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Yorkshire County Cricket Club

Yorkshire 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 Yorkshire. Yorkshire's first team is the most successful in English cricketing history with 33 County Championship titles, including one shared. The team's most recent Championship title was in 2015. The club's limited overs team is called the Yorkshire Vikings and their kit colours are Cambridge blue, Oxford blue, and yellow.

Yorkshire County Cricket Club
One Day nameYorkshire Vikings
Personnel
CaptainShan Masood
CoachOttis Gibson
Overseas player(s)Shan Masood
Chief executiveStephen Vaughan
Team information
Founded1863
Home groundHeadingley Cricket Ground, Leeds
Capacity18,350
History
First-class debutSurrey
in 1863
at The Oval
Championship wins33 (including 1 shared)
Pro40 wins1
FP Trophy wins3
Twenty20 Cup wins0
B&H Cup wins1
Official websitewww.yorkshireccc.com

Yorkshire teams formed by earlier organisations, essentially the old Sheffield Cricket Club, played top-class cricket from the 18th century and the county club has always held first-class status. Yorkshire have competed in the County Championship since the official start of the competition in 1890 and have played in every top-level domestic cricket competition in England. The team play most of their home games at Headingley Cricket Ground in Leeds. Another significant venue is at North Marine Road Ground, Scarborough, which houses the annual Scarborough Festival. Yorkshire have used other grounds in the past including Bramall Lane, Sheffield, which was the club's original home; Horton Park Avenue, Bradford; St George's Road Cricket Ground, Harrogate; The Circle, Kingston upon Hull; and Acklam Park, Middlesbrough.

Earliest cricket in Yorkshire Edit

The earliest certain reference to cricket in Yorkshire dates from 1751 when local matches were held in Sheffield and a game took place on or soon after Monday, 5 August at Stanwick, near Richmond, between the Duke of Cleveland's XI and Earl of Northumberland's XI; the same teams earlier played a game at Durham.[1][2]

Sheffield Cricket Club was probably formed about this time and there are references to Sheffield matches in Derbyshire in 1757 and home and away matches against Leeds in 1765.[3] A club was formed in Leeds in 1760 and in York in 1784.[4] Bedale in North Yorkshire was a noted centre in the early 19th century.[5] But cricket in most rural areas was slow to develop.[6] Yorkshire cricket became centred around Sheffield, where it was more organised than in the rest of the county.[6]

From 1771, Sheffield played semi-regular matches against Nottingham Cricket Club.[7] Nottingham was generally the better side and Sheffield sometimes played with more players to give them a greater chance of victory.[8] Nevertheless, the Sheffield player Tom Marsden was regarded as one of the leading players in the country in the 1820s.[8]

Cricket increased in popularity after one of the 1827 roundarm trial matches was played at the purpose-built Darnall New Ground in Sheffield to evaluate the new style of roundarm bowling.[9] After this match, many new cricket clubs were formed in the county.[10]

In 1833, "Yorkshire" was first used as the name of the team, although it contained eleven Sheffield players, for a game against Norfolk at the Hyde Park Ground in Sheffield.[11] The name may have arisen from a need to match the status of Norfolk as a county rather than a city. There were some differences in the organisation of the Yorkshire team vis-à-vis those called Sheffield as it included three amateurs while Sheffield teams were entirely professional.[12] Yorkshire, as such, played intermittently over the next thirty years but was not organised in any formal way.[6] Among their opponents were Sussex in 1835; Manchester in 1844 and 1845; and Kent in 1849. Also in 1849, Yorkshire played against a "Lancashire" team for the first time, though it was really a Sheffield v Manchester match.[13] By 1855, Sheffield and Yorkshire were playing at Bramall Lane.[13]

Club history Edit

Origin Edit

 
Roger Iddison, the first captain of Yorkshire: he led the team until 1872.

On 7 March 1861, during a meeting at the Adelphi Hotel in Sheffield, a Match Fund Committee was established to run Yorkshire county matches. The committee was made up from the management committee of the Bramall Lane ground and representatives from clubs willing to pay £1 to the fund.[14] But the committee was unable to persuade other clubs that it was not seeking to promote Sheffield cricket and a lack of funds prevented some matches being played in 1862.[14]

By this time, there were several cricketers with good reputations and the county team was one of the strongest in England.[14] Consequently, on 8 January 1863, Yorkshire County Cricket Club was formed. Membership was unlimited and cost a minimum of 10s and 6d.[14] Like most first-class cricket clubs of the time, Yorkshire relied on private patronage with administrators "paying to serve" and "moneyed enthusiasts" acting as ready match sponsors.[15] The majority of players were freelance professionals who were paid a usual match fee of £5, from which all travel and accommodation had to be paid.[15] Travel could be arduous, living away from home could be "rough" and sometimes the match fee was not enough to cover expenses, especially if, as was often a problem with early Yorkshire cricketers, "the ale-house was a temptation".[16]

The first club President was former player Thomas Barker, who had become Mayor of Sheffield, although he probably never attended any meetings. Michael Ellison was the first club Treasurer and at some point early in Yorkshire's history, he assumed the Presidency.[16] Most official accounts record Ellison as Yorkshire's first President.[17] Joseph ("J. B.") Wostinholm became the first of four long-serving club Secretaries in 1864.[17] The first team captain was Roger Iddison, a professional cricketer.[18]

The objective of the club was to play matches "either in Sheffield or in any other towns of the county according as arrangements may be made".[14] Other locations in Yorkshire were unable or unwilling to host fixtures in the first years of the club, and Bradford and York continued to attempt to organise games in competition with Yorkshire, sometimes causing confusion among other counties.[19] Attempts to form an alternative Yorkshire team continued intermittently until 1884[20] although, by 1873, most clubs had accepted the authority of the Sheffield-based county club.[21]

1863–1882 Edit

 
George Freeman, a key factor in Yorkshire's success in the late 1860s, played for the team mainly between 1865 and 1870, taking 209 wickets in 32 matches.[22]

Yorkshire played their inaugural first-class match against Surrey at The Oval on 4, 5 and 6 June 1863. Surrey scored 315 runs, to which Yorkshire replied with 257. Surrey were bowled out for 60 before the match was drawn.[23][24] The team recorded their first win in the following match against the strong Nottinghamshire team and although they lost the return match, won two and lost only one of the four matches played in their first season.[25] In 1864, the team won two and lost four of seven matches.[26]

In 1865, the club and players became involved in a dispute. Five players – Roger Iddison, George Anderson, George Atkinson, Joseph Rowbotham and Ned Stephenson – refused to play against Surrey.[15] This concerned a controversy that arose in 1862 when Iddison and Anderson played for an All-England team against Surrey at The Oval and the Kent bowler Edgar Willsher was repeatedly no-balled for using an overarm action by an umpire whom, they claimed, had been appointed by Surrey specifically for that purpose.[15] Anderson stated in 1865 that he "would not play against those who have combined to sweep us from the cricket field altogether if they could".[15]

The dispute was about a point of principle and centred on the right of bowlers to use an overarm action, which had been legalised ahead of the 1864 season.[27] Consequently, with several important players missing, Yorkshire did not win a game in 1865 and were forced to cancel some matches for the 1866 season. The Yorkshire Committee and the players came to an understanding in early 1867 after the players apologised, but Anderson never represented the county again.[28]

With the player dispute resolved, Yorkshire won all seven of their matches in 1867, defeating Surrey, Lancashire and Cambridgeshire.[29] As a result, the sporting press proclaimed Yorkshire to be the "Champion County" for the first time.[30] The following year, John Thewlis scored the first century for Yorkshire in first-class cricket, against Surrey at The Oval;[21] in 1869, Joseph Rowbotham became the first man to score two centuries in a season for Yorkshire.[31] Yorkshire won four games in both 1868 and 1869; one sports publication regarded Yorkshire as equal champions in the latter year.[32][33] The team won six out of seven in 1870 to be acclaimed as Champion County again.[34] Much of Yorkshire's success in these years came from the bowling combination of George Freeman and Tom Emmett.[35][36]

Following Freeman's retirement from regular cricket after 1870, Yorkshire declined, winning fewer games in 1871 and 1872 as Gloucestershire rose to a position of dominance in County Cricket, driven by the success of W. G. Grace and his brothers. Conscious of the need to strengthen the club, Yorkshire instituted a Colts team of young players,[37] but replaced Iddison as captain at the end of the 1872 season. Rowbotham, another professional, assumed the position.[38] For the 1873 season, county cricket moved a step closer towards an organised competition when the counties agreed qualification rules for players to be eligible for a team; for many years, this was considered to be start of the County Championship. However, the counties did not organise a formal competition and the "Champion County" was still decided by the press; some publications disagreed.[39]

 
The Yorkshire team in 1875 was captained by Joseph Rowbotham. Back row: G. Martin (umpire), John Thewlis. Middle row: George Pinder, George Ulyett, Tom Armitage, Joseph Rowbotham, Allen Hill, Andrew Greenwood. Front row: Tom Emmett, John Hicks, Ephraim Lockwood, Charlie Ullathorne.[40]

Despite the team containing effective players, Yorkshire did not perform as well as expected over the next seasons. The bowling attack was strong, the team contained some experienced players and critics believed Ephraim Lockwood to be the best professional batsman in the country.[41] In 1873, Yorkshire won seven games and lost five and for the following season, Luke Greenwood replaced Rowbotham as captain.[42] The team had an improved record, but although second only to Gloucestershire, Yorkshire lost heavily in both encounters between the teams.[note 1][44] Greenwood retired, Rowbotham resumed the captaincy for 1875,[45] and Lockwood took over in 1876.[46] The team did not perform particularly well in either season,[47] but their worst performance came in 1877, winning two games – but none of the last ten – and losing seven.[48] This placed them eighth out of nine counties.[41]

Tom Emmett then took over as captain, but the following two seasons brought mixed results as the team displayed inconsistency, often losing to teams they should comfortably have beaten.[49] Derek Hodgson, in his official county history, suggests a lack of discipline in the team throughout these years was to blame; contemporary reports suggested the team drank too much alcohol to be effective.[50] The players also suffered from public attention, receiving generous hospitality at times which impacted on their performances.[51] In these seasons, the team often began well only to lose form later in the season and the Yorkshire committee was reluctant to replace the experienced cricketers with younger players. However, off the field, Yorkshire became increasingly successful, and the profits made by the club paid for improvements to be made to the Bramall Lane Ground and increased player wages through the introduction of travelling expenses and talent money where good performances were financially rewarded.[43] An influx of what proved to be effective new players saw Yorkshire finish second to Lancashire in the unofficial Championship for 1881, but more significant was the debut for the county of Lord Hawke, then aged 21.[52]

The team faded again in 1882 and Hawke, who had refused the captaincy earlier, was appointed team captain at the end of the season, the first amateur to hold this position.[53] Previous captains had all been professionals: Roger Iddison (1863–1872), Joseph Rowbotham (1873 and 1875), Luke Greenwood (1874), Ephraim Lockwood (1876–1877) and Tom Emmett (1878–1882). Hawke remained in charge for 28 seasons until 1910, during which time the team won eight County Championships.[54]

1883–1918 Edit

 
Caricature of Lord Hawke by Spy, first published in Vanity Fair on 24 September 1892 with the caption "Yorkshire Cricket".

