Countries | England |
---|---|
Format | Limited Overs |
First edition | 1892 |
Tournament format | League |
Number of teams | 12 (ECB Premier Division) |
Current champion | Burnley CC |
Most successful | Nelson CC (21) |
Website | https://lancashireleague.play-cricket.com/ |
The Lancashire League is a competitive league of local cricket clubs drawn from the small to middle-sized mill towns, mainly but not exclusively, of East Lancashire. Its real importance is probably due to its history of employing professional players of international standing to play in the League. After declining earlier opportunities to have this status, the league became an ECB Premier League from the 2023 season.
The Lancashire Cricket League was formed on 16 March 1892, growing from the North East Cricket League which had been formed 17 months earlier. Currently in membership are Accrington CC, Bacup CC, Burnley CC, Church CC, Clitheroe CC, Colne CC, Crompton CC, Darwen Cricket Club, East Lancashire CC, Enfield CC, Great Harwood CC, Greenmount CC, Haslingden CC, Littleborough CC, Lowerhouse CC, Middleton CC, Nelson CC, Norden CC, Ramsbottom CC, Rawtenstall CC, Rishton CC, Rochdale CC, Todmorden CC (actually in Yorkshire) and Walsden CC (in West Yorkshire). In the early years, Bury CC were also members, but they withdrew after participating for two seasons.
The early 1890s saw the sudden emergence of cricket leagues all over Lancashire, with the first in 1888 – the Bolton Association. The North Lancashire League and the Central Lancashire League each started the same year as the Lancashire League in 1892. The Football League had set a trend in season 1888–89 and also had its heart in Lancashire, and with professionals and regular friendlies and local derbies, the leagues quickly became very popular institutions, with games played at weekends when working people had rare leisure time. [1]
In the early years, until 1899, it was possible for each team to field two professionals, but this was restricted for the 1900 season to one. The League Centenary was celebrated in 1992, and in 1998 a major exhibition about the League was mounted by Horse and Bamboo Theatre at their centre with the involvement of the author Ron Freethy.
In 1981, the League's name was amended to include the name of a sponsor, initially Blackburn brewer Matthew Brown, later E. W. Cartons and Sponsorbank, among others, and currently J. W. Lees.
The Lancashire League, in its first season of 1892, consisted of only thirteen clubs (the fourteen current members, minus Todmorden) before Bury played in 1893 and 1894 to give the league fourteen clubs. Bury left for the 1895 season, before Todmorden joined in 1897. The membership of the League did not then change for another 120 years, until three new clubs—Clitheroe, Darwen and Great Harwood—joined in 2017. [2] In 2018, the number of member clubs was increased to 24 with the admission of Crompton, Norden, Littleborough, Middleton, Milnrow, Rochdale and Walsden; [3] however, in 2019 Milnrow resigned from the League after two seasons, to be replaced in 2020 by Bury's Greenmount CC. [4] [5] In addition, Edenfield entered the 20/20 Cup between 2007 and 2014, but did not enter any other Lancashire League competition.
The league's 22 current member clubs are divided into two divisions. Games start out as 50 over matches but if rain affects play they can be reduced to a minimum of 20 overs. The method for working out reduced targets is to take 3/4 of the first innings run rate off the first innings score for every over that is lost in the second innings. One over is lost for every 7 minutes in the first innings and every 3½ minutes in the second innings. The second innings can be less than 20 overs as long as there were more than 20 overs bowled in the first innings and the team batting second believe they can chase the full total posted in the first innings or the team bowling second believe they can bowl their opponents out in the allocated overs. If the team batting second get the full total then they win. If the team bowling second bowl out the team batting second then they win. If neither team does this then it is a No Result. For example, Lowerhouse scored 124-7 off their allocated 31 overs. Nelson opted to chase 125 for victory off 12 overs. They ended up on 82-7 so neither team won and it was a no result. 10 points are awarded for a win, 7 points for a tie, 3 points for a no result and 2 points for bowling the opposition out. Up to 5 bonus points are then awarded to the team who lost. If the team that lost bowled second they get 1-point for 5 wickets, 2 for 6 wickets, 3 for 7 wickets, 4 for 8 wickets and 5 for 9 wickets. If they batted second they get 1-point for being within 50 runs, 2 points for being within 40 runs, 3 points for being within 30 runs, 4 points for being within 20 runs and 5 points for being within 10 runs. 1 point is deducted for slow over rate in an innings of more than 40 overs. One over is expected to be bowled in 3¾ minutes. One bowler may bowl up to 17 overs while no other bowlers may bowl more than 14 overs.
