Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Forfarshire Cricket Club

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cricket team
Forfarshire Cricket Club
NicknameThe Forfs
Personnel
CaptainCallum Garden
Team information
CityDundee,Scotland
Colours  
Founded1880; 146 years ago (1880)
Home groundForthill,Broughty Ferry, Dundee
History
Grand Final wins1 (2019)
Eastern Premier League wins1 (2019)
Scottish County Championship wins15 (including 1 shared)
Scottish Cup wins4
T20 Scottish Cup wins4
Official websiteForfarshire CC

Home

Alternative

Forfarshire Cricket Club is acricket club based inDundee. Since its foundation in 1880 the club has played atForthill inBroughty Ferry. A founding member of theScottish County Championship, the club went on to become one of the most successful county sides in the country, winning the title 15 times.[1] The club currently plays in theEastern Premier League, the highest tier of cricket in Eastern Scotland.

Winner of the inaugural County Championship in1902, Forfarshire has won many major honours across its146 year history including the Eastern Premier League andCricket ScotlandGrand Final playoff in 2019 in addition to both the Scottish Cup and T20 Scottish Cup four times each.

Honours

[edit]

First XI

[edit]

Second XI (Forthill XI)

[edit]
  • SPCU First Tier (2) - 1940, 2015
  • SPCU Second Tier (3) - 1990, 1994, 2011

Other honours

[edit]

Early cricket in Dundee and Angus

[edit]

Although cricket had been played inDundee since at least the 1830s, no club had the luxury of a dedicated pitch to play on. Magdalen Green was a popular location before playing the sport on the public park was effectively banned in the mid 19th century.[2]

History

[edit]

Origin

[edit]

The club was formed officially in June 1879, although no matches were played in that season. George M. Cox, a member of the Cox family which ownedCamperdown Works, gathered enough support and funds totalling £300 to form the first cricket club in Dundee or the surrounding area (as Broughty Ferry was a separateburgh at the time) which was to have its own ground.[3] Suitable land was leased on the then-outskirts of Broughty Ferry. A pavilion was built for the opening of the new ground and debut match in 1880.

Forfarshire took its name from the official name of the county ofAngus at the time. Cox, who played for Marchbanks CC inLochee as well asPerthshire before the creation of the new club, wanted to emulate the success of thePerth-based team in his home town.[4]

Early years

[edit]

In the first few years of its existence, Forfarshire fielded a poorer team than its neighbours in Perth orAberdeen. The early professionals brought to the club were highly-regarded players, but not of the calibre required to drive the team to successfully challenge the other county sides.

Pat Higgins in 1902

The arrival of new professional Pat Higgins from Guiseley inYorkshire, in 1883 was seen as a step forward. Although he considered his performances poor in his first season at the club, suffering from a bad illness the previous winter and admitting to having underestimated the quality of Scottish cricket, he was offered the opportunity to return as professional for the 1884 season. The Irish-born player's association with the club would last a total of 33 years.[5]

In 1885, Dundee-bornW. R. Sharp was appointed captain. His leadership skills, along with his excellent ability as anall-rounder, allowed the team to flourish under his stewardship. The partnership of Sharp and Higgins over the next quarter of a century became one of the most successful and enduring in the history of Scottish cricket.[6][7]

In the years since cricket was first played competitively in Scotland, no rivalry has been more fierce than that ofForfarshire and Perthshire. The relatively close proximity of the clubs drew large away crowds to the new fixtures. Perthshire was over 50 years older and had a much more established side but Forfarshire soon became competitive. Of the 22 matches played between 1880 and 1890, both teams had won seven, with eight other matches ending as a draw.[8]

The development of the rivalry meant matches between the two clubs became some of the most anticipated ties on the Scottish cricket calendar.[9] Eventually, derby attendances grew, especially at Forthill, to well over 10,000 on a regular basis. In 1898 the original pavilion was replaced by a new construction financed by club captain W. R. Sharp.[10]

Golden era

[edit]

The formation of theCounty Championship was fundamental to Forfarshire's expansion in the early 20th century. The prominence of the derby with Perthshire grew to become the most important matches of the year. Crowds of over 20,000 attended Forthill, with extra trains between Broughty Ferry and Perth being scheduled on match days to accommodate the large numbers of away supporters.[11]

The winning run or wicket of the inter-county derbies was often followed by pitch invasions; several times Forfarshire players were carried off the pitch to the pavilion on the shoulders of celebrating fans.[12][13]

As was the case at Forthill, large crowds attended derby matches in Perth. In 1903, while playing a derby match against Perthshire at their home ground on theNorth Inch, a temporary stand holding nearly 500 spectatorscollapsed, injuring more than 150 people.[14]

Championship honours were shared with Aberdeen in 1906. W. R. Sharp retired from playing in 1908 and was succeeded as match-day captain by James Kyd; Sharp continued in his role as club captain after retiring.[6] The club won the league outright with back-to-back successes in 1909 and 1910.