In an obituary tribute, the editor of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack said that Lord Hawke's "strength of character was tested" when, as a young man on leaving Cambridge University, he undertook the responsibility of captaining the Yorkshire side, composed at that time of "elements that were not entirely harmonious". Owing to Hawke's "tact, judgment and integrity", he moulded the Eleven into "the best and probably the most united county cricket team in England".[55]

Yorkshire to 1883 was widely seen as an idiosyncratic team and, though Hawke's primary task as captain was to lead the team to fulfilment of its potential, his biggest challenge was to unite the club's geographical and social factions.[56] At the end of the 1882 season, in addition to appointing Hawke as captain, the committee agreed to reorganise itself for the first time since the club's foundation and began a process which eventually made the club representative of the whole county and not just Sheffield.[57]

Hawke succeeded Emmett in 1883 and remained as official captain for 27 years, but at first he was careful to take his time and did not make too many changes. Yorkshire improved in 1883 and finished second behind Nottinghamshire in the unofficial County Championship.[58][59] However, the remainder of the 1880s was disappointing for the team and its supporters. Kilburn said that Yorkshire "continued to be an unreliable side, mingling brilliant achievement with miserable performance".[60] The basic problem was that the older players were past their peak while younger replacements did not make the progress expected.[61][62] A poor season on the field in 1889 was reflected by reduced income and changes were made with several good new players being introduced.[63] These included Jack Brown, David Hunter and Stanley Jackson, while Bobby Peel was becoming increasingly effective as a bowling all-rounder.[63][64] They were followed by John Tunnicliffe, David Denton, Ted Wainwright and George Hirst. Hawke worked on fielding practice and the players became specialised and efficient as fielders.[65]

In 1893, the club's initial reorganisation was completed and was finalised after Ellison died in 1898 and Hawke assumed the club presidency as well as captaincy.[66] When Wostinholm died in 1902 after being club secretary for 38 years, the county offices were moved from Sheffield to the more central location of Leeds.[67]

It was in 1893 that the team finally came good and Yorkshire won their first official County Championship. Hodgson wrote that it was "perhaps ... the first confirmation of Hawke's striving for teamwork and discipline".[68] Yorkshire achieved second and third places in 1894 and 1895.[69] The team continued to develop as Brown and Tunnicliffe established an effective opening partnership backed up by Denton and Jackson while Peel, Wainwright and Hirst carried the bowling attack.[65]

Yorkshire historian R. S. Holmes described Yorkshire as "prodigious" in 1896, when they won their second title with some outstanding batting performances including a championship record total of 887 against Warwickshire.[65] Hawke began the practice of paying the professionals over the winter, initially £2 per week; the scheme was later modified to include bonuses.[70] Peel was sacked in 1897 after appearing drunk on the field and was replaced in 1898 by Wilfred Rhodes, who took 141 wickets in his debut season.[71] In the same season, Brown and Tunnicliffe established a record partnership for the first wicket when they scored 554 against Derbyshire at Chesterfield. Yorkshire won their third Championship in 1898 and narrowly failed in 1899 when only a defeat late in the season by Kent prevented the retention of the title.[72]

 
Wilfred Rhodes made his debut in 1898 and went on to take a record 3,598 wickets for Yorkshire.

Between 1900 and 1902, Yorkshire lost only twice in the County Championship, both times to Somerset, and won the County Championship in all three seasons largely thanks to their two outstanding all-rounders Hirst and Rhodes.[73] When Joseph Wolstinholm retired as club secretary after the 1902 season, he was succeeded by Frederick Toone who held the post until his death in June 1930 and formed a successful liaison with Hawke. Toone and Hawke worked together to improve the terms and conditions of professional players' contracts. To 1914, they were paid £5 for a home match and £6 for an away match with a £1 win bonus. Players who had received their county cap were obliged to join the Cricketers' Friendly Society and were paid a winter wage of £2 a week.[74]

Yorkshire remained a strong championship contender through the 1903 to 1914 seasons and won a further three titles in this period, also finishing as runners-up three times.[66] They won their seventh title in 1905 after being third and second in 1903 and 1904 respectively. In 1906, George Hirst achieved a unique "double-double" by scoring 2,385 runs and taking 208 wickets.[66] The 1906 championship was decided on the last day of the season. Yorkshire lost to Gloucestershire by a single run and were overtaken by Kent, who won their last match against Hampshire by an innings. Having finished third in 1907, Yorkshire went through the 1908 season unbeaten and bowled Northamptonshire out for 27 and 15, the aggregate score of 42 being the lowest in English first-class cricket.[75] Yorkshire finished third in 1909 but then dropped to eighth and seventh in the next two seasons before a recovery in 1912 brought their last title before the First World War. While Hirst, Rhodes and Denton continued to excel, Yorkshire gained much in the last four years before the war from two new all-rounders, Major Booth and Alonzo Drake, both of whom were an outstanding success.[76] Another newcomer was Arthur Dolphin, who replaced the retired David Hunter as first-choice wicketkeeper.[77] In 1913 and the unfinished 1914 season, Yorkshire finished second and fourth. Lord Hawke played only a few matches in 1909 and formally resigned as captain in 1910.[77] He was succeeded by Everard Radcliffe, who held the post until the end of the 1911 season; and then by Sir Archibald White, who led the team until the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914.[78]

1919–1945 Edit

Yorkshire won the first post-war Championship in 1919, a year which saw the debuts of Herbert Sutcliffe and Emmott Robinson, and remained a dominant force in the County Championship until the Second World War. They won every year from 1922 to 1925 and seven more times in the 1930s. The team won 25 games in 1923, for instance, with Rhodes and Roy Kilner doing the double in these matches alone, while four other batsmen scored 1,000 runs and three other bowlers, including George Macaulay, took 100 wickets.[citation needed]

Yorkshire's quintessential rivalry is with Lancashire via the Roses Match. The importance of this match reached a peak during the inter-war period when, for many years, Yorkshire and Lancashire were the dominant teams in English cricket. The writings of Neville Cardus at this time were instrumental in emphasising the sense of rivalry between the two teams.[citation needed]

Wilfred Rhodes retired in 1930, taking 73 wickets and scoring 478 runs in his final season at the age of 53. J. M. Kilburn wrote in the Yorkshire Post: "He had bowled at W. G. Grace, and he bowled at Don Bradman. At 20, at 30, at 40 and at 50 he had shown himself master of his world, and his kingdom was never usurped".[citation needed] Rhodes was succeeded by Hedley Verity, another skilful slow left armer. In 1932, Verity performed the greatest bowling feat in first-class cricket - ten wickets for ten runs against Nottinghamshire at Headingley.[citation needed] Percy Holmes and Sutcliffe had a record opening stand of 555 against Essex at Leyton in 1932. Len Hutton began his career in the 1930s.[citation needed]

1946–1970 Edit

Large crowds flocked to the cricket after the Second World War with 47,000 people attending the 3 days of the Roses Match at Bramall Lane in 1946.[citation needed] Yorkshire won the first post-war Championship. New players after the war included spinner Johnny Wardle, all-rounder Brian Close and fast bowler Fred Trueman. Another newcomer Bob Appleyard became the first bowler to take 200 wickets in his first full season in 1951.[citation needed] The 1950s were dominated by Surrey, who won seven successive championships. Yorkshire had internal problems which were resolved before the 1959 season in which Yorkshire recovered the title under Ronnie Burnet.[citation needed]

The 1960s saw a new Yorkshire team emerge that dominated English cricket. Brian Close was made captain in 1963 and won the Championship in his first season. The team included Fred Trueman, all-rounder Ray Illingworth, wicket-keeper Jimmy Binks and Test batsmen Geoffrey Boycott, Doug Padgett, Phil Sharpe and John Hampshire. The team began to break up after winning a third successive title in 1968 and Close was controversially sacked in 1970.[79]

1971–2000 Edit

There followed a long-running current of unrest in the club. There was sadness too in 1973 when Bramall Lane, the club's first ever home, was finally closed to cricket after over 400 first-class matches and was converted into a specialist football stadium.[citation needed]

Geoff Boycott captained Yorkshire for most of the 1970s, but competitive success eluded the team even when Boycott left Test cricket for three years to concentrate on the county game. He was sacked as captain amid much internal furore after the 1978 season. Ray Illingworth returned from Leicestershire as team manager and, in 1982 at the age of 50, took over the captaincy. Yorkshire finished bottom of the 17-strong County Championship for the first time in 1983 but won the John Player (later National) League for the first time. There was further controversy when Boycott was not offered a new contract. The outcome of this was that the general committee resigned and Boycott, having already been elected to the new committee, was reinstated as a player. Meanwhile, Brian Close became chairman of the cricket committee. Success continued to elude Yorkshire although Phil Carrick led the team to a Benson and Hedges Cup triumph in 1987.[citation needed]

