 October 1990 age 32 Right handed Right arm fast medium24 Josh Tongue England 1997 11 15 15 November 1997 age 25 Right handed Right arm fast31 Charlie Morris England 1992 07 06 6 July 1992 age 30 Right handed Right arm fast medium33 Josh Baker England 2003 05 16 16 May 2003 age 19 Right handed Slow left arm orthodox36 Pat Brown England 1998 08 23 23 August 1998 age 24 Right handed Right arm fast medium38 Mitchell Stanley England 2001 03 17 17 March 2001 age 21 Right handed Right arm fast medium61 Adam Finch England 2000 05 28 28 May 2000 age 22 Right handed Right arm fast mediumLists of players and club captains EditList of Worcestershire CCC players List of Worcestershire cricket captainsCounty caps awarded EditNote Worcestershire no longer award traditional caps instead awarding colours on a player s Championship debut 1928 Harold Gibbons 1931 Peter Jackson 1931 Reg Perks 1934 Dick Howorth 1937 Edwin Cooper 1938 Phil King 1939 Roly Jenkins 1939 Charles Palmer 1946 Ronald Bird 1946 Allan White 1946 Bob Wyatt 1947 Don Kenyon 1947 Hugo Yarnold 1948 Laddie Outschoorn 1949 Michael Ainsworth 1950 George Chesterton 1950 George Dews 1951 Bob Broadbent 1952 Peter Richardson 1955 Jack Flavell 1955 Martin Horton 1956 Roy Booth 1956 Dick Richardson 1957 Bob Berry 1959 John Aldridge 1959 Len Coldwell 1959 Derek Pearson 1960 Doug Slade 1961 Norman Gifford 1961 Ron Headley 1962 Tom Graveney 1962 James Standen 1965 Robert Carter 1965 Basil D Oliveira 1966 Brian Brain 1966 Alan Ormrod 1968 Glenn Turner 1969 Ted Hemsley 1970 Rodney Cass 1970 Vanburn Holder 1972 Jim Yardley 1974 John Parker 1976 Imran Khan 1976 John Inchmore 1978 James Cumbes 1978 David Humphries 1978 Phil Neale 1979 Dipak Patel 1979 Younis Ahmed 1980 Paul Pridgeon 1981 Hartley Alleyne 1984 Tim Curtis 1984 David Smith 1985 Damian D Oliveira 1985 Neal Radford 1986 Graeme Hick 1986 Richard Illingworth 1986 Phil Newport 1986 Steve Rhodes 1986 Martin Weston 1987 Ian Botham 1987 Graham Dilley 1989 Stuart Lampitt 1989 Steven McEwan 1990 Gordon Lord 1991 Tom Moody 1993 Chris Tolley 1994 Gavin Haynes 1994 David Leatherdale 1995 Phil Weston 1997 Alamgir Sheriyar 1997 Reuben Spiring 1998 Vikram Solanki 2000 Glenn McGrath 2001 Andy Bichel 2004 Nadeem Malik 2004 Ray PriceGrounds EditMain article List of Worcestershire County Cricket Club grounds This section gives details of every venue at which Worcestershire have hosted at least one match at first class or List A level Figures show the number of Worcestershire matches only played at the grounds listed and do not include abandoned games Note that the locations given are current in some cases grounds now in other counties lie within the traditional boundaries of Worcestershire Haden Hill Park in Old Hill West Midlands was due to host a Benson amp Hedges Cup match in 1988 However this was abandoned without a ball being bowled and no other senior cricket has been played at the ground so it is not included in the table Name of ground Location First class span Worcs f c matches List A span Worcs LA matchesBournville Cricket Ground Bournville Birmingham 1910 1911 2 N A 0Chain Wire Club Ground Stourport on Severn Worcestershire 1980 1 N A 0Chester Road North Ground Kidderminster Worcestershire 1921 2019 68 1969 2008 5 25 Evesham Cricket Club Ground Evesham Worcestershire 1951 1 N A 0Blackfinch New Road Worcester 1899 present 1 072 26 1963 present 425 27 Racecourse Ground Hereford 1919 1983 5 28 1983 1987 3Seth Somers Park Halesowen West Midlands 1964 1969 2 N A 0Tipton Road Dudley West Midlands 1911 1971 88 1969 1977 14War Memorial Athletic Ground Stourbridge West Midlands 1905 1981 61 1969 1982 3Himley Cricket Club Himley Staffordshire N A 0 2007 1Worcester Royal Grammar School Ground Flagge Meadow Worcester N A 0 2007 1Records EditFirst class Edit Most first class runs for Worcestershire Qualification 20 000 runs 29 Player RunsDon Kenyon 34 490Graeme Hick 31 149Glenn Turner 22 298Alan Ormrod 21 753Harold Gibbons 20 918Frederick Bowley 20750Ron Headley 20 712Tim Curtis 20 155 Most first class wickets for Worcestershire Qualification 1 000 wickets 30 Player WicketsReg Perks 2 143Norman Gifford 1 615Jack Flavell 1 507Fred Root 1 387Dick Howorth 1 274Roly Jenkins 1 148Peter Jackson 1 139Len Coldwell 1 029 Batting Edit Highest team total 701 6 declared v Surrey Worcester 2007 Lowest team total 24 v Yorkshire Huddersfield 1903 Highest individual innings 405 by Graeme Hick v Somerset Taunton 1988 Most runs in a season 2 654 by Harold Gibbons 1934Bowling Edit Best bowling in an innings 9 23 by Fred Root v Lancashire Worcester 1931 Best bowling in a match 15 87 by Arthur Conway v Gloucestershire Moreton in Marsh 1914 Most wickets in a season 207 by Fred Root 1925Highest partnership for each wicket Edit 1st 309 by Frederick Bowley and Harry Foster v Derbyshire Derby 1901 2nd 316 by Stephen Moore and Vikram Solanki v Gloucestershire Cheltenham 2008 3rd 438 by Graeme Hick and Tom Moody v