Interwar period

[edit]

The four years of disruption due to the First World War took its toll on Scottish cricket, with the county championship not returning until 1920. The club's professional in place before the war,Claude Buckenham, returned to the club in 1919 and aided the club in winning the 1920 championship.

Gordon Hodgson being carried off the field by Forfarshire supporters after taking 8 wickets for only 26 runs against Perthshire in 1936

Although Forfarshire had its own dedicated ground, the club did not own it outright until 1923 when club captain W. R. Sharp, who had at some stage bought the land on which the ground stood, gifted it to Forfarshire.[6]

Sharp continued as club captain until his sudden death in 1925, when he suffered a suspectedheart attack while out walking alone nearEdzell.[6] His death was followed only three months later by that of his long-time batting partner Pat Higgins, who also died of a heart attack at his home inMenston nearLeeds.[15]

Several high-profile professionals played for the club in the interwar period, includingGordon Hodgson for the 1935-36 seasons, who previously played forLancashire and was also anEngland international footballer who played forLiverpool at the time.[16][17]

The club won the county championship again in 1928, 1930 and 1932.

Post-war

[edit]

Following theSecond World War, the club were without a professional for one year. In 1947, formerMiddlesex playerBill Etherington was signed. In May, the decision was made to trial a 'Talent Money' system which saw Etherington awarded a bonus for more than five wickets taken, as well as for scoring 50 or 100 runs in a match.[18] Despite the financial incentives presented to him, Etherington never settled in Scotland. After a difficult spell with illness, includingrelapsing malaria, he was forced to resign and returned to London in late July. The club was unable to fund a replacement and again went without a professional for a large part of the season.[19]

The club went without domestic success for several years after the War, before winning the County Championship in two successive years in 1950 and 1951. Following another barren spell, Forfarshire again won the championship in 1957.

Later county years

[edit]

Despite the draw of cricket not being nearly as strong as it had been in the inter-war period, and the club's status far-diminshed from its golden years in the early part of the 20th century, the average attendance at Forthill was thought to be 5,000 until the early 1960s, after which attendances slumped to all-time lows.[20] Without the financial benefits of paying spectators, the club was forced to make long-term cuts to several areas, including no longer employing a professional each year.

The 1960s was as difficult a decade on the pitch as it was in the boardroom, with Forfarshire's rivals Perthshire winning the County Championship in eight out of ten years. Some success was found, however, in the fledglingScottish Cup, which was won by the club in 1968.

In 1973, Forfarshire stopped Perthshire from winning an eighth consecutive championship, winning the league for the first time in 16 years. The club would then wait another eight years, until 1981, to win the championship. It was in this season that the first professional sinceJack Dyson in 1962 was signed, this timeAustralianAndrew Hilditch.

The club's final Championship success was in 1992. Of the three most successful clubs in Scottish county cricket, Forfarshire's victory was the last; neither Perthshire nor Aberdeenshire would win the league again before it was dissolved after the 1995 season, albeit Aberdeenshire were denied the final season after being forced to forfeit a match.[21]

After county cricket

[edit]

Due to poor league finishes in the final three years of the county championship, Forfarshire was placed in the Second Division of the newSNCL. Over the next seven seasons Forfarshire remained outside the first tier, other than 1998 when the SNCL trialled a different league format. The club was promoted to the Premier Division for the 2003 season. This proved to be a short stay, with Forfarshire relegated back to the second tier in 2004. Another five years would pass before the club was again promoted.