Yorkshire put themselves at a self-evident disadvantage from 1968 until 1992 by insisting that all its players must have been born within the historic county boundaries of Yorkshire, while all the other county teams strengthened themselves by signing overseas Test players. In 1992, the birth qualification rule was first modified to include those who had been educated within the county, a dispensation that allowed Michael Vaughan to play; and was then eventually abandoned altogether. Yorkshire's first ever overseas player that season was 19-year-old Sachin Tendulkar.[80]

2001 to present Edit

Yorkshire finally won the County Championship again in 2001 when the captain was David Byas. Yorkshire had mixed success in the first decade of the 21st century but finished a close third in the 2010 championship under Andrew Gale.[citation needed]

There had for many years been a controversial issue about the apparent inability of players from Yorkshire's large ethnic minority population to make their way at the club. Tendulkar was the first Asian player to represent Yorkshire, but he was an overseas player. It was not until 2003 that Dewsbury's Ismail Dawood became the first British-born Asian to play for Yorkshire. He was followed by Ajmal Shahzad and Adil Rashid who have both represented England. In 2007, Azeem Rafiq as a member of Yorkshire's academy team became the first player of an Asian background to captain England at any level when he was appointed U-15 captain.[81] In the summer of 2012, Rafiq stepped in for the injured Andrew Gale to captain the team in six T20 matches, becoming the first player of Asian origin to lead the county, as well as the youngest captain in the club's history.[82]

The club were relegated at the end of a disappointing 2011 season, leading to major restructuring in the coaching staff, with former Yorkshire and Australia player Jason Gillespie brought in as coach.[83] After swiftly regaining promotion, Gillespie set about revamping the team who made a strong title challenge in 2013, eventually finishing runners-up.[84] Yorkshire improved on that by winning the title in both 2014 and 2015, which was their last to date.[citation needed]

Accusations of institutional racism Edit

In 2020, Yorkshire were accused of institutional racism by former player Azeem Rafiq.[85] In 2021, the ECB suspended Yorkshire from holding Test matches because their handling of the issue was causing reputational damage to the sport, while former Yorkshire captain Gary Ballance, who admitted using racist language, was indefinitely suspended from national selection. The ECB wrote in a statement that there were problems with the governance and management of the club.[86]

Badge and colours Edit

Lord Hawke, in the early days of his captaincy, designed the white rose badge. Copying the idea from Lancashire, who already had adopted the red rose as a symbol, Hawke designed a rose which, unlike Lancashire's, was not a real flower. He created a rose with eleven petals, to represent the eleven players of the team, based on the hedge rose. Only players who had received their county cap were allowed to wear the badge. It was not until the 1980s that the committee allowed the design to be placed on merchandise as a marketing device.[87] Yorkshire's club colours are dark blue, light blue and gold; these are knitted in bands forming the v-neck of each player's sweater.[88]

Ground history Edit

 
Headingley – East Stand

As with all county cricket clubs, Yorkshire represents the historic county and not any modern or current administrative unit. In Yorkshire's case, this means the three ridings and the City of York, although the club played some home matches outside the historic borders at Sheffield's Abbeydale Park, which was historically part of Derbyshire, from 1974 to 1996.[89]

The club was founded on 8 January 1863 in the Adelphi Hotel, Sheffield and was initially based at Bramall Lane. Yorkshire first played at North Marine Road, Scarborough in the 1878 season. This remains the venue for the annual Scarborough Festival matches. Headingley was first established in 1888 and Test cricket was first played there in 1899, eight years later than it hosted its inaugural first-class match when Yorkshire played Kent in 1891, the year in which the club's headquarters moved there. The "out grounds" in Hull, Sheffield, Bradford, Middlesbrough and Harrogate were used with great success until the 1970s.[citation needed]

 
Headingley – West Stand

On 31 December 2005, Yorkshire purchased the Headingley cricket ground for £12 million from the Leeds Cricket, Football and Athletic Company, parent company of the Leeds rugby league club, with the help of a £9 million loan from Leeds City Council. This purchase ensures that Test cricket continues at the venue with a 15-year staging agreement. On 11 January 2006, the stadium was officially renamed the Headingley Carnegie Stadium as a result of sponsorship from Leeds Metropolitan University and the club announced plans on 11 January 2006 to rebuild the stand next to the rugby ground with 3,000 extra seats, taking capacity to 20,000.[90] The club also announced plans to redevelop the Winter shed (North) stand on 25 August 2006 providing a £12.5 million pavilion complex.[91]

Sponsorship Edit

The club was founded in 1863 to be owned by its members who have elected various officials including the club's general committee, which existed until 2002 when it was replaced by a board of management headed by a chief executive. The office of club President still exists (see list below) and (in 2017) there are seven board members including the chief executive and the director of cricket. In addition to the board members, there are a director of finance and a human resources manager who is also personal assistant (PA) to both the board and chief executive. Among other roles are coaching, groundstaff, physiotherapy, operations, marketing, retail and community development. The once-influential post of club Secretary effectively ceased in 2002 although the club did have a company secretary for three years. That function has now disappeared under the broader structure and the present secretary as such is the finance director.[92] Like all county clubs, Yorkshire relies heavily on sponsorship and numerous companies have formed deals with the club over many years. Current partners and sponsors can be found on the club website.[93]

Year Kit Manufacturer First-Class Shirt Sponsor One-Day Shirt Sponsor T20 Shirt Sponsor
1999 Asics Yorkshire Tea
2000
2001
2002 Lee Cooper
2003 Exito
2004 Costcutter
2005 Bradford & Bingley
2006
2007
2008 Canterbury
2009
2010 Gray-Nicolls Visit Yorkshire
2011 JCT600[94]
2012
2013
2014 Puma[95] Mazars[96]
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020 William Hill
2021 Nike[97] NIC Services Group Nuii
2022 Kukri[98] NIC Services Group Seat Unique

Players Edit

Current squad Edit

  • No. denotes the player's squad number, as worn on the back of their shirt.
  • ‡ denotes players with international caps.
  •  *  denotes a player who has been awarded a county cap.
No. Name Nat Birth date Batting style Bowling style Notes
Batters
9 Adam Lyth* ‡   England (1987-09-25) 25 September 1987 (age 35) Left-handed Right-arm off break
23 James Wharton   England (2001-02-01) 1 February 2001 (age 22) Right-handed Right-arm off break
29 Dawid Malan* ‡   England (1987-09-03) 3 September 1987 (age 36) Left-handed Right-arm leg break England incremental contract
31 Will Fraine   England (1996-06-13) 13 June 1996 (age 27) Right-handed Right-arm medium
33 Finlay Bean   England (2002-04-16) 16 April 2002 (age 21) Left-handed
59 Saud Shakeel* ‡   Pakistan (1995-09-05) 5 September 1995 (age 28) Left-handed Left-arm medium Overseas player
66 Joe Root* ‡   England (1990-12-30) 30 December 1990 (age 32) Right-handed Right-arm off break England central contract
68 Will Luxton   England (2003-05-06) 6 May 2003 (age 20) Right-handed Right-arm medium
88 Harry Brook* ‡   England (1999-02-22) 22 February 1999 (age 24) Right-handed Right-arm medium England incremental contract
94 Shan Masood* ‡   Pakistan (1989-10-14) 14 October 1989 (age 33) Left-handed Right-arm medium Club Captain;
Overseas player
All-rounders
7 Matthew Fisher* ‡   England (1997-11-09) 9 November 1997 (age 25) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium England pace development contract
16 Ben Mike   England (1998-08-24) 24 August 1998 (age 25) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
18 George Hill   England (2001-01-24) 24 January 2001 (age 22) Right-handed Right-arm medium
44 Jordan Thompson*   England (1996-10-09) 9 October 1996 (age 26) Left-handed Right-arm fast-medium
45 Yash Vagadia   England (2004-05-07) 7 May 2004 (age 19) Right-handed Right-arm off break
47 Dom Bess* ‡   England (1997-07-22) 22 July 1997 (age 26) Right-handed Right-arm off break
77 Matt Revis   England (2001-11-15) 15 November 2001 (age 21) Right-handed Right-arm medium
96 David Wiese* ‡   Namibia[a] (1985-05-18) 18 May 1985 (age 38) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Overseas player (T20 only)
Wicket-keepers
11 Shai Hope* ‡   West Indies (1993-11-10) 10 November 1993 (age 29) Right-handed Overseas player
12 Jonathan Tattersall*   England (1994-12-15) 15 December 1994 (age 28) Right-handed Right-arm leg break
21 Jonny Bairstow* ‡   England (1989-09-26) 26 September 1989 (age 33) Right-handed Right-arm medium England central contract
22 Harry Duke   England (2001-09-06) 6 September 2001 (age 22) Right-handed
27 Ryan Rickelton ‡   South Africa (1996-07-11) 11 July 1996 (age 27) Left-handed Overseas player
Bowlers
3 Adil Rashid* ‡   England (1988-02-17) 17 February 1988 (age 35) Right-handed Right-arm leg break White ball contract;
England central contract
4 Matt Milnes   England (1994-07-29) 29 July 1994 (age 29) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
5 Jafer Chohan   England (2002-07-11) 11 July 2002 (age 21) Right-handed Right-arm leg break
6 Mark Steketee   Australia (1994-01-17) 17 January 1994 (age 29) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Overseas player
8 Dom Leech   England (2001-01-10) 10 January 2001 (age 22) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
10 Ben Coad*   England (1994-01-10) 10 January 1994 (age 29) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
24 Jack Shutt   England (1997-06-24) 24 June 1997 (age 26) Right-handed Right-arm off break
26 Ben Cliff   England (2002-10-23) 23 October 2002 (age 20) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
90 Mickey Edwards   Australia (1994-12-23) 23 December 1994 (age 28) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium UK passport
  1. ^ Wiese has also played international cricket for South Africa.

All players Edit

The following represented England while playing for Yorkshire:

Club captains Edit

Four Yorkshire players – Stanley Jackson, Len Hutton, Ray Illingworth and Michael Vaughan – have captained England to success in The Ashes yet none of them was club captain at the time (Ray Illingworth had just left Yorkshire for Leicestershire when he became captain of England; he later returned to Yorkshire).[citation needed]

From 1883 to 1959 inclusive, Yorkshire always had an amateur club captain. The extent of leadership given by these gentlemen has long been a subject of discussion. Hawke and Sellers are generally held to have been autocratic and decisive, but in fact both relied heavily on sound professional advice. At the other extreme, Wilfred Rhodes is supposed to have been the de facto captain from 1920 to 1930, but it was Major Arthur Lupton who restored discipline to the side when a row erupted between Yorkshire and Middlesex in 1924.[99]

Lord Hawke famously said at the Yorkshire Annual General Meeting in 1925: "Pray God, no professional shall ever captain England. I love and admire them all, but we have always had an amateur skipper and when the day comes when we shall have no more amateurs captaining England it will be a thousand pities."[100] In view of this, it is perhaps surprising that, when Arthur Lupton retired at the end of the 1927 season, Hawke was one of the sponsors of the suggestion that Herbert Sutcliffe should become Yorkshire captain. In the event, there was sufficient opposition to the idea amongst the Yorkshire committee and players (some of the latter felt that Wilfred Rhodes, as senior professional, had a prior claim), that the proposal was dropped.[100]

In 1960, Vic Wilson became Yorkshire's first professional captain since Tom Emmett when he succeeded Ronnie Burnet. Brian Close, who took over in 1963, has been Yorkshire's most successful professional captain with four County Championships.[101]

Club officials Edit

Directors of Cricket Edit

Managing Director of Cricket Edit

Coaching staff Edit

Officers Edit

Club Presidents Edit

Those who have held the office of Yorkshire President are:[103]

From To Name
1863 1863 Thomas Barker
1864 1897 Michael Ellison
1898 1938 Martin Hawke, 7th Baron Hawke
1939 1947 Sir Stanley Jackson
1948 1960 Tom Taylor
1961 1973 Sir William Worsley
1974 1981 Sir Kenneth Parkinson
1981 1983 Norman Yardley
1984 1989 Viscount Mountgarret
1989 1990 Sir Leonard Hutton
1991 1999 Sir Lawrence Byford
1999 2004 Robin Smith
2004 2006 David Jones
2006 2008 Bob Appleyard
2008 2009 Brian Close
2010 2011 Ray Illingworth
2012 2014 Geoffrey Boycott
2014 2016 Dickie Bird
2016 2017 John Hampshire
2017 2019 Richard Hutton
2019 2022 Geoff Cope
2023 Jane Powell

Club Secretaries Edit

Those who have held the office of Yorkshire Secretary are:[103]

From To Name
1863 1863 George Padley
1864 1902 Joseph B. Wostinholm
1903 1930 Frederick Toone
1931 1971 John Nash
1972 1991 Joe Lister
1991 2002 David Ryder
2002 2005 Brian Bouttell[note 2]

Honours Edit

First XI honours Edit

  • County Championship (32) – 1893, 1896, 1898, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1905, 1908, 1912, 1919, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1935, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1946, 1959, 1960, 1962, 1963, 1966, 1967, 1968, 2001, 2014, 2015; shared (1) – 1949
  • FP Trophy[note 3] (3) – 1965, 1969, 2002
  • National League[note 4] (1) – 1983
  • Benson & Hedges Cup (1) – 1987

Second XI honours Edit

  • Second XI Championship (5) – 1977, 1984, 1991, 2003, 2022; shared (1) – 1987
  • Second XI Trophy (1) – 2009, 2017
  • Minor Counties Championship (5) – 1947, 1957, 1958, 1968, 1971

Other honours Edit

  • Fenner Trophy (3) – 1972, 1974, 1981
  • Asda Challenge (1) – 1987
  • Ward Knockout Cup (1) – 1989
  • Joshua Tetley Festival Trophy (6) – 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998; shared (1) – 1992
  • Tilcon Trophy (1) – 1988
  • Under-25 Competition (3) – 1976, 1978, 1987
  • Bain Clarkson Trophy (1) – 1994

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Gloucestershire captain W. G. Grace nevertheless believed that Yorkshire were more worthy champions than his county.[43]
  2. ^ Bouttell was in fact a company secretary, Yorkshire's organisational structure having been redefined in 2002 when the general committee was replaced by a board of management.
  3. ^ Formerly known as the Gillette Cup (1963–1980), NatWest Trophy (1981–2000) and C&G Trophy (2001–2006)
  4. ^ Formerly known as the Sunday League (1969–1998).

References Edit

  1. ^ Waghorn 1906, p. 27.
  2. ^ "At the Sign of the Wicket", F. S. Ashley-Cooper, Cricket, issue 535, 26 April 1900, p. 83.
  3. ^ Maun 2011, pp. 78–79, 112.
  4. ^ Hodgson 1989, p. 8.
  5. ^ Kilburn 1970, p. 9.
  6. ^ a b c Woodhouse 1989, p. 7.
  7. ^ Hawke, Lord (1932). "Fifty years of Yorkshire county". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  8. ^ a b Hodgson 1989, p. 10.
  9. ^ "England v Sussex, 1827". CricketArchive. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
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  11. ^ "Yorkshire v Norfolk, 1833". CricketArchive. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  12. ^ Hodgson 1989, p. 11.
  13. ^ a b Hodgson 1989, p. 12.
  14. ^ a b c d e Hodgson 1989, p. 14.
  15. ^ a b c d e Kilburn 1970, p. 10.
  16. ^ a b Kilburn 1970, p. 14.
  17. ^ a b Hodgson 1989, p. 16.
  18. ^ Kilburn 1970, p. 13.
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  20. ^ Hodgson 1989, p. 17.
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  71. ^ Hodgson 1989, pp. 70–73.
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  75. ^ Hodgson 1989, p. 83.
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  92. ^ "Yorkshire club officials". Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  93. ^ "Sponsors & Partners – Yorkshire County Cricket Club". Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  94. ^ "JCT600 backs YCCC with main sponsorship deal". Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  95. ^ "Puma enters English cricket market with Yorkshire". SportBusiness Sponsorship. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  96. ^ "Six and out for Mazars – The last over". Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  97. ^ "Yorkshire unveil Nike as new kit partner". Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  98. ^ "Kukri signs partnership with Yorkshire County Cricket Club". Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  99. ^ Woodhouse 1989, p. 333
  100. ^ a b Gibson, Alan (1989). The Cricket Captains of England. The Pavilion Library. pp. 154–56. ISBN 1-85145-390-3.
  101. ^ "Brian Close". Cricinfo. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
  102. ^ "Kabir joins Yorkshire as assistant coach". BBC Sport. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  103. ^ a b The Yorkshire County Cricket Club Yearbook (2010 ed.). Ilkley: Great Northern Books. March 2010. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-905080-75-5.

Bibliography Edit

External links Edit

  • Official website

yorkshire, 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, scholar, . 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 Yorkshire County Cricket Club news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Yorkshire 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 Yorkshire Yorkshire s first team is the most successful in English cricketing history with 33 County Championship titles including one shared The team s most recent Championship title was in 2015 The club s limited overs team is called the Yorkshire Vikings and their kit colours are Cambridge blue Oxford blue and yellow Yorkshire County Cricket ClubOne Day nameYorkshire VikingsPersonnelCaptainShan MasoodCoachOttis GibsonOverseas player s Shan MasoodChief executiveStephen VaughanTeam informationFounded1863Home groundHeadingley Cricket Ground LeedsCapacity18 350HistoryFirst class debutSurreyin 1863at The OvalChampionship wins33 including 1 shared Pro40 wins1FP Trophy wins3Twenty20 Cup wins0B amp H Cup wins1Official websitewww yorkshireccc comYorkshire teams formed by earlier organisations essentially the old Sheffield Cricket Club played top class cricket from the 18th century and the county club has always held first class status Yorkshire have competed in the County Championship since the official start of the competition in 1890 and have played in every top level domestic cricket competition in England The team play most of their home games at Headingley Cricket Ground in Leeds Another significant venue is at North Marine Road Ground Scarborough which houses the annual Scarborough Festival Yorkshire have used other grounds in the past including Bramall Lane Sheffield which was the club s original home Horton Park Avenue Bradford St George s Road Cricket Ground Harrogate The Circle Kingston upon Hull and Acklam Park Middlesbrough Contents 1 Earliest cricket in Yorkshire 2 Club history 2 1 Origin 2 2 1863 1882 2 3 1883 1918 2 4 1919 1945 2 5 1946 1970 2 6 1971 2000 2 7 2001 to present 2 8 Accusations of institutional racism 3 Badge and colours 4 Ground history 5 Sponsorship 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 6 2 All players 6 3 Club captains 7 Club officials 7 1 Directors of Cricket 7 2 Managing Director of Cricket 7 3 Coaching staff 8 Officers 8 1 Club Presidents 8 2 Club Secretaries 9 Honours 9 1 First XI honours 9 2 Second XI honours 9 3 Other honours 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksEarliest cricket in Yorkshire EditThe earliest certain reference to cricket in Yorkshire dates from 1751 when local matches were held in Sheffield and a game took place on or soon after Monday 5 August at Stanwick near Richmond between the Duke of Cleveland s XI and Earl of Northumberland s XI the same teams earlier played a game at Durham 1 2 Sheffield Cricket Club was probably formed about this time and there are references to Sheffield matches in Derbyshire in 1757 and home and away matches against Leeds in 1765 3 A club was formed in Leeds in 1760 and in York in 1784 4 Bedale in North Yorkshire was a noted centre in the early 19th century 5 But cricket in most rural areas was slow to develop 6 Yorkshire cricket became centred around Sheffield where it was more organised than in the rest of the county 6 From 1771 Sheffield played semi regular matches against Nottingham Cricket Club 7 Nottingham was generally the better side and Sheffield sometimes played with more players to give them a greater chance of victory 8 Nevertheless the Sheffield player Tom Marsden was regarded as one of the leading players in the country in the 1820s 8 Cricket increased in popularity after one of the 1827 roundarm trial matches was played at the purpose built Darnall New Ground in Sheffield to evaluate the new style of roundarm bowling 9 After this match many new cricket clubs were formed in the county 10 In 1833 Yorkshire was first used as the name of the team although it contained eleven Sheffield players for a game against Norfolk at the Hyde Park Ground in Sheffield 11 The name may have arisen from a need to match the status of Norfolk as a county rather than a city There were some differences in the organisation of the Yorkshire team vis a vis those called Sheffield as it included three amateurs while Sheffield teams were entirely professional 12 Yorkshire as such played intermittently over the next thirty years but was not organised in any formal way 6 Among their opponents were Sussex in 1835 Manchester in 1844 and 1845 and Kent in 1849 Also in 1849 Yorkshire played against a Lancashire team for the first time though it was really a Sheffield v Manchester match 13 By 1855 Sheffield and Yorkshire were playing at Bramall Lane 13 Club history EditOrigin Edit nbsp Roger Iddison the first captain of Yorkshire he led the team until 1872 On 7 March 1861 during a meeting at the Adelphi Hotel in Sheffield a Match Fund Committee was established to run Yorkshire county matches The committee was made up from the management committee of the Bramall Lane ground and representatives from clubs willing to pay 1 to the fund 14 But the committee was unable to persuade other clubs that it was not seeking to promote Sheffield cricket and a lack of funds prevented some matches being played in 1862 14 By this time there were several cricketers with good reputations and the county team was one of the strongest in England 14 Consequently on 8 January 1863 Yorkshire County Cricket Club was formed Membership was unlimited and cost a minimum of 10s and 6d 14 Like most first class cricket clubs of the time Yorkshire relied on private patronage with administrators paying to serve and moneyed enthusiasts acting as ready match sponsors 15 The majority of players were freelance professionals who were paid a usual match fee of 5 from which all travel and accommodation had to be paid 15 Travel could be arduous living away from home could be rough and sometimes the match fee was not enough to cover expenses especially if as was often a problem with early Yorkshire cricketers the ale house was a temptation 16 The first club President was former player Thomas Barker who had become Mayor of Sheffield although he probably never attended any meetings Michael Ellison was the first club Treasurer and at some point early in Yorkshire s history he assumed the Presidency 16 Most official accounts record Ellison as Yorkshire s first President 17 Joseph J B Wostinholm became the first of four long serving club Secretaries in 1864 17 The first team captain was Roger Iddison a professional cricketer 18 The objective of the club was to play matches either in Sheffield or in any other towns of the county according as arrangements may be made 14 Other locations in Yorkshire were unable or unwilling to host fixtures in the first years of the club and Bradford and York continued to attempt to organise games in competition with Yorkshire sometimes causing confusion among other counties 19 Attempts to form an alternative Yorkshire team continued intermittently until 1884 20 although by 1873 most clubs had accepted the authority of the Sheffield based county club 21 1863 1882 Edit nbsp George Freeman a key factor in Yorkshire s success in the late 1860s played for the team mainly between 1865 and 1870 taking 209 wickets in 32 matches 22 Yorkshire played their inaugural first class match against Surrey at The Oval on 4 5 and 6 June 1863 Surrey scored 315 runs to which Yorkshire replied with 257 Surrey were bowled out for 60 before the match was drawn 23 24 The team recorded their first win in the following match against the strong Nottinghamshire team and although they lost the return match won two and lost only one of the four matches played in their first season 25 In 1864 the team won two and lost four of seven matches 26 In 1865 the club and players became involved in a dispute Five players Roger Iddison George Anderson George Atkinson Joseph Rowbotham and Ned Stephenson refused to play against Surrey 15 This concerned a controversy that arose in 1862 when Iddison and Anderson played for an All England team against Surrey at The Oval and the Kent bowler Edgar Willsher was repeatedly no balled for using an overarm action by an umpire whom they claimed had been appointed by Surrey specifically for that purpose 15 Anderson stated in 1865 that he would not play against those who have combined to sweep us from the cricket field altogether if they could 15 The dispute was about a point of principle and centred on the right of bowlers to use an overarm action which had been legalised ahead of the 1864 season 27 Consequently with several important players missing Yorkshire did not win a game in 1865 and were forced to cancel some matches for the 1866 season The Yorkshire Committee and the players came to an understanding in early 1867 after the players apologised but Anderson never represented the county again 28 With the player dispute resolved Yorkshire won all seven of their matches in 1867 defeating Surrey Lancashire and Cambridgeshire 29 As a result the sporting press proclaimed Yorkshire to be the Champion County for the first time 30 The following year John Thewlis scored the first century for Yorkshire in first class cricket against Surrey at The Oval 21 in 1869 Joseph Rowbotham became the first man to score two centuries in a season for Yorkshire 31 Yorkshire won four games in both 1868 and 1869 one sports publication regarded Yorkshire as equal champions in the latter year 32 33 The team won six out of seven in 1870 to be acclaimed as Champion County again 34 Much of Yorkshire s success in these years came from the bowling combination of George Freeman and Tom Emmett 35 36 Following Freeman s retirement from regular cricket after 1870 Yorkshire declined winning fewer games in 1871 and 1872 as Gloucestershire rose to a position of dominance in County Cricket driven by the success of W G Grace and his brothers Conscious of the need to strengthen the club Yorkshire instituted a Colts team of young players 37 but replaced Iddison as captain at the end of the 1872 season Rowbotham another professional assumed the position 38 For the 1873 season county cricket moved a step closer towards an organised competition when the counties agreed qualification rules for players to be eligible for a team for many years this was considered to be start of the County Championship However the counties did not organise a formal competition and the Champion County was still decided by the press some publications disagreed 39 nbsp The Yorkshire team in 1875 was captained by Joseph Rowbotham Back row G Martin umpire John Thewlis Middle row George Pinder George Ulyett Tom Armitage Joseph Rowbotham Allen Hill Andrew Greenwood Front row Tom Emmett John Hicks Ephraim Lockwood Charlie Ullathorne 40 Despite the team containing effective players Yorkshire did not perform as well as expected over the next seasons The bowling attack was strong the team contained some experienced players and critics believed Ephraim Lockwood to be the best professional batsman in the country 41 In 1873 Yorkshire won seven games and lost five and for the following season Luke Greenwood replaced Rowbotham as captain 42 The team had an improved record but although second only to Gloucestershire Yorkshire lost heavily in both encounters between the teams note 1 44 Greenwood