Every club in the league competes in this knockout tournament with two teams being given a random bye to the second round (there are four rounds in all). All games have to be 50 overs and if not completed on the given date have to be continued on weeknights or, if still in the first innings, the following Saturday. The first game is generally played on a Sunday and the reserve date is always a Saturday. Bowlers can bowl no more than ten overs each.
The League winner plays the Worsley Cup winner in this competition. If a team wins both competitions then the Double winners play the team that finished second the previous year. It is played on the Saturday before the League starts. It is played to the same match rules as the Worsley Cup except that overs are deducted for bad weather. The Colne Trophy has to be a minimum of 20 overs. If the game cannot be completed then the trophy is shared.
There are three groups: two consisting of six teams and one group consisting of five. The top three clubs from each group (top two from the group of five) go through to the quarter-final. In the group stage, each team plays each other team once. Two points are awarded for a win and one point for a draw. Each team must face a minimum of five overs for a game to be valid. The method for working out reduced targets is to subtract the full run rate for every over lost in the second innings. Games are played mainly on a Friday night, but are occasionally played on a Thursday night. Teams can play in colours if they wish. Bowlers can bowl no more than four overs.
A remarkable number of exceptional cricketers from all over the world have come to live in Lancashire and play in the League, including Dik Abed, Bill Alley, Nyron Asgarali, Nathan Astle, Sydney Barnes, Allan Border, Chris Cairns, Michael Clarke, Sir Learie Constantine, Kapil Dev, Allan Donald, Bruce Dooland, Roy Gilchrist, Dennis Lillee, Trevor Chappell, Jason Gillespie, Kerry O'Keeffe, Charlie Griffith, Andrew Hall, Wes Hall, Roger Harper, Chris Harris, George Headley, Michael Holding, Murali Kartik, Charlie Llewellyn, Clive Lloyd, Manny Martindale, Mark Orchard, Cec Pepper, Viv Richards, Andy Roberts, Fred Root, Jacques Rudolph, Peter Sleep, 'Big' Jim Smith, Hugh Tayfield, George Tribe, Lou Vincent, Shane Warne, Chester Watson, Steve Waugh, Bilawal Bhatti, Alviro Petersen, Robin Peterson , Vijay Hazare , and Everton Weekes. [1] It is a rule of the competition that each team must have a professional player in their squad. Should the professional be unavailable, then a substitute must be found. Teams not playing a pro can be fined.
In C.L.R. James' autobiographical Beyond a Boundary , the Trinidadian writer writes about his visits as a young man to his friend Learie Constantine, at that time living in Nelson while playing as a professional for the town Lancashire League team. He gives a vivid sense of what it must have been like for a young West Indian to arrive in the wet and strange East Lancashire. He also describes how his subsequent education at university in Paris is helped by a local baker, and how his gradual politicisation is given a boost by meetings with local socialists, concerned with the harsh treatment and conditions suffered by the local working class millworkers. Although an extreme example, the meetings between other professional cricketers from the British Empire, and the mainly working-class amateurs of the Lancashire League, must have resulted in many other instances of mutual support and understanding. [6]
The league and its relationship with West Indies professional cricketers is the subject of a 2017 BBC television documentary: Race and Pace: West Indians in the East Lancashire League. [7] The film features original footage of the players, shots of the ground and interviews with Wes Hall, Viv Richards, David Lloyd, and Learie Constantine's daughter. [7]
Year | Club |
---|---|
1891 | East Lancashire |
1892 | Nelson |
1893 | Burnley |
1894 | Rawtenstall |
1895 | Nelson |
1896 | Nelson |
1897 | Burnley |
1898 | Rishton |
1899 | Bacup |
1900 | Haslingden |
1901 | Burnley |
1902 | Colne |
1903 | Nelson |
1904 | Rawtenstall |
1905 | Colne |
1906 | Burnley |
1907 | Burnley |
1908 | Burnley |
1909 | Enfield |