In the final season of the SNCL in 2011, Forfarshire achieved its best finish in the tournament, third place out of the 16 teams in the final league format. The SNCL was subsequently disbanded and is now largely seen as a failed experiment which weakened the standing of Scottish domestic cricket.[22]

Present day

[edit]

In recent years, Forfarshire have won several honours, including theT20 Scottish Cup and theEastern Premier League in 2019. Winning the league meant the opportunity to play in theCricket Scotland Grand Final against the winner of the Western Premiership. Forfarshire beat their opponents, Uddingston, crowning them 2019 Scottish champions.[23]

This was followed by two successive cup doubles, winning theScottish Cup and T20 Scottish Cup in 2022 and 2023.[24]

By winning the T20 Scottish Cup, Forfarshire gained a place in theT10European Cricket League, hosted at the Cártama Oval Cricket Ground inSpain. The club was first scheduled to compete in the tournament in 2020 after winning the T20 Scottish cup the previous year but the tournament was cancelled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. In 2023 the club came second in its group table and was knocked out.[25]

Forfarshire's tournament in 2024 was more successful, qualifying from the initial group stage to contest matches in the second group stage. After winning only one game, the club was again eliminated.[26]

In 2024 the club finished in third place in the Eastern Premier League. Due to representatives failing to submit captain's reports, Forfarshire was deducted five points in the final table.[27]

Home ground

[edit]
Main article:Forthill

Forthill was initially leased for ten years by the new cricket club from a local landowner, Sylvester Kerr. Its main appeal was the short distance toBroughty Ferry station as well as the views of the surrounding countryside at that time.[2]

Sponsorship

[edit]
PeriodKit ManufacturerShirt Sponsor
2006-2009NoneDeuchars IPA
2010-2012CanterburyNone
2013-2016AdidasAutoecosse
2017-2018Tayside Group
2019-2021Gray-NicollsION8
2022DC Consulting
2023-2025ABP Food Group

Players

[edit]
Further information:List of Forfarshire cricket captains

Internationals

[edit]
NameYear
W. R. Sharp1902
Robert Tait1907
George Chalmers1908
Billy Ringrose1908
Alexander Lindsay1909
Henry Nicoll1914
David Stevenson1922
John Russell1923
Alexander Simpson1924
William Young1924
John Farquhar1930
John Melville1932
NameYear
James Henderson1946
Stuart Wilson1957
Alex Steele1967
Peter Rhind1968
Earl Reoch1973
Stewart Bruce2004
Ryan Watson2006
Craig Wallace2012
Michael Leask2014
Scott Cameron2018
Charlie Cassell2024

Hall of Fame

[edit]

2019

2022

  • Dick Auchinleck
  • Rae McLelland

2024

Professionals

[edit]
Further information:List of Forfarshire cricket professionals
Billy Ringrose

Since the club's formation, Forfarshire has had many professionals at the club. During the halcyon years of Scottish county cricket from 1902 to 1914, Forfarshire employed at least two professionals. For several years there were three professionals: veteran Pat Higgins and his two understudies, formerNottinghamshire playerGeorge Chambers and Scotland-cappedBilly Ringrose.[5]

Forfarshire's first overseas professional wasDickie Fuller, aJamaican who played several matches for his home nation as well as one test for theWest Indies.[29] He played three seasons between 1949 and 1951.Alf Pope was then signed as professional until 1956.[30] The following year, the club again looked to the West Indies and signedBarbadian playerClairmonte Depeiaza who also played for the club for three seasons.[31]

Ceylonese player Bob Bartels was employed for one season followed byLancashire player, andFA Cup-winning footballer,Jack Dyson.[32][33] Dyson had left Lancashire after disciplinary action and his signing by Forfarshire was seen as a major coup.[34] Due to two serious leg breaks he was unable to perform at the same footballing level forManchester City and looked for a Scottish club to move to in conjunction with his move to Forthill, accepting an offer fromStirling Albion.[35]

Dyson left to return to Lancashire in 1962 and following this, due to monetary constraints, no professional was employed by the club for a period of 19 years.[36] By the time the club's financial outlook had improved, Scottish teams could no longer afford the wages competent English players could earn south of the border. This led the club to begin to look overseas once again, this time to Australia and India.[37][38]

Michael Leask became the club's first professional in a number of years when he signed on in 2023, having already been playing for the club as an amateur.[39]

Timeline

[edit]

Club officials

[edit]

Club officers

[edit]
PositionName
PresidentElaine Sim
SecretaryPaul Whitehead
TreasurerGraham McLelland