Hampshire Southampton 1997 4th 330 by Ben Smith and Graeme Hick v Somerset Taunton 2006 5th 393 by Ted Arnold and William Burns v Warwickshire Birmingham 1909 6th 265 by Graeme Hick and Steve Rhodes v Somerset Taunton 1988 7th 256 by David Leatherdale and Steve Rhodes v Nottinghamshire Nottingham 2002 8th 184 by Steve Rhodes and Stuart Lampitt v Derbyshire Kidderminster 1991 9th 181 by John Cuffe and Robert Burrows v Gloucestershire Worcester 1907 10th 136 by Alex Milton and Steve Magoffin v Somerset Worcester 2018List A Edit Highest team total 404 3 60 overs v Devon Worcester 1987 Lowest team total 58 all out 20 3 overs v Ireland Worcester 2009 Highest individual innings 192 by Callum Ferguson v Leicestershire New Road 2018 Best bowling 7 19 by Neal Radford v Bedfordshire Bedford 1991Fostershire EditMain article Fostershire Fostershire was a name jocularly applied to Worcestershire County Cricket Club in the early part of the 20th century shortly after the county had achieved first class status and admission into the English County Championship in 1899 The name came from the fact that seven brothers from this one family played for Worcestershire during the period 1899 1934 three of whom captained the club at some point Six of the brothers appeared during the seasons 1908 11 References Edit ACS 1982 A Guide to First Class Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles Nottingham ACS Bowen p 270 Cricket Worcestershire County Cricket Club Archived from the original on 7 July 2013 Retrieved 11 July 2013 Bowen p 273 Selvey Mike 1 May 2013 Fifty years ago the very first Gillette Cup changed cricket for ever The Guardian Smyth Rob 11 December 2008 Cricket Rob Smyth The forgotten story of the Combined Universities 1989 B amp H Cup run The Guardian The Home of CricketArchive Cricketarchive com Cricket Natwest Trophy Hick and Moody destroy grand slam dream The Independent London 4 September 1994 The Home of CricketArchive cricketarchive com Collis John 19 September 2003 Northamptonshire 196 amp 379 9 Worcestershire 172 8dec The Guardian Hall keeps his cool to edge Worcestershire into C amp G final Espncricinfo com Paul Bolton Warwickshire tamed by stunning Solanki The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Gloucs win C amp G Trophy BBC 28 August 2004 Largest Margin of Innings Defeat CricketArchive co uk Retrieved 14 May 2007 Worcestershire clinch Pro40 title BBC Sport 13 September 2007 Retrieved 14 September 2007 Results Pro40 Division One 2007 ESPN Cricinfo ESPNcricinfo Worcestershire promoted despite loss LV County Championship Domestic News Archive ECB Ecb co uk Graeme Hick ESPNcricinfo Davies bows out with Durham draw BBC Sport 26 September 2009 Retrieved 27 September 2009 Worcestershire stay up as Durham title hopes end BBC Sport Worcestershire relegated as Bears seal title triumph Worcester Standard Archived from the original on 8 June 2014 Retrieved 28 November 2021 Zafar Ansari ensures Surrey scrape draw against Worcestershire The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 County Championship Worcs relegated after defeat by Durham BBC 17 September 2015 Retrieved 29 September 2018 Worcestershire v Durham Promoted leaders seek victory for Division Two title BBC 27 September 2017 Retrieved 29 September 2018 Four other List A matches all involving Worcestershire Cricket Board have been played at Kidderminster One other first class match a 1972 England v Rest of England Test trial has been played at New Road Three One Day Internationals have also been played at New Road West Indies v Zimbabwe in the 1983 World Cup and Australia v Scotland and Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe in the 1999 World Cup The 2003 C amp G Trophy game between Worcestershire Cricket Board and Worcestershire is included in this figure although it was technically a Worcs CB home fixture One other first class match between HK Foster s XI and the Australian Imperial Forces has been played at the Racecourse Ground The Home of CricketArchive Cricketarchive com Retrieved 26 November 2021 The Home of CricketArchive Cricketarchive com Retrieved 26 November 2021 Further reading EditH S Altham A History of Cricket Volume 1 to 1914 George Allen amp Unwin 1962 Derek Birley A Social History of English Cricket Aurum 1999 Rowland Bowen Cricket A History of its Growth and Development Eyre amp Spottiswoode 1970 Roy Webber The Playfair Book of Cricket Records Playfair Books 1951 Playfair Cricket Annual various editions Wisden Cricketers Almanack various editionsExternal links EditWorcestershire County Cricket Club Official Website Worcestershire CCC history Grounds in England from CricketArchive Retrieved 9 December 2006 Worcestershire CCC Fans Forum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Worcestershire County Cricket Club amp oldid 1131985046, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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