1910 | Colne |
Year | Club |
---|---|
1911 | Nelson |
1912 | Rishton |
1913 | Burnley |
1914 | Accrington |
1915 | Accrington |
1916 | Accrington |
1917 | no competition |
1918 | no competition |
1919 | East Lancashire |
1920 | Haslingden |
1921 | Ramsbottom |
1922 | Bacup and Rawtenstall |
1923 | Bacup |
1924 | Bacup |
1925 | Ramsbottom |
1926 | Rawtenstall |
1927 | Todmorden |
1928 | Nelson |
1929 | Nelson |
1930 | Bacup |
Year | Club |
---|---|
1931 | Nelson |
1932 | Nelson |
1933 | Todmorden |
1934 | Nelson |
1935 | Nelson |
1936 | Nelson |
1937 | Nelson |
1938 | Todmorden |
1939 | Church and Oswaldtwistle |
1940 | Church and Oswaldtwistle |
1941 | Church and Oswaldtwistle |
1942 | East Lancashire |
1943 | Enfield |
1944 | Rishton |
1945 | Church and Oswaldtwistle |
1946 | Nelson |
1947 | East Lancashire |
1948 | Rishton |
1949 | East Lancashire |
1950 | Burnley |
Year | Club |
---|---|
1951 | East Lancashire |
1952 | East Lancashire |
1953 | Haslingden |
1954 | Todmorden |
1955 | Rishton |
1956 | Burnley |
1957 | Todmorden |
1958 | Bacup |
1959 | Colne |
1960 | Bacup |
1961 | Accrington |
1962 | Church and Oswaldtwistle |
1963 | East Lancashire |
1964 | Burnley |
1965 | Nelson |
1966 | East Lancashire |
1967 | Nelson |
1968 | Enfield |
1969 | Nelson |
1970 | Burnley |
Year | Club |
---|---|
1971 | Enfield |
1972 | East Lancashire |
1973 | East Lancashire |
1974 | Ramsbottom |
1975 | Accrington |
1976 | Rawtenstall |
1977 | Enfield |
1978 | Burnley |
1979 | Burnley |
1980 | East Lancashire |
1981 | Rawtenstall |
1982 | Rawtenstall |
1983 | Haslingden |
1984 | East Lancashire |
1985 | Haslingden |
1986 | Nelson |
1987 | Haslingden |
1988 | Haslingden |
1989 | Haslingden |
1990 | East Lancashire |
Year | Club |
---|---|
1991 | Haslingden |
1992 | Ramsbottom |
1993 | Haslingden |
1994 | Nelson |
1995 | Rishton |
1996 | Rishton |
1997 | Haslingden |
1998 | Nelson |
1999 | Nelson |
2000 | Bacup |
2001 | Bacup |
2002 | Bacup |
2003 | East Lancashire |
2004 | Lowerhouse |
2005 | Lowerhouse |
2006 | Burnley |
2007 | Rishton |
2008 | Accrington |
2009 | Accrington |
2010 | Ramsbottom |
Year | Club |
---|---|
2011 | Lowerhouse |
2012 | Lowerhouse |
2013 | Accrington |
2014 | Lowerhouse |
2015 | Burnley |
2016 | Ramsbottom |
2017 | Clitheroe |
2018 | Walsden |
2019 | Burnley |
2020 | no competition |
2021 | Burnley |
2022 | Darwen |
2023 | Burnley |
Key | |
---|---|
Gold | Champions |
Blue | Left League |
Red | Relegated |
Club | 2023 | 2024 |
---|---|---|
Burnley | 1 | |
Church and Oswaldtwistle | ||
Clitheroe | 4 | |
Darwen | 3 | |
Enfield | 9 | |
Haslingden | 10 | |
Littleborough | 2 | |
Lowerhouse | 6 | |
Middleton | ||
Norden | 5 | |
Ramsbottom | 12 | |
Rochdale | 8 | |
Todmorden | 7 | |
Walsden | 11 | |
References | [9] |
Milnrow Cricket Club, based in Milnrow, an area of the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale, Greater Manchester, are an English cricket team who as of 2022 play in the Greater Manchester Cricket League (GMCL).
Sydney Francis Barnes was an English professional cricketer who is regarded as one of the greatest bowlers of all time. He was right-handed and bowled at a pace that varied from medium to fast-medium with the ability to make the ball both swing and break from off or leg. In Test cricket, Barnes played for England in 27 matches from 1901 to 1914, taking 189 wickets at 16.43, one of the lowest Test bowling averages ever achieved. In 1911–12, he helped England to win the Ashes when he took 34 wickets in the series against Australia. In 1913–14, his final Test series, he took a world record 49 wickets in a Test series, against South Africa.
Johnny Briggs was an English left arm spin bowler who played for Lancashire County Cricket Club between 1879 and 1900 and remains the second-highest wicket-taker in the county's history after Brian Statham. In the early days of Test cricket, Briggs‘ batting was considered careless, although still very useful. He was the first bowler in Test cricket to take 100 wickets, and held the record of most wickets in Test cricket on two occasions, the first in 1895 and again from 1898 until 1904, when he was succeeded by Hugh Trumble. He toured Australia a record six times, a feat only equalled by Colin Cowdrey.
Learie Nicholas Constantine, Baron Constantine was a Trinidadian cricketer, lawyer and politician who served as Trinidad and Tobago's High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and became the UK's first black peer. He played 18 Test matches for the West Indies before the Second World War and took the team's first wicket in Test cricket. An advocate against racial discrimination, in later life he was influential in the passing of the 1965 Race Relations Act in Britain. He was knighted in 1962 and made a life peer in 1969.
Ellis Edgar Achong was a sportsman from Trinidad and Tobago in the West Indies. He played cricket for the West Indies and was the first person of known Chinese descent to play in a Test match.
Edwin Lloyd St Hill was a Trinidadian cricketer who played two Test matches for the West Indies in 1930. His brothers, Wilton and Cyl, also played for Trinidad and Tobago; in addition, the former played Test matches for the West Indies.
Emmanuel Alfred Martindale was a West Indian cricketer who played in ten Test matches from 1933 to 1939. He was a right-arm fast bowler with a long run up; although not tall for a bowler of his type he bowled at a fast pace. With Learie Constantine, Martindale was one of the earliest in the long succession of Test-playing West Indian fast bowlers. During the time he played, the West Indies bowling attack depended largely on his success. Critics believe that his record and performances stand comparison with bowlers of greater reputation and longer careers.
The Bradford Premier League is a semi-professional cricket competition centred in Bradford, West Yorkshire. It has been described as "arguably England's strongest semi-professional competition."
Nelson Cricket Club, based at Seedhill in Nelson, Lancashire, are a cricket club in the Lancashire League. They play at the Seedhill ground in Nelson. Their captain for the 2024 season is Khurrum Nazir and their professional is Ankit Sharma.
Ambrose Causer Williams, better known as Billy Williams, was an English first-class cricketer who played twelve matches for Yorkshire County Cricket Club between 1911 and 1919. He played in the Lancashire League for Haslingden C.C. in 1920 and 1921, and for the Yorkshire Second XI from 1911 to 1919.
John Alexander Cuffe was an Australian-born English first-class cricketer who played more than 200 times for Worcestershire between 1903 and 1914, having previously made a single appearance for New South Wales. After retiring from county cricket, he stood as an umpire for three years in the 1920s. He also played at least once as a professional for Lowerhouse in the Lancashire League. It was wrongly thought until 2019 that Cuffe was also a footballer and played ten seasons for Glossop North End in the Football League Second Division. The footballer was a different John Cuffe, born in Glossop.
Lawrence Cook was an English cricketer and footballer.
Colne Cricket Club is a cricket club who play in the Lancashire League, which plays its home games at The Horsfield in Colne. For the 2023 season, their club captain is Tom Bradshaw, their 2nd XI captain is Martin Kegg, their 3rd XI captain is Thomas Ellacott and their T20 captain is also Tom Bradshaw. Their professional is Geeth Kumara of Sri Lanka. The club has won the league on five occasions and won the cup six times, achieving a league and cup double in 1959. It has employed professionals including Amar Singh, Bill Alley, Joe Scuderi and Collis King.
East Lancashire Cricket Club is a cricket club in the Lancashire League, which plays its home games at Alexandra Meadows in Blackburn. For the 2024 season its captain is James Westhead and its professional is Adithya Siriwardhana. The club has been very successful, winning the League on 14 occasions, the Worsley Cup on 18, the Inter League Club Challenge Trophy twice in its ten-year history, and has won a greater percentage of its games than any other club. It has employed professionals including Fazal Mahmood, Allan Border and Paul Reiffel.
Todmorden Cricket Club is a cricket club in the Lancashire League, which plays its home games at Centre Vale in Todmorden, West Yorkshire. Until the administrative border was changed in 1888, the historic boundary between Lancashire and Yorkshire ran through the centre of the ground.
Leslie John Todd was an English cricketer. A left-handed all-rounder who at various points in his career bowled left-arm orthodox spin and medium-paced inswingers, he played in 437 first-class matches, the majority for Kent County Cricket Club. Making his debut for the county in 1927, Todd found opportunities limited until 1933 when he scored more than 1,000 runs in a season for the first time. He took over 80 wickets in five successive seasons, completing the double in 1937.
Colin Lever is a former English cricketer. Lever was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace. He was born in Todmorden, Yorkshire.
Harry "Joe" Griffin played first-class county cricket for Somerset in 1898 and 1899. As a slow left-arm bowler, he was employed as a professional by Todmorden Cricket Club in the Lancashire League before being recruited by Somerset. He played four matches for the county, but his bowling action was questioned, with suggestions that he was guilty of throwing. He continued to play club cricket for Street for many years after.