retired Rowbotham resumed the captaincy for 1875 45 and Lockwood took over in 1876 46 The team did not perform particularly well in either season 47 but their worst performance came in 1877 winning two games but none of the last ten and losing seven 48 This placed them eighth out of nine counties 41 Tom Emmett then took over as captain but the following two seasons brought mixed results as the team displayed inconsistency often losing to teams they should comfortably have beaten 49 Derek Hodgson in his official county history suggests a lack of discipline in the team throughout these years was to blame contemporary reports suggested the team drank too much alcohol to be effective 50 The players also suffered from public attention receiving generous hospitality at times which impacted on their performances 51 In these seasons the team often began well only to lose form later in the season and the Yorkshire committee was reluctant to replace the experienced cricketers with younger players However off the field Yorkshire became increasingly successful and the profits made by the club paid for improvements to be made to the Bramall Lane Ground and increased player wages through the introduction of travelling expenses and talent money where good performances were financially rewarded 43 An influx of what proved to be effective new players saw Yorkshire finish second to Lancashire in the unofficial Championship for 1881 but more significant was the debut for the county of Lord Hawke then aged 21 52 The team faded again in 1882 and Hawke who had refused the captaincy earlier was appointed team captain at the end of the season the first amateur to hold this position 53 Previous captains had all been professionals Roger Iddison 1863 1872 Joseph Rowbotham 1873 and 1875 Luke Greenwood 1874 Ephraim Lockwood 1876 1877 and Tom Emmett 1878 1882 Hawke remained in charge for 28 seasons until 1910 during which time the team won eight County Championships 54 1883 1918 Edit Main article History of Yorkshire County Cricket Club 1883 1918 nbsp Caricature of Lord Hawke by Spy first published in Vanity Fair on 24 September 1892 with the caption Yorkshire Cricket In an obituary tribute the editor of Wisden Cricketers Almanack said that Lord Hawke s strength of character was tested when as a young man on leaving Cambridge University he undertook the responsibility of captaining the Yorkshire side composed at that time of elements that were not entirely harmonious Owing to Hawke s tact judgment and integrity he moulded the Eleven into the best and probably the most united county cricket team in England 55 Yorkshire to 1883 was widely seen as an idiosyncratic team and though Hawke s primary task as captain was to lead the team to fulfilment of its potential his biggest challenge was to unite the club s geographical and social factions 56 At the end of the 1882 season in addition to appointing Hawke as captain the committee agreed to reorganise itself for the first time since the club s foundation and began a process which eventually made the club representative of the whole county and not just Sheffield 57 Hawke succeeded Emmett in 1883 and remained as official captain for 27 years but at first he was careful to take his time and did not make too many changes Yorkshire improved in 1883 and finished second behind Nottinghamshire in the unofficial County Championship 58 59 However the remainder of the 1880s was disappointing for the team and its supporters Kilburn said that Yorkshire continued to be an unreliable side mingling brilliant achievement with miserable performance 60 The basic problem was that the older players were past their peak while younger replacements did not make the progress expected 61 62 A poor season on the field in 1889 was reflected by reduced income and changes were made with several good new players being introduced 63 These included Jack Brown David Hunter and Stanley Jackson while Bobby Peel was becoming increasingly effective as a bowling all rounder 63 64 They were followed by John Tunnicliffe David Denton Ted Wainwright and George Hirst Hawke worked on fielding practice and the players became specialised and efficient as fielders 65 In 1893 the club s initial reorganisation was completed and was finalised after Ellison died in 1898 and Hawke assumed the club presidency as well as captaincy 66 When Wostinholm died in 1902 after being club secretary for 38 years the county offices were moved from Sheffield to the more central location of Leeds 67 It was in 1893 that the team finally came good and Yorkshire won their first official County Championship Hodgson wrote that it was perhaps the first confirmation of Hawke s striving for teamwork and discipline 68 Yorkshire achieved second and third places in 1894 and 1895 69 The team continued to develop as Brown and Tunnicliffe established an effective opening partnership backed up by Denton and Jackson while Peel Wainwright and Hirst carried the bowling attack 65 Yorkshire historian R S Holmes described Yorkshire as prodigious in 1896 when they won their second title with some outstanding batting performances including a championship record total of 887 against Warwickshire 65 Hawke began the practice of paying the professionals over the winter initially 2 per week the scheme was later modified to include bonuses 70 Peel was sacked in 1897 after appearing drunk on the field and was replaced in 1898 by Wilfred Rhodes who took 141 wickets in his debut season 71 In the same season Brown and Tunnicliffe established a record partnership for the first wicket when they scored 554 against Derbyshire at Chesterfield Yorkshire won their third Championship in 1898 and narrowly failed in 1899 when only a defeat late in the season by Kent prevented the retention of the title 72 nbsp Wilfred Rhodes made his debut in 1898 and went on to take a record 3 598 wickets for Yorkshire Between 1900 and 1902 Yorkshire lost only twice in the County Championship both times to Somerset and won the County Championship in all three seasons largely thanks to their two outstanding all rounders Hirst and Rhodes 73 When Joseph Wolstinholm retired as club secretary after the 1902 season he was succeeded by Frederick Toone who held the post until his death in June 1930 and formed a successful liaison with Hawke Toone and Hawke worked together to improve the terms and conditions of professional players contracts To 1914 they were paid 5 for a home match and 6 for an away match with a 1 win bonus Players who had received their county cap were obliged to join the Cricketers Friendly Society and were paid a winter wage of 2 a week 74 Yorkshire remained a strong championship contender through the 1903 to 1914 seasons and won a further three titles in this period also finishing as runners up three times 66 They won their seventh title in 1905 after being third and second in 1903 and 1904 respectively In 1906 George Hirst achieved a unique double double by scoring 2 385 runs and taking 208 wickets 66 The 1906 championship was decided on the last day of the season Yorkshire lost to Gloucestershire by a single run and were overtaken by Kent who won their last match against Hampshire by an innings Having finished third in 1907 Yorkshire went through the 1908 season unbeaten and bowled Northamptonshire out for 27 and 15 the aggregate score of 42 being the lowest in English first class cricket 75 Yorkshire finished third in 1909 but then dropped to eighth and seventh in the next two seasons before a recovery in 1912 brought their last title before the First World War While Hirst Rhodes and Denton continued to excel Yorkshire gained much in the last four years before the war from two new all rounders Major Booth and Alonzo Drake both of whom were an outstanding success 76 Another newcomer was Arthur Dolphin who replaced the retired David Hunter as first choice wicketkeeper 77 In 1913 and the unfinished 1914 season Yorkshire finished second and fourth Lord Hawke played only a few matches in 1909 and formally resigned as captain in 1910 77 He was succeeded by Everard Radcliffe who held the post until the end of the 1911 season and then by Sir Archibald White who led the team until the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914 78 1919 1945 Edit Yorkshire won the first post war Championship in 1919 a year which saw the debuts of Herbert Sutcliffe and Emmott Robinson and remained a dominant force in the County Championship until the Second World War They won every year from 1922 to 1925 and seven more times in the 1930s The team won 25 games in 1923 for instance with Rhodes and Roy Kilner doing the double in these matches alone while four other batsmen scored 1 000 runs and three other bowlers including George Macaulay took 100 wickets citation needed Yorkshire s quintessential rivalry is with Lancashire via the Roses Match The importance of this match reached a peak during the inter war period when for many years Yorkshire and Lancashire were the dominant teams in English cricket The writings of Neville Cardus at this time were instrumental in emphasising the sense of rivalry between the two teams citation needed Wilfred Rhodes retired in 1930 taking 73 wickets and scoring 478 runs in his final season at the age of 53 J M Kilburn wrote in the Yorkshire Post He had bowled at W G Grace and he bowled at Don Bradman At 20 at 30 at 40 and at 50 he had shown himself master of his world and his kingdom was never usurped citation needed Rhodes was succeeded by Hedley Verity another skilful slow left armer In 1932 Verity performed the greatest bowling feat in first class cricket ten wickets for ten runs against Nottinghamshire at Headingley citation needed Percy Holmes and Sutcliffe had a record opening stand of 555 against Essex at Leyton in 1932 Len Hutton began his career in the 1930s citation needed 1946 1970 Edit Large crowds flocked to the cricket after the Second World War with 47 000 people attending the 3 days of the Roses Match at Bramall Lane in 1946 citation needed Yorkshire won the first post war Championship New players after the war included spinner Johnny Wardle all rounder Brian Close and fast bowler Fred Trueman Another newcomer Bob Appleyard became the first bowler to take 200 wickets in his first full season in 1951 citation needed The 1950s were dominated by Surrey who won seven successive championships Yorkshire had internal problems which were resolved before the 1959 season in which Yorkshire recovered the title under Ronnie Burnet citation needed The 1960s saw a new Yorkshire team emerge that dominated English cricket Brian Close was made captain in 1963 and won the Championship in his first season The team included Fred Trueman all rounder Ray Illingworth wicket keeper Jimmy Binks and Test batsmen Geoffrey Boycott Doug Padgett Phil Sharpe and John Hampshire The team began to break up after winning a third successive title in 1968 and Close was controversially sacked in 1970 79 1971 2000 Edit There followed a long running current of unrest in the club There was sadness too in 1973 when Bramall Lane the club s first ever home was finally closed to cricket after over 400 first class matches and was converted into a specialist football stadium citation needed Geoff Boycott captained Yorkshire for most of the 1970s but competitive success eluded the team even when Boycott left Test cricket for three years to concentrate on the county game He was sacked as captain amid much internal furore after the 1978 season Ray Illingworth returned from Leicestershire as team manager and in 1982 at the age of 50 took over the captaincy Yorkshire finished bottom of the 17 strong County Championship for the first time in 1983 but won the John Player later National League for the first time There was further controversy when Boycott was not offered a new contract The outcome of this was that the general committee resigned and Boycott having already been elected to the new committee was reinstated as a player Meanwhile Brian Close became chairman of the cricket committee Success continued to elude Yorkshire although Phil Carrick led the team to a Benson and Hedges Cup triumph in 1987 citation needed Yorkshire put themselves at a self evident disadvantage from 1968 until 1992 by insisting that all its players must have been born within the historic county boundaries of Yorkshire while all the other county teams strengthened themselves by signing overseas Test players In 1992 the birth qualification rule was first modified to include those who had been educated within the county a dispensation that allowed Michael Vaughan to play and was then eventually abandoned altogether Yorkshire s first ever overseas player that season was 19 year old Sachin Tendulkar 80 2001 to present Edit Yorkshire finally won the County Championship again in 2001 when the captain was David Byas Yorkshire had mixed success in the first decade of the 21st century but finished a close third in the 2010 championship under Andrew Gale citation needed There had for many years been a controversial issue about the apparent inability of players from Yorkshire s large ethnic minority population to make their way at the club Tendulkar was the first Asian player to represent Yorkshire but he was an overseas player It was not until 2003 that Dewsbury s Ismail Dawood became the first British born Asian to play for Yorkshire He was followed by Ajmal Shahzad and Adil Rashid who have both represented England In 2007 Azeem Rafiq as a member of Yorkshire s academy team became the first player of an Asian background to captain England at any level when he was appointed U 15 captain 81 In the summer of 2012 Rafiq stepped in for the injured Andrew Gale to captain the team in six T20 matches becoming the first player of Asian origin to lead the county as well as the youngest captain in the club s history 82 The club were relegated at the end of a disappointing 2011 season leading to major restructuring in the coaching staff with former Yorkshire and Australia player Jason Gillespie brought in as coach 83 After swiftly regaining promotion Gillespie set about revamping the team who made a strong title challenge in 2013 eventually finishing runners up 84 Yorkshire improved on that by winning the title in both 2014 and 2015 which was their last to date citation needed Accusations of institutional racism Edit Main article Yorkshire County Cricket Club racism scandal In 2020 Yorkshire were accused of institutional racism by former player Azeem Rafiq 85 In 2021 the ECB suspended Yorkshire from holding Test matches because their handling of the issue was causing reputational damage to the sport while former Yorkshire captain Gary Ballance who admitted using racist language was indefinitely suspended from national selection The ECB wrote in a statement that there were problems with the governance and management of the club 86 Badge and colours EditLord Hawke in the early days of his captaincy designed the white rose badge Copying the idea from Lancashire who already had adopted the red rose as a symbol Hawke designed a rose which unlike Lancashire s was not a real flower He created a rose with eleven petals to represent the eleven players of the team based on the hedge rose Only players who had received their county cap were allowed to wear the badge It was not until the 1980s that the committee allowed the design to be placed on merchandise as a marketing device 87 Yorkshire s club colours are dark blue light blue and gold these are knitted in bands forming the v neck of each player s sweater 88 Ground history Edit nbsp Headingley East StandSee also List of Yorkshire County Cricket Club grounds As with all county cricket clubs Yorkshire represents the historic county and not any modern or current administrative unit In Yorkshire s case this means the three ridings and the City of York although the club played some home matches outside the historic borders at Sheffield s Abbeydale Park which was historically part of Derbyshire from 1974 to 1996 89 The club was founded on 8 January 1863 in the Adelphi Hotel Sheffield and was initially based at Bramall Lane Yorkshire first played at North Marine Road Scarborough in the 1878 season This remains the venue for the annual Scarborough Festival matches Headingley was first established in 1888 and Test cricket was first played there in 1899 eight years later than it hosted its inaugural first class match when Yorkshire played Kent in 1891 the year in which the club s headquarters moved there The out grounds in Hull Sheffield Bradford Middlesbrough and Harrogate were used with great success until the 1970s citation needed nbsp Headingley West StandOn 31 December 2005 Yorkshire purchased the Headingley cricket ground for 12 million from the Leeds Cricket Football and Athletic Company parent company of the Leeds rugby league club with the help of a 9 million loan from Leeds City Council This purchase ensures that Test cricket continues at the venue with a 15 year staging agreement On 11 January 2006 the stadium was officially renamed the Headingley Carnegie Stadium as a result of sponsorship from Leeds Metropolitan University and the club announced plans on 11 January 2006 to rebuild the stand next to the rugby ground with 3 000 extra seats taking capacity to 20 000 90 The club also announced plans to redevelop the Winter shed North stand on 25 August 2006 providing a 12 5 million pavilion complex 91 Sponsorship EditThe club was founded in 1863 to be owned by its members who have elected various officials including the club s general committee which existed until 2002 when it was replaced by a board of management headed by a chief executive The office of club President still exists see list below and in 2017 there are seven board members including the chief executive and the director of cricket In addition to the board members there are a director of finance and a human resources manager who is also personal assistant PA to both the board and chief executive Among other roles are coaching groundstaff physiotherapy operations marketing retail and community development The once influential post of club Secretary effectively ceased in 2002 although the club did have a company secretary for three years That function has now disappeared under the broader structure and the present secretary as such is the finance director 92 Like all county clubs Yorkshire relies heavily on sponsorship and numerous companies have formed deals with the club over many years Current partners and sponsors can be found on the club website 93 Year Kit Manufacturer First Class Shirt Sponsor One Day Shirt Sponsor T20 Shirt Sponsor1999 Asics Yorkshire Tea200020012002 Lee Cooper2003 Exito2004 Costcutter2005 Bradford amp Bingley200620072008 Canterbury20092010 Gray Nicolls Visit Yorkshire2011 JCT600 94 201220132014 Puma 95 Mazars 96 201520162017201820192020 William Hill2021 Nike 97 NIC Services Group Nuii2022 Kukri 98 NIC Services Group Seat UniquePlayers EditCurrent squad Edit No denotes the player s squad number as worn on the back of their shirt denotes players with international caps denotes a player who has been awarded a county cap No Name Nat Birth date Batting style Bowling style NotesBatters9 Adam Lyth nbsp England 1987 09 25 25 September 1987 age 35 Left handed Right arm off break23 James Wharton nbsp England 2001 02 01 1 February 2001 age 22 Right handed Right arm off break29 Dawid Malan nbsp England 1987 09 03 3 September 1987 age 36 Left handed Right arm leg break England incremental contract31 Will Fraine nbsp England 1996 06 13 13 June 1996 age 27 Right handed Right arm medium33 Finlay Bean nbsp England 2002 04 16 16 April 2002 age 21 Left handed 59 Saud Shakeel nbsp Pakistan 1995 09 05 5 September 1995 age 28 Left handed Left arm medium Overseas player66 Joe Root nbsp England 1990 12 30 30 December 1990 age 32 Right handed Right arm off break England central contract68 Will Luxton nbsp England 2003 05 06 6 May 2003 age 20 Right handed Right arm medium88 Harry Brook nbsp England 1999 02 22 22 February 1999 age 24 Right handed Right arm medium England incremental contract94 Shan Masood nbsp Pakistan 1989 10 14 14 October 1989 age 33 Left handed Right arm medium Club Captain Overseas playerAll rounders7 Matthew Fisher nbsp England 1997 11 09 9 November 1997 age 25 Right handed Right arm fast medium England pace development contract16 Ben Mike nbsp England 1998 08 24 24 August 1998 age 25 Right handed Right arm fast medium18 George Hill nbsp England 2001 01 24 24 January 2001 age 22 Right handed Right arm medium44 Jordan Thompson nbsp England 1996 10 09 9 October 1996 age 26 Left handed Right arm fast medium45 Yash Vagadia nbsp England 2004 05 07 7 May 2004 age 19 Right handed Right arm off break47 Dom Bess nbsp England 1997 07 22 22 July 1997 age 26 Right handed Right arm off break77 Matt Revis nbsp England 2001 11 15 15 November 2001 age 21 Right handed Right arm medium96 David Wiese nbsp Namibia a 1985 05 18 18 May 1985 age 38 Right handed Right arm fast medium Overseas player T20 only Wicket keepers11 Shai Hope nbsp West Indies 1993 11 10 10 November 1993 age 29 Right handed Overseas player12 Jonathan Tattersall nbsp England 1994 12 15 15 December 1994 age 28 Right handed Right arm leg break21 Jonny Bairstow nbsp England 1989 09 26 26 September 1989 age 33 Right handed Right arm medium England central contract22 Harry Duke nbsp England 2001 09 06 6 September 2001 age 22 Right handed 27 Ryan Rickelton nbsp South Africa 1996 07 11 11 July 1996 age 27 Left handed Overseas playerBowlers3 Adil Rashid nbsp England 1988 02 17 17 February 1988 age 35 Right handed Right arm leg break White ball contract England central contract4 Matt Milnes nbsp England 1994 07 29 29 July 1994 age 29 Right handed Right arm fast medium5 Jafer Chohan nbsp England 2002 07 11 11 July 2002 age 21 Right handed Right arm leg break6 Mark Steketee nbsp Australia 1994 01 17 17 January 1994 age 29 Right handed Right arm fast medium Overseas player8 Dom Leech nbsp England 2001 01 10 10 January 2001 age 22 Right handed Right arm fast medium10 Ben Coad nbsp England 1994 01 10 10 January 1994 age 29 Right handed Right arm fast medium24 Jack Shutt nbsp England 1997 06 24 24 June 1997 age 26 Right handed Right arm off break26 Ben Cliff nbsp England 2002 10 23 23 October 2002 age 20 Right handed Right arm fast medium90 Mickey Edwards nbsp Australia 1994 12 23 23 December 1994 age 28 Right handed Right arm fast medium UK passport Wiese has also played international cricket for South Africa All players Edit See also List of Yorkshire County Cricket Club players and Category Yorkshire cricketers The following represented England while playing for Yorkshire Bob Appleyard Tom Armitage Bill Athey David Bairstow Jonny Bairstow Gary Ballance Wilf Barber Billy Bates Jimmy Binks Richard Blakey Brian Bolus Major Booth Bill Bowes Geoffrey Boycott Don Brennan Tim Bresnan Jack Brown Brian Close Geoff Cope Alec Coxon Richard Dawson David Denton Arthur Dolphin Tom Emmett Paul Gibb Darren Gough Andrew Greenwood Schofield Haigh Gavin Hamilton John Hampshire Lord Hawke Allen Hill George Hirst Matthew Hoggard Percy Holmes Joseph Hunter Richard Hutton Len Hutton Ray Illingworth Stanley Jackson Paul Jarvis Roy Kilner Eddie Leadbeater Maurice Leyland Frank Lowson Adam Lyth George Macaulay Anthony McGrath Frank Milligan Arthur Mitchell Frank Mitchell Martyn Moxon Chris Old Doug Padgett Ted Peate Bobby Peel Liam Plunkett Adil Rashid Wilfred Rhodes Joe Root Ajmal Shahzad Phil Sharpe Arnie Sidebottom Ryan Sidebottom Chris Silverwood Frank Smailes Gerald Smithson R T Stanyforth Graham Stevenson Frank Sugg Herbert Sutcliffe Ken Taylor George Thornton Fred Trueman George Ulyett Michael Vaughan Hedley Verity Abe Waddington Ted Wainwright Albert Ward Johnny Wardle Willie Watson Craig White David Willey Don Wilson Clem Wilson Rockley Wilson Arthur Wood Norman Yardley Club captains Edit Further information List of Yorkshire cricket captains Four Yorkshire players Stanley Jackson Len Hutton Ray Illingworth and Michael Vaughan have captained England to success in The Ashes yet none of them was club captain at the time Ray Illingworth had just left Yorkshire for Leicestershire when he became captain of England he later returned to Yorkshire citation needed From 1883 to 1959 inclusive Yorkshire always had an amateur club captain The extent of leadership given by these gentlemen has long been a subject of discussion Hawke and Sellers are generally held to have been autocratic and decisive but in fact both relied heavily on sound professional advice At the other extreme Wilfred Rhodes is supposed to have been the de facto captain from 1920 to 1930 but it was Major Arthur Lupton who restored discipline to the side when a row erupted between Yorkshire and Middlesex in 1924 99 Lord Hawke famously said at the Yorkshire Annual General Meeting in 1925 Pray God no professional shall ever captain England I love and admire them all but we have always had an amateur skipper and when the day comes when we shall have no more amateurs captaining England it will be a thousand pities 100 In view of this it is perhaps surprising that when Arthur Lupton retired at the end of the 1927 season Hawke was one of the sponsors of the suggestion that Herbert Sutcliffe should become Yorkshire captain In the event there was sufficient opposition to the idea amongst the Yorkshire committee and players some of the latter felt that Wilfred Rhodes as senior professional had a prior claim that the proposal was dropped 100 In 1960 Vic Wilson became Yorkshire s first professional captain since Tom Emmett when he succeeded Ronnie Burnet Brian Close who took over in 1963 has been Yorkshire s most successful professional captain with four County Championships 101 Club officials EditDirectors of Cricket Edit 2002 Geoff Cope 2007 2021 Martyn MoxonManaging Director of Cricket Edit 2021 to date Darren GoughCoaching staff Edit Head Coach Ottis Gibson Assistant Coach Kabir Ali Assistant Coach Alistair Maiden Second Eleven Coach Tom Smith 102 Officers EditClub Presidents Edit Those who have held the office of Yorkshire President are 103 From To Name1863 1863 Thomas Barker1864 1897 Michael Ellison1898 1938 Martin Hawke 7th Baron Hawke1939 1947 Sir Stanley Jackson1948 1960 Tom Taylor1961 1973 Sir William Worsley1974 1981 Sir Kenneth Parkinson1981 1983 Norman Yardley1984 1989 Viscount Mountgarret1989 1990 Sir Leonard Hutton1991 1999 Sir Lawrence Byford1999 2004 Robin Smith2004 2006 David Jones2006 2008 Bob Appleyard2008 2009 Brian Close2010 2011 Ray Illingworth2012 2014 Geoffrey Boycott2014 2016 Dickie Bird2016 2017 John Hampshire2017 2019 Richard Hutton2019 2022 Geoff Cope2023 Jane PowellClub Secretaries Edit Those who have held the office of Yorkshire Secretary are 103 From To Name1863 1863 George Padley1864 1902 Joseph B Wostinholm1903 1930 Frederick Toone1931 1971 John Nash1972 1991 Joe Lister1991 2002 David Ryder2002 2005 Brian Bouttell note 2 Honours EditSee also List of the competitive honours won by county cricket clubs in England and Wales First XI honours Edit County Championship 32 1893 1896 1898 1900 1901 1902 1905 1908 1912 1919 1922 1923 1924 1925 1931 1932 1933 1935 1937 1938 1939 1946 1959 1960 1962 1963 1966 1967 1968 2001 2014 2015 shared 1 1949 FP Trophy note 3 3 1965 1969 2002 National League note 4 1 1983 Benson amp Hedges Cup 1 1987Second XI honours Edit Second XI Championship 5 1977 1984 1991 2003 2022 shared 1 1987 Second XI Trophy 1 2009 2017 Minor Counties Championship 5 1947 1957 1958 1968 1971Other honours Edit Fenner Trophy 3 1972 1974 1981 Asda Challenge 1 1987 Ward Knockout Cup 1 1989 Joshua Tetley Festival Trophy 6 1991 1993 1994 1996 1997 1998 shared 1 1992 Tilcon Trophy 1 1988 Under 25 Competition 3 1976 1978 1987 Bain Clarkson Trophy 1 1994Notes Edit Gloucestershire captain W G Grace nevertheless believed that Yorkshire were more worthy champions than his county 43 Bouttell was in fact a company secretary Yorkshire s organisational structure having been redefined in 2002 when the general committee was replaced by a board of management Formerly known as the Gillette Cup 1963 1980 NatWest Trophy 1981 2000 and C amp G Trophy 2001 2006 Formerly known as the Sunday League 1969 1998 References Edit Waghorn 1906 p 27 At the Sign of the Wicket F S Ashley Cooper Cricket issue 535 26 April 1900 p 83 Maun 2011 pp 78 79 112 Hodgson 1989 p 8 Kilburn 1970 p 9 a b c Woodhouse 1989 p 7 Hawke Lord 1932 Fifty years of Yorkshire county Wisden Cricketers Almanack Retrieved 28 December 2022 a b Hodgson 1989 p 10 England v Sussex 1827 CricketArchive Retrieved 28 December 2022 Hodgson 1989 pp 9 10 Yorkshire v Norfolk 1833 CricketArchive Retrieved 28 December 2022 Hodgson 1989 p 11 a b Hodgson 1989 p 12 a b c d e Hodgson 1989 p 14 a b c d e Kilburn 1970 p 10 a b Kilburn 1970 p 14 a b Hodgson 1989 p 16 Kilburn 1970 p 13 Hodgson 1989 pp 16 17 Hodgson 1989 p 17 a b Hodgson 1989 p 21 Woodhouse 1989 pp 15 16 Hodgson 1989 pp 18 19 Surrey v Yorkshire 1863 CricketArchive Retrieved 28 December 2022 Woodhouse 1989 pp 11 12 Woodhouse 1989 p 12 Kilburn 1970 p 12 Hodgson 1989 p 18 Hodgson 1989 p 20 Woodhouse 1989 p 21 Hodgson 1989 p 22 Hodgson 1989 pp 22 24 Woodhouse 1989 p 25 Hodgson 1989 p 24 Woodhouse 1989 p 15 Hodgson 1989 pp 18 24 Hodgson 1989 p 27 Woodhouse 1989 pp 32 33 LV County Championship Constitution of County Championship Wisden Cricketers Almanack 2010 ed John Wisden amp Co May 2010 p 572 ISBN 978 14 08124 66 6 Hodgson 1989 p 36 a b Hodgson 1989 p 28 Woodhouse 1989 p 37 a b Hodgson 1989 p 35 Woodhouse 1989 p 40 Woodhouse 1989 pp 40 41 Woodhouse 1989 p 43 Woodhouse 1989 pp 43 46 Woodhouse 1989 p 50 Woodhouse 1989 pp 57 61 Hodgson 1989 pp 28 29 Hodgson 1989 p 34 Woodhouse 1989 p 70 Woodhouse 1989 pp 77 79 Lord Hawke CricketArchive Retrieved 12 April 2011 The late Lord Hawke Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1939 Retrieved 15 April 2011 Kilburn 1970 p 23 Hodgson 1989 p 57 Hodgson 1989 p 42 Woodhouse 1989 p 84 Kilburn 1970 p 19 Hodgson 1989 p 48 Woodhouse 1989 p 101 a b Hodgson 1989 p 53 Hodgson 1989 p 51 a b c Hodgson 1989 p 66 a b c Swanton Plumptre amp Woodcock 1986 p 468 Hodgson 1989 pp 57 58 Hodgson 1989 p 59 LV County Championship County Championship Final Positions 1890 2010 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 2010 ed John Wisden amp Co Ltd p 574 Hodgson 1989 p 69 Hodgson 1989 pp 70 73 Hodgson 1989 p 73 Hodgson 1989 p 255 Hodgson 1989 pp 87 88 Hodgson 1989 p 83 Kilburn 1970 pp 56 57 a b Kilburn 1970 p 56 Kilburn 1970 p 57 Brian Close Controversial curious composite of unfulfilled promises Cricket Country 4 March 2014 Retrieved 20 May 2021 World s Best Tendulkar a man forever etched in Yorkshire history Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 19 June 2018 Azeem Rafiq Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 27 June 2007 Culley Jon Azeem Rafiq shows his credentials ESPN cricinfo Retrieved 10 April 2013 Gillespie named Yorkshire coach ESPN cricinfo Retrieved 10 January 2012 2013 County Championship Points Table ESPN cricinfo 30 September 2013 Azeem Rafiq Yorkshire admit ex player was victim of inappropriate behaviour BBC Sport 19 August 2021 Yorkshire lose right to host England BBC Sport 4 November 2021 Hodgson 1989 p 77 Playfair Marshall Ian ed Playfair Cricket Annual 70th edition 2017 ed London Headline p 196 First Class Matches played at Abbeydale Park Sheffield CricketArchive Retrieved 10 August 2006 New stand and name for Headingley BBC News 11 January 2006 Retrieved 10 August 2006 Yorkshire launches lottery to break records Yorkshire County Cricket Club Archived from the original on 6 July 2009 Retrieved 19 September 2006 Yorkshire club officials Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 23 June 2017 Sponsors amp Partners Yorkshire County Cricket Club Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 23 June 2017 JCT600 backs YCCC with main sponsorship deal Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 4 October 2020 Puma enters English cricket market with Yorkshire SportBusiness Sponsorship Retrieved 4 October 2020 Six and out for Mazars The last over Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 4 October 2020 Yorkshire unveil Nike as new kit partner Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 7 April 2021 Kukri signs partnership with Yorkshire County Cricket Club Yorkshire County Cricket Club Retrieved 6 April 2022 Woodhouse 1989 p 333 a b Gibson Alan 1989 The Cricket Captains of England The Pavilion Library pp 154 56 ISBN 1 85145 390 3 Brian Close Cricinfo Retrieved 19 June 2018 Kabir joins Yorkshire as assistant coach BBC Sport Retrieved 15 February 2022 a b The Yorkshire County Cricket Club Yearbook 2010 ed Ilkley Great Northern Books March 2010 p 8 ISBN 978 1 905080 75 5 Bibliography EditACS 1981 A Guide to Important Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles 1709 1863 Nottingham ACS ACS 1982 A Guide to First class Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles Nottingham ACS Birley Derek 1999 A Social History of English Cricket London Aurum Press Ltd ISBN 978 18 54107 10 7 Hodgson Derek 1989 The Official History of Yorkshire County Cricket Club Marlborough The Crowood Press ISBN 978 18 52232 74 0 Kilburn J M 1970 A History of Yorkshire Cricket London Stanley Paul ISBN 978 00 91011 10 9 Maun Ian 2011 From Commons to Lord s Volume Two 1751 to 1770 Leicester Martin Wilson ISBN 978 09 56906 60 1 Swanton E W Plumptre George Woodcock George eds 1986 Barclays World of Cricket London Harper Collins ISBN 978 00 02181 93 8 Trueman Fred 2004 As It Was London Macmillan ISBN 978 03 30427 05 0 Waghorn H T 1906 The Dawn of Cricket London Electric Press ISBN 978 09 47821 17 3 Woodhouse Anthony 1989 The History of Yorkshire County Cricket Club London Christopher Helm ISBN 978 07 47034 08 7 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yorkshire County Cricket Club Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yorkshire County Cricket Club amp oldid 1176553990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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