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The Champion County". Dundee Evening Telegraph. 25 August 1902. p. 3.
  2. ^ab"Cricket - Forfarshire V. Glenalmond".Dundee Courier: 2. 25 May 1880.
  3. ^"The Forfarshire Cricket Club".Dundee Courier: 2. 10 June 1879.
  4. ^McLeish, Duncan (2005).International Cricket Grounds of Scotland. West Bridgford, Nottingham: Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. p. 17.
  5. ^ab""Patsy" Higgins' Memories".Dundee Courier. 30 April 1920. p. 6. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^abcd"Death of Noted Sportsman".Dundee Courier. 11 September 1925. p. 4. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  7. ^"Fifty Years of Forfarshire Cricket".Dundee Courier. 18 April 1930. p. 9. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  8. ^"Cricket - Forfarshire V. Perthshire".Dundee Courier. 2 July 1891. p. 4. Retrieved14 July 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^"The Great Cricket Inter-county at Forthill".Dundee Courier. 17 June 1912. p. 7. Retrieved21 July 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  10. ^"The Most Exciting Match I Ever Played In".Dundee Evening Telegraph. 26 July 1932. p. 2. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  11. ^"Forfarshire v Perthshire".The Scottish Referee. 10 July 1905. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  12. ^"How Forfarshire Gained Their Victory".Dundee Courier. 8 July 1907. p. 6. Retrieved2 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  13. ^"The Hero of the Match".Dundee Courier. 7 July 1924. p. 6. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  14. ^"Perth Cricket Catastrophe".Dundee Courier. 3 August 1903. p. 5. Retrieved10 July 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  15. ^"Patsy Higgins Dead".Dundee Courier. 8 December 1925. p. 5. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  16. ^"Forfarshire C.C.'s New Professional - Gordon Hodgson from Lancs".Dundee Evening Telegraph: 8. 27 September 1934.
  17. ^"Forfarshire C.C. Prof Leaves".Dundee Evening Telegraph: 1. 4 August 1936.
  18. ^"Forfarshire Pro. To Get Talent Money".Dundee Evening Telegraph. 30 May 1947. p. 9. Retrieved3 August 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  19. ^"Etherington Is Leaving Forthill".Sunday Post. 20 July 1947. p. 1. Retrieved3 August 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  20. ^"Your Sporting Roundup - County Cricket".Dundee Evening Telegraph. 17 May 1991. p. 21. Retrieved30 August 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  21. ^"Cricket".Dundee Courier. 29 September 1995. p. 26. Retrieved30 August 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  22. ^Strang, Sandy (19 July 2011)."League structure could face dismissal".The Scotsman. Edinburgh: The Scotsman Publications.
  23. ^Kelso, David (8 September 2019)."Forfarshire defeat Uddingston in Grand Final as Meigle win promotion".The Scotsman. Retrieved1 June 2025.
  24. ^"Scottish Cricket Cup Finals Day 2023 - Wins for Forfarshire and West of Scotland Women".cricketworld. 20 August 2023. Retrieved2 June 2025.
  25. ^"European Cricket League, 2023 Standings".European Cricket League. 18 March 2023. Retrieved23 July 2025.
  26. ^"European Cricket League, 2024 Standings".European Cricket League. 22 March 2024. Retrieved23 July 2025.
  27. ^"Table Adjustments".Cricket Scotland Live. Cricket Scotland. 5 August 2024. Retrieved23 July 2025.
  28. ^"Forfarshire CC Hall of Fame".Forfarshire CC. Retrieved1 June 2025.
  29. ^"Forfarshire's New Pro".Dundee Evening Telegraph. 13 January 1949. p. 12. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  30. ^"Alf Pope is New Forthill Pro".Dundee Courier. 10 January 1952. p. 5. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  31. ^"Notes... by the way".Kirriemuir Free Press and Angus Advertiser. 28 March 1957. p. 6. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  32. ^"West Lothian Fail at Boghall".Linlithgowshire Gazette. 29 July 1960. p. 7. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  33. ^"Dyson Comes to Scotland".Aberdeen Evening Express. 22 February 1961. p. 14. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  34. ^"Profile: Jack Dyson". www.ESPNcricinfo.com. Retrieved1 September 2025.
  35. ^"Dyson Unsettled".Broughty Ferry Guide and Advertiser. 3 February 1962. p. 5. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  36. ^"Forfarshire break new ground".The Scotsman. 2 May 1964. p. 14. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  37. ^"Forfarshire's New Pro".Broughty Ferry Guide and Advertiser. 27 December 1980. p. 10. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  38. ^"New Professional".Broughty Ferry Guide and Advertiser. 23 May 1987. p. 11. Retrieved1 September 2025 – via theBritish Newspaper Archive.
  39. ^"Forfarshire CC - Season 2023 - Players Signings".Forfarshire Cricket Club. Dundee. 10 February 2023. Retrieved23 July 2025.

External links

[edit]
Players
Ground
Captains
Other
National teams
Domestic clubs
Former domestic clubs
Associations
Competitions
Grounds
Player lists
Others
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Forfarshire_Cricket_Club&oldid=1337129942"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp