Monday, April 12, 2010

History of sport

The history of sport probably extends as far back as the existence of people as purposive sportive and active beings. Sport has been a useful way for people to increase their mastery of nature and the environment. The history of sport can teach us a great deal about social changes and about the nature of sport itself. Sport seems to involve basic human skills being developed and exercised for their own sake, in parallel with being exercised for their usefulness. It also shows how society has changed its beliefs and therefore there are changes in the rules. Of course, as we go further back in history the dwindling evidence makes the theories of the origins and purposes of sport difficult to support. Nonetheless, its importance in human history is undeniable.

Friday, April 9, 2010

A brief history of Bermuda Cricket

Cricket in Bermuda
The earliest match recorded in Bermuda took place on August 30, 1844, when the local garrison lost to another army team, although since the island was colonized in 1701, it seems more than likely that the game was played there in the 18th century. In 1855 Bermuda Cricket Club was formed, and it not surprising the the first visitors came from the nearby USA when Philadelphia Zingari visited in March 1891, playing the first international matches there, and the first Bermuda touring team, Hamilton Cricket Club, played in New York and Philadelphia in 1905.
The 1912 Australians popped in on their way home, but the cricketing strength of the island fell away after World War One, tours of poor quality sides taking place. The only tour of significance in the inter-War period being that of Sir Julien Cahn's team in 1933 - the five matches they played being the subject of much discussion for several years afterwards.
After the Second World War, enthusiasm for cricket gained ground and improvements in traveling led to more tours, particularly by West Indian sides, while Bermuda themselves visited England in 1960.
Bermuda became an Associate member of the ICC in 1966 and it was their delegate, Alma Hunt, who first proposed that a competition be held among the Associate members. This proposal led to the first ICC Trophy in England in 1979. In the second ICC Trophy in 1982, Bermuda advanced to the final without losing a match, but subsequent competitions have not seen this high standard kept up.
Bermuda remained on the periphery until they qualified for the 2007 World Cup courtesy of a fourth-place finish in the 2005 ICC Trophy. An US$11 million investment from the government plus extra income from Alan Stanford's competition gave the locals real hope that the country could breach the gap between Associates and Full Members.
The highlight of the domestic season is the annual Cup Match, played between two of the island's leading clubs - Somerset and St. George's. The match was first played in 1902 and the event is a public holiday, largely because so many locals took the time off anyway, and has taken on a carnival atmosphere.
Alma Hunt was, perhaps, the best cricketer produced by the island - he had some success in a trial match in Trinidad in 1933 prior to the selection of the West Indian side to tour England the following season, but doubts were raised about his eligibility - in the end he was not chosen. He was later an outstanding professional with Aberdeenshire and played for Scotland.

A brief history of Zimbabwe cricket

A brief history of Zimbabwe cricket

It is believed that the first cricket match staged in what was then known as Rhodesia took place on August 16, 1890 near Fort Victoria (now Masvingo). By the mid 1890s the principal match of the season was Salisbury (now Harare) v Bulawayo.
In 1898-99 Lord Hawke's team came to play two matches in Bulawayo, this being the first visit by an English cricket team to Rhodesia. In the first years of the twentieth century, JD Logan presented a cup for competition amongst the towns in Rhodesia, and in 1904-05 Rhodesia sent a team to Johannesburg to oppose Transvaal in the Currie Cup Competition. After a long and harrowing journey by the Rhodesians, Transvaal won by an innings and 170 runs.
The first MCC touring side travelled to South Africa in 1905-06, but did not play in Rhodesia; similarly the second MCC team of 1909-10 failed to make a visit, but at the end of that tour the captain Leveson-Gower persuaded three of his MCC touring colleagues, together with seven South African players, to journey to Rhodesia and play games at Bulawayo, Gwelo (now Gweru) and Salisbury. After being defeated at Bulawayo in the first game, the Rhodesians gave a much better account of themselves in the match at Salisbury.
Between the two World Wars the standard of cricket in Rhodesia continued to rise and the country took part in a number of Currie Cup tournaments, as well as having regular visits from touring sides. Rhodesia might well have won the Currie Cup tournament of 1931-32, held in the Johannesburg area. In five matches they won four outright victories against a defeat by Transvaal, but the seemingly inexplicable system which awarded the same number of points for a first-innings lead in a drawn match as for an outright victory gave the tournament to Western Province.
Unfortunately this was Rhodesia's last appearance in the Currie Cup until after World War II; the long distances involved and the reluctance of most South African teams to travel north across the Limpopo made participation difficult, apart from those years when the tournament was held in one centre. Despite the scarcity of first-class cricket, though, the country did produce its first Test player, when leg-spinning all-rounder Denis Tomlinson was selected for the South African tour to England in 1935.
After 1946 Rhodesia participated regularly in the Currie Cup, playing most of their matches away from home to start with until the South African provinces gradually became more willing to travel north. During the fifties and sixties, with the Currie Cup now split into two sections, Rhodesia were forever it seemed in limbo between the two. A cycle began in which they would overwhelm B Section opposition and gain promotion to the A Section, only to find themselves outclassed at that level - lack of self-confidence being an explanation rather than lack of talent - and being demoted again to the B Section.
>From 1953-54 to 1963-64 Rhodesia were captained by David Lewis, who won a Blue at Oxford University and is still acclaimed by many as the best captain Rhodesia ever had. In his team he had several outstanding players who also played Test cricket for South Africa: Percy Mansell, Godfrey Lawrence, Joe Partridge and the Pithey brothers, Tony and David.
The player who really brought Rhodesian cricket to world attention, though, was the legendary Colin Bland. He is remembered not so much as a batsman good enough to average 49 in Test cricket for South Africa, but more as an outfielder who lifted the art of fielding to heights never before attained, or possibly even imagined. Since then, superb fielding has become a national tradition and teams from this country have rarely failed to live up to his legacy.
The early 70s saw the emergence of what many still regard as the country's strongest ever team. It was captained by the great South African all-rounder Mike Procter and contained such fine players as Jackie du Preez, John Traicos, Duncan Fletcher, Brian Davison, Peter Carlstein, Paddy Clift, Howie Gardiner, Richie Kaschula and Surrey and England pace bowler Robin Jackman. Those years, though, are more frequently remembered as an era of frustration, as it coincided with South Africa's years of greatest strength and Rhodesia were never quite able to win the coveted Currie Cup.
They came closest in 1972-73, when the infamous 'Wilmot walk-off' match took place (see 1972-73 season) and the decision of the umpires to award the match to Rhodesia was arbitrarily overturned by the South African Cricket Union. Yet two matches were lost that season due to disastrous batting collapses from a position of strength, and this tendency also let down the team in other seasons during the seventies. It was a team with outstanding potential, on paper probably the strongest team in the world outside Test cricket at that time, but, with the civil war years looming, it never quite realised its potential. True international cricket during those years was impossible after Rhodesia's UDI in 1965 and the subsequent imposition of sanctions on the country; gradually South Africa too was being isolated.
Independence and the subsequent reacceptance of the country by the rest of the world in 1980 began a new era in Zimbabwean cricket. On July 21, 1981 Zimbabwe was elected an associate member of the ICC. In 1983 they participated in the World Cup for the first time, and in their first match astounded the cricket world with a handsome victory over Australia. However the emigration of many whites, the unavoidably long time necessary to develop black talent and the defection to England of Graeme Hick, indisputably the most talented batsman ever produced by this country, led to a decline in strength and, at times, of morale.
Between 1983 and 1992 Zimbabwe played in three World Cup competitions, but were forced to qualify for each in an ICC Trophy competition among the associate members. Zimbabwe duly won all three, and in fact won every completed match they played each time. Andy Pycroft and Dave Houghton were the mainstays of the batting, while Peter Rawson was a bowler of true international class. The evergreen off-spinner John Traicos played long enough and well enough not only throughout the eighties, but in fact to play Test cricket for South Africa in 1970 before its isolation and for Zimbabwe in the nineties.
For years ZCU presidents Alwyn Pichanick and Dave Ellman-Brown lobbied the Test-playing nations on Zimbabwe's behalf, knowing that the game would stagnate without the stimulus of true international competition. Their work finally bore fruit, and not a season too soon, as Zimbabwe were finally elevated to Test status in 1992.
On 18 October 1992 India came to Harare to play Zimbabwe in the first Test involving the home country. Again Zimbabwe performed beyond all expectations, running up a total of 456 and coming close to forcing India to follow-on. In the end they had to settle for a draw, but they were the first new member of the Test-playing community ever to avoid defeat in its inaugural Test match.
Zimbabwe's first Test victory came in its 11th match, in 1994-95, when Pakistan were roundly defeated at Harare Sports Club by an innings and 64 runs. The next was longer in coming: after several near misses, they finally beat India in a closely fought match, also in Harare, in 1998-99. This was followed immediately by another, against Pakistan in Peshawar; Pakistan failed to level the score and so Zimbabwe had won a Test series for the first time, and that away from home.
In one-day internationals Zimbabwe also took a long time to find their confidence and master the techniques of winning, although occasional victories showed what could be achieved. This was most notable against England, the one country which had failed to support Zimbabwe's bid for Test status. When that country somewhat belatedly toured Zimbabwe for the first time, the home side overwhelmed (or 'murdered', to use a word made popular by the visiting coach David Lloyd) the Englishmen 3-0 in the one-day series. In six one-day internationals played between the two countries to date, Zimbabwe have won five and lost only one.
Again a major breakthrough was achieved in 1998-99 when Zimbabwe reached the final of a one-day competition for the first time. This took place in Sharjah as a result of two victories in the group matches over the reigning World Cup champions Sri Lanka and one over India, who defeated Zimbabwe in the final with the help of a century by Sachin Tendulkar.
Within a year of their first Test match, the Zimbabwean team consisted almost entirely of promising youngsters built around Dave Houghton, now in his late thirties, and pace bowler Eddo Brandes, when fit. The Flower brothers, Andy and Grant, soon emerged as world-class batsmen, and Heath Streak as a fast-medium bowler at one time ranked as fourth in the world. Zimbabwe's first black Test player, Henry Olonga, made his debut in Zimbabwe's first Test victory and played a crucial role in both of the next two.
At a domestic level, inter-provincial cricket has been played for the Logan Cup since 1903-04, but it is only since Zimbabwe attained Test status that it has been possible to organise it as a first-class competition. Since the late sixties Mashonaland - basically Harare - has had at times almost a monopoly of the top players, making true inter-provincial competition difficult.
But the increasing political unrest inside Zimbabwe spilt over into the Zimbabwe Cricket Union, which had been a genuinely professional organisation after the granting of Test status, with Don Arnott as the first chief executive until his retirement in 1998. He was succeeded by Dave Ellman-Brown, who brought a new dynamic approach to cricket administration in the country, but a combination of rampant inflation, an exodus of many of the cricketing fraternity and growing politicisation resulted in a marked decline in standards and development.
The 2003 World Cup, which should have given Zimbabwe a platform to show itself off, degenerated into a farce as England refused to tour and Andy Flower and Henry Olonga staged their famous "black armband" protest. Both quickly slipped into exile, joining a number of current and former players.
In April 2004, the sacking of Heath Streak as captain triggered a six-month crisis which threatened the future of the game and led to calls for Zimbabwe to be stripped of their Test status. Although an uneast truce followed, the side was left woefully weak, and Test and ODI defeats by Bangladesh confirmed that Zimbabwe were bottom of the pile. A self-imposed one-year suspension from Test cricket followed, but when Zimbabwe came back they were, if anything, even weaker and chaos at home continued.
The 2005-06 Logan Cup never took place after a disastrous Faithwear Trophy when sides were so feeble as to be embarrassing. ZC revamped the system, removed Mashonaland and Matabeleland (two of the leading opponents of the Chingoka regime) and unveilled a new competition for 2006-07.

The measurements of cricket

The measurements of cricket
The measurements of most sports are in round numbers, except for a few of those that have been converted to metric equivalents. The welter of precise measurements in cricket seems distinct, but in fact some have quite a simple origin.
The earliest known Laws of Cricket, the "Code of 1744", give the length of the pitch as 22 yards. Over the centuries the often vague and regionally differing Saxon linear measurements becaine standardized to give a mile (a survival of the old Roman measurement of 1,000 double paces) as equal to 8 furlongs (i.e. "furrow long") or 320 perches (also called rods or poles) or 1,760 yards (from the Old English gyrd that meant stick or twig) or 5,280 feet or 63,360 inches or 190,080 barley corns (e.g. in the thirteenth century a royal Assize of Weights and Measures prescribed "the Iron Yard of our Lord the King" at 3 feet of 12 inches or 36 barley corns). It will thus be seen that 22 yards is in fact one tenth of a furlong or length of a furrow. There was an equally vague Saxon square measurement of land, the hide (called also carucate, from the Latin for a plough, and ploughland) which was the area required by one free family with dependents and that could be ploughed with one plough and 8 oxen in one year. This was in turn divided into four yardlands or 100 acres, the definition of which was the amount of land that could be ploughed by one yoke of oxen in one day. In Norman times the acre became precisely defined as 40 by 4 perches, thus preserving the shape of the Saxon strip-acre, i.e. one furlong by one tenth of a furlong. The cricket pitch is therefore simply the breadth of the Saxon strip-acre.
It would be a mistake, however, to assume that cricket, which is believed to have had its origins on the Weald that was used primarily as grazing ground for sheep rather than ploughland, necessarily took the length of its pitch directly from this source, although the largest Saxon mete-wand or measuring rod, the gad, continued in use into the early days of cricket and was one perch in length, i.e. one quarter of the breadth of a furrow. In 1610 Edmund Gunter, an Oxford trained mathematician, now Professor of Astronomy at Gresham College, London, invented as an instrument of measurement the chain, taking its length from the breadth of the furrow and dividing it into 100 links of 7.92 inches each (i.e. 4 perches [not 40 as stated by the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed., vol. 19, p. 729, which is the length of the furrow]; By 1661 use of this chain had become sufficiently popular for the word to be used to designate the measurement itself}. This chain became the common measuring tool for land surveyors. We do not know when cricketers first wished to standardize their pitch, but in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries at least pitches were often physically marked out with the use of Gunter's chain.
The distance between the bowling crease and the popping crease (i.e. the crease over which the bat could be popped for safety) is given by the "Code of 1744" as 46 inches (increased to 48 inches sometime before 1821). Before creases were marked in whitewash in 1865 they were cut into the earth and were, as W.G. Grace remembered from his early days, one inch deep and one inch wide. With allowance made of 1/2 inch from the centre of each crease the distance between the inner edges of the creases was thus 45 inches, that is the length of an ell. This was another Saxon measurement that had been standardized by the time of Edward I who required that there should be an exact copy of his ell-wand in all the towns of his realm. It was used regularly for measuring cloth (hence its later name of clothyard), and indeed the king's alnager had the duty of checking that all cloth for sale was one ell in width. It was thus a measurement that would have been very familiar to the cricketing folk of the sheep-rearing Weald.
The ell's subdivision into 16 nails of 2 and 13/16 inches each probably accounts for the size of the early wicket. According to the "Code of 1744" "Ye Stumps must be 22 inches long, and ye Bail 6 inches". P.F. Thomas (who wrote under the pseudonymous H.P.-T.) convincingly argues that these figures are a rounding off by the gentlemen of London of the earlier rustic measurement of 8 nails by 2 nails, which would give a wicket of 22 and 1/2 by 5 and 5/8 inches. The addition of the third stump c. 1775 did not change the dimensions of the wicket but since 1798 a series of alterations has brought them to the present 28 by 9 inches. The addition of the third stump did not immediately bring about the division of the single bail into two bails (first mentioned in the Maidstone edition of the Laws c. 1786 but not in a reputable edition until the early nineteenth century. It is InterestIng that even in the 1950s bails were often sold as a single piece to be cut at the discretion of the purchaser).
There were no legal limits on the size of the bat until Shock White appeared in a match with a weapon the width of the wicket, unsporting behaviour that led two days later to his opponents, the Hambledon Club, writing the following minute: "In view of the performance of one White of Ryegate on September 23rd that ffour (sic) and quarter inches shall be the breadth forthwith. - this 25th day of September 1771". It is signed by its scribe Richard Nyren and by T. Brett and J. Small and was speedily accepted elsewhere, occuring already in the "Code of 1774". The Hambledonians promptly made an iron gauge to check the implements of future opponents, but unfortunately it has been lost since it was purloined by "a gentleman who took a fancy to it". Other similar gauges were, however, manufactured, the one at Sheffield Park once catching out W.G. Grace. Approximately 4 and 1/4 inches is the standard width of all earlier known bats, the oldest being that owned by John Chitty of Knaphill now in the pavilion at Kennington Oval that is dated to 1729. There is tenuous evidence for an earlier period. The Roman Catholic College of Stonyhurst removed to France and later Belgium during the religious persecution of the sixteenth century and kept up a form of cricket that it brought back to England when forced to move by the French revolution. A teacher who left the school in 1871 remembers its bats as being blocks of probably alder wood about 3 feet long, "roughly oval in shape, about 4 and 1/2 in. wide and 2 in. thick". This distinctive Stonyhurst cricket had remarkable wickets, stones about 17 in. high, 13 in. wide and 8 in. thick at the bottom. There has never been any limitation on the weight of the bat, one of 1771 weighing a monstrous 5 Ib.
The "Code of 1744" prescribes that 'Ye Ball must weigh between 5 and 6 Ounces". Its circumference was not specified until May lOth 1838 when it was put as between 9 and 9 and 1/4 inches. This lack of precision corroborates what one might suspect, that a ball was the weight and size found convenient and that the difficulties of manufacture have precluded even today any precise specification. The size of the wicket and other laws have been frequently changed in attempts to be fair to both batsman and bowler. Is it not time for further revisions of measurements? The principal problems today are the ease with which even mis-hits go to the boundary and the sharply rising bouncers from tall fast bowlers. It is impossible to push back the boundaries at most grounds (though Kennington Oval and Grace Road, Leicester, for instance, do not use all the available playing area for any one match), but a restriction on the weight of the bat would not only revive more refined batsmanship but also once more enable slow bowlers to tempt batsmen to their doom with catches in the deep. The length of the pitch was chosen by cricketers who bowled, that is propelled the ball under arm, and were on average shorter than their modern counterparts who can hurl their missile from far above their heads. Is it not time that the pitch should be lengthened, that the old Saxon strip-acre should at last be left fallow ?

The history of the game Cricket !!! AR Littlewood

Cricket literature - the 18th century
Written and pictorial records of cricket may go back to the Plantagenet period, although it is impossible to distinguish between what may be cricket and its brothers, cat and dog, stool-ball, rounders etc., and even at times its cousins, hockey and golf. The firmest, though still not secure, pictorial evidence is an illustration apparently of a man demonstrating a stroke with a stump to a boy holding a straight club and a ball in a Decretal of Pope Gregory IX that was illuminated in England; while in the Wardrobe Accounts of the Royal Household for the year 1300 the sums of 100 shillings and 6 pounds are mentioned as being spent on "creag" and other sports of Prince Edward (the grandfather of the Black Prince).
In the Tudor period there are references to boys playing "creckett" and in the seventeenth century there are many references such as that by Sir William Dugdale that Oliver Cromwell played cricket in his youth, while in 1653 Sir Thomas Urquhart even makes Gargantua play cricket in his translation of Rabelais. At the very end of this century cricket makes its appearance in the newspapers, a trend that grows rapidly in the eighteenth century but is concerned with announcements of matches, the wagers involved and, occasionally, the ensuing riots rather than with descriptions of matches. Rather different is the "Code of 1744" that contains at least two strata, one of which, wherein for instance the ball is referred to as "she" rather than "it", is clearly rustic rather than metropolitan and may be of considerable antiquity. All this, however, cannot be classed as literature.
Literature begins, for cricket, suddenly, unexpectedly and fully grown, like Minerva from the head of Jupiter, in a Latin poem of 95 lines on a rural cricket match that was written by William Goldwin and published in his Musae Juveniles in March 1706. Little is known of the author: he left Eton for King's College Cambridge in 1700 and subsequently became Master of Bristol Grammar School and then was Vicar of Saint Nicholas, Bristol, until his death in 1747. His poem, In Certamen Pilae (On a Match at Ball), has been translated into English verse by Harold Perry in Etoniana in 1922 and, with copious scholarly notes, again into verse by H.P.-T. (P.F. Thomas) in Early Cricket the following year. In early spring "a chosen cohort of youths, armed with curved bats, ...descends rejoicing to the field". Each team tries to impose its own laws, until a grey-haired Nestor composes the squabble. They mark the pitch and on the stumps place the bail which "cries out for good defence" against "the leathern sphere". Two umpires stand "leaning on their bats" while the scorers "sit on a hummock ready to cut the mounting score on sticks with their little knives". The game begins and a batsman "propels the strident ball afar ...but a clearsighted scout (fieldsman) prepares his ambush in the deep and with outstretched palms joyfully accepts it as it falls ...and grief overwhelms those who silently mourn their friend's disaster". The tale of misfortune continues, and one batsman in going for a second run "falls headlong at the very foot of the wicket. (as) the shaken earth groans beneath his great weight" and the rustic throng exult in laughter". The other side fares better and "Victory , long striven for, noisily flaps its wings and fills the sky with the shouts and roars of success".
Cricket literature in English also gets off to a flying start with the appearance of Cricket: an Heroic Poem. illlustrated with the Critical Observations of Scriblerus Maximus. In 316 lines it describes the earliest match for which individual scores have been recorded, between Kent and England at the Artillery Ground, London, on June 18th 1744. It was written by James Love (really Dance), the bankrupt son of the architect of the Mansion House, who had taken to acting and writing for the stage to earn his living. It contains the much quoted couplet "Hail, cricket! Glorious manly, British Game! / First of all Sports! be first alike in Fame", as it lauds cricket to the detriment of "puny Billiards, where, with sluggish Pace, / The dull Ball trails before the feeble Mace" and even "Tennis self, thy sister sport" that cannot "charm, / Or with thy fierce Delights our Bosoms warm". Its style may, however, be better judged by the description of the fall of the famous lefthander Richard Newland of Slindon:
The champion strikes. When scarce arriving fair,The glancing ball mounts upward in the air.The batsman sees it, and with mournful eyesFixed on the ascending pellet as it flies,Thus suppliant claims the favour of the skies And now illustrious Sackville where he stoodThe approaching ball with cautious pleasure viewed,At once he sees the chiefs impending doom,And pants for mighty honours yet to come.Swift as the falcon darting on its prey,He springs elastic on the verdant way;Sure of success, flies upward with a bound,Derides the slow approach, and spurns the ground.Prone slips the youth, yet glories in his fall,With arm extended shows the captive ball.
The notes are worth reading, being partly informative of participants in the match and literary inspirations from Vergil and partly mock scholarly like that on Book 2, verse 47: "A Place there is.) Est in secessu Locus. The Author here has exactly follow'd the Example of all great Poets, both ancient and modern, who never fail to prepare you with a pompous Description of the Place where any great Action is to be perform'd."
A more frivolous poem on a cricket match appeared in 1773 when the Rev. John Duncombe wrote a parody on the ballad Chevy Chace called Burry Triumphant:
The active Earl of TankervilleAn even bet did make,That in Bourn paddock he would causeKent's chief est hands to quake.
And so he did, for:
Of byes and overthows but threeThe Kentish heroes gain'd,And Surry victor on the score,Twice seventy-five remain'd.
Of near three hundred notches madeBy Surry, eight were byes;The rest were balls, which, boldly struck,Re-echo'd to the skies!
This called forth a rejoinder from John Burn by, an attorney-at-law in Canterbury. His description of the Duke of Dorset is memorable:
His Grace the Duke of Dorset came,...Equall'd by few, he plays with glee,Nor peevish seeks for victory...And for unlike the Modern wayOf blocking every ball at play,He firmly stands with bat upright,And strikes with athletic might,Sends forth the ball across the mead,And scores six notches for the deed.
A more unusual match was the subject of an anonymous poem of 1796: it was played between the one-legged and the one armed:
...Though bloody deeds by fortress wallAre parodied when bat and ballDefend and storm the stubborn wicket.Thus thought I, when with vision dim,With feeble step and loss of limb,Old warriors in the strife contended...
Poems could give advice, on cricket (1772):
Ye bowlers take heed, to my precepts attend,On you the whole state of the game must depend,Spare your vigour at first nor exert all your strength,But measure each step, and be sure pitch a length.Ye strikers observe when the foe shall draw nigh,Mark the bowler advance with a vigilant eye;Your skill all depends upon distance and sight,Stand firm to your scratch, let your bat be upright.
and even through cricket on life (1756):
The outward side, who place and profit want,Watch to surprise and labour to supplant;While those who taste the sweets of present winningsLabour as heartily to keep their innings.
On either side the whole great game is play'd -Untry'd no shift is left, unsought no aid;Skill vies with skill, and pow'r contends with pow'r ,And squint-eyed prejudice computes their score.
The enthusiasm for cricket in the eighteenth century is well represented by a letter from Mary Turner of East Hoathly to her son in September 1739: "Last Munday youre Father was at Mr Payns and plaid at Cricket and come home pleased anuf for he struck the best Ball in the game and whished he had not anny thing else to do he wuld play Cricket all his life". However, the active participation in cricket of members of the nobility called forth adverse criticism from both poets and poetasters. Alexander Pope attacks probably Lord John Sackville in his "The Judge to dance his brother serjeant call, / The Senator at cricket urge the ball", while in 1778 a lampooner inveighs against the Duke of Dorset in his The Noble Cricketers:
When Death (for Lords must die) your doom shall seal,What sculptured Honors shall your tomb reveal?Instead of Glory , with a weeping eye,Instead of Virtue pointing to the sky,Let Bats and Balls th' affronted stone disgrace,While Farce stands leering by, with Satyr face,Holding, with forty notches mark'd, a board -The noble triumph of a noble Lord!
The last words for the eighteenth century must, however, be for its most famous club, Hambledon, for which the Rev. Reynell Cotton, master of Hyde Abbey School, Winchester, wrote his Cricket Song:
...The wickets are pitch'd now, and measured the ground;Then they form a large ring, and stand gazing around -Since Ajax fought Hector, in sight of all Troy,No contest was seen with such fear and such joy.
Derry down, etc Then fill up your glass, he's the best that drinks most.Here's the Hambledon Club! - who refuses the toast ?Let's join in the praise of the bat and the wicket,And sing in full chorus the patrons of cricket.Derry down, etc.
And when the game's o'er, and our fate shall draw nigh(For the heroes of cricket, like others, must die),Our bats we'll resign, neither troubled nor vex'd,And give up our wickets to those that come next.Derry down, etc.

A brief history of cricket

A brief history of cricket :
The origins of cricket lie somewhere in the Dark Ages - probably after the Roman Empire, almost certainly before the Normans invaded England, and almost certainly somewhere in Northern Europe. All research concedes that the game derived from a very old, widespread and uncomplicated pastime by which one player served up an object, be it a small piece of wood or a ball, and another hit it with a suitably fashioned club.
How and when this club-ball game developed into one where the hitter defended a target against the thrower is simply not known. Nor is there any evidence as to when points were awarded dependent upon how far the hitter was able to despatch the missile; nor when helpers joined the two-player contest, thus beginning the evolution into a team game; nor when the defining concept of placing wickets at either end of the pitch was adopted.
Etymological scholarship has variously placed the game in the Celtic, Scandinavian, Anglo-Saxon, Dutch and Norman-French traditions; sociological historians have variously attributed its mediaeval development to high-born country landowners, emigré Flemish cloth-workers, shepherds on the close-cropped downland of south-east England and the close-knit communities of iron- and glass-workers deep in the Kentish Weald. Most of these theories have a solid academic basis, but none is backed with enough evidence to establish a watertight case. The research goes on.
What is agreed is that by Tudor times cricket had evolved far enough from club-ball to be recognisable as the game played today; that it was well established in many parts of Kent, Sussex and Surrey; that within a few years it had become a feature of leisure time at a significant number of schools; and - a sure sign of the wide acceptance of any game - that it had become popular enough among young men to earn the disapproval of local magistrates.
Dates in cricket history
1550 (approx) Evidence of cricket being played in Guildford, Surrey. 1598 Cricket mentioned in Florio's Italian-English dictionary.1610 Reference to "cricketing" between Weald and Upland near Chevening, Kent. 1611 Randle Cotgrave's French-English dictionary translates the French word "crosse" as a cricket staff.Two youths fined for playing cricket at Sidlesham, Sussex.
1624 Jasper Vinall becomes first man known to be killed playing cricket: hit by a bat while trying to catch the ball - at Horsted Green, Sussex.1676 First reference to cricket being played abroad, by British residents in Aleppo, Syria.1694 Two shillings and sixpence paid for a "wagger" (wager) about a cricket match at Lewes.1697 First reference to "a great match" with 11 players a side for fifty guineas, in Sussex.1700 Cricket match announced on Clapham Common.
1709 First recorded inter-county match: Kent v Surrey.1710 First reference to cricket at Cambridge University.1727 Articles of Agreement written governing the conduct of matches between the teams of the Duke of Richmond and Mr Brodrick of Peperharow, Surrey.1729 Date of earliest surviving bat, belonging to John Chitty, now in the pavilion at The Oval.1730 First recorded match at the Artillery Ground, off City Road, central London, still the cricketing home of the Honourable Artillery Company.
1744 Kent beat All England by one wicket at the Artillery Ground.First known version of the Laws of Cricket, issued by the London Club, formalising the pitch as 22 yards long.1767 (approx) Foundation of the Hambledon Club in Hampshire, the leading club in England for the next 30 years.1769 First recorded century, by John Minshull for Duke of Dorset's XI v Wrotham.1771 Width of bat limited to 4 1/4 inches, where it has remained ever since.1774 LBW law devised.1776 Earliest known scorecards, at the Vine Club, Sevenoaks, Kent.1780 The first six-seamed cricket ball, manufactured by Dukes of Penshurst, Kent.1787 First match at Thomas Lord's first ground, Dorset Square, Marylebone - White Conduit Club v Middlesex.Formation of Marylebone Cricket Club by members of the White Conduit Club.1788 First revision of the Laws of Cricket by MCC.1794 First recorded inter-schools match: Charterhouse v Westminster.1795 First recorded case of a dismissal "leg before wicket".1806 First Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's.1807 First mention of "straight-armed" (i.e. round-arm) bowling: by John Willes of Kent.1809 Thomas Lord's second ground opened at North Bank, St John's Wood.1811 First recorded women's county match: Surrey v Hampshire at Ball's Pond, London.1814 Lord's third ground opened on its present site, also in St John's Wood.1827 First Oxford v Cambridge match, at Lord's. A draw.1828 MCC authorise the bowler to raise his
hand level with the elbow.1833 John Nyren publishes his classic Young Cricketer's Tutor and The Cricketers of My Time.1836 First North v South match, for many years regarded as the principal fixture of the season.1836 (approx) Batting pads invented.1841 General Lord Hill, commander-in-chief of the British Army, orders that a cricket ground be made an adjunct of every military barracks.1844 First official international match: Canada v United States.1845 First match played at The Oval.1846 The All-England XI, organised by William Clarke, begins playing matches, often against odds, throughout the country.1849 First Yorkshire v Lancashire match.1850 Wicket-keeping gloves first used.1850 John Wisden bowls all ten batsmen in an innings for North v South.1853 First mention of a champion county: Nottinghamshire.1858 First recorded instance of a hat being awarded to a bowler taking three wickets with consecutive balls.1859 First touring team to leave England, captained by George Parr, draws enthusiastic crowds in the US and Canada.1864 Overhand bowling authorised by MCC.John Wisden's The Cricketer's Almanack first published.1868 Team of Australian aborigines tour England.1873 WG Grace becomes the first player to record 1,000 runs and 100 wickets in a season.First regulations restricting county qualifications, often regarded as the official start of the County Championship.1877 First Test match: Australia beat England by 45 runs in Melbourne.1880 First Test in England: a five-wicket win against Australia at The Oval.1882 Following England's first defeat by Australia in England, an "obituary notice" to English cricket in the Sporting Times leads to the tradition of The Ashes.1889 South Africa's first Test match.Declarations first authorised, but only on the third day, or in a one-day match.1890 County Championship officially constituted.Present Lord's pavilion opened.1895 WG Grace scores 1,000 runs in May, and reaches his 100th hundred.1899 AEJ Collins scores 628 not out in a junior house match at Clifton College, the highest individual score in any match.Selectors choose England team for home Tests, instead of host club issuing invitations.1900 Six-ball over becomes the norm, instead of five.1909 Imperial Cricket Conference (ICC - now the International Cricket Council) set up, with England, Australia and South Africa the original members.1910 Six runs given for any hit over the boundary, instead of only for a hit out of the ground.1912 First and only triangular Test series played in England, involving England, Australia and South Africa.1915 WG Grace dies, aged 67.1926 Victoria score 1,107 v New South Wales at Melbourne, the record total for a first-class innings.1928 West Indies' first Test match.AP "Tich" Freeman of Kent and England becomes the only player to take more than 300 first-class wickets in a season: 304.1930 New Zealand's first Test match.Donald Bradman's first tour of England: he scores 974 runs in the five Ashes Tests, still a record for any Test series.1931 Stumps made higher (28 inches not 27) and wider (nine inches not eight - this was optional until 1947).1932 India's first Test match.Hedley Verity of Yorkshire takes ten wickets for ten runs v Nottinghamshire, the best innings analysis in first-class cricket.1932-33 The Bodyline tour of Australia in which England bowl at batsmen's bodies with a packed leg-side field to neutralise Bradman's scoring.1934 Jack Hobbs retires, with 197 centuries and 61,237 runs, both records. First women's Test: Australia v England at Brisbane.1935 MCC condemn and outlaw Bodyline.1947 Denis Compton of Middlesex and England scores a record 3,816 runs in an English season.1948 First five-day Tests in England.Bradman concludes Test career with a second-ball duck at The Oval and a batting average of 99.94 - four runs short of 100.1952 Pakistan's first Test match.1953 England regain the Ashes after a 19-year gap, the longest ever.1956 Jim Laker of England takes 19 wickets for 90 v Australia at Manchester, the best match analysis in first-class cricket.1957 Declarations authorised at any time.1960 First tied Test, Australia v West Indies at Brisbane.1963 Distinction between amateur and professional cricketers abolished in English cricket.The first major one-day tournament begins in England: the Gillette Cup.1969 Limited-over Sunday league inaugurated for first-class counties.1970 Proposed South African tour of England cancelled: South Africa excluded from international cricket because of their government's apartheid policies.1971 First one-day international: Australia v England at Melbourne.1975 First World Cup: West Indies beat Australia in final at Lord's.1976 First women's match at Lord's, England v Australia.1977 Centenary Test at Melbourne, with identical result to the first match: Australia beat England by 45 runs.Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer, signs 51 of the world's leading players in defiance of the cricketing authorities.1978 Graham Yallop of Australia wears a protective helmet to bat in a Test match, the first player to do so.1979 Packer and official cricket agree peace deal.1980 Eight-ball over abolished in Australia, making the six-ball over universal.1981 England beat Australia in Leeds Test, after following on with bookmakers offering odds of 500 to 1 against them winning.1982 Sri Lanka's first Test match.1991 South Africa return, with a one-day international in India.1992 Zimbabwe's first Test match.Durham become the first county since Glamorgan in 1921 to attain firstclass status.1993 The ICC ceases to be administered by MCC, becoming an independent organisation with its own chief executive.1994 Brian Lara of Warwickshire becomes the only player to pass 500 in a firstclass innings: 501 not out v Durham.2000 South Africa's captain Hansie Cronje banned from cricket for life after admitting receiving bribes from bookmakers in match-fixing scandal.Bangladesh's first Test match.County Championship split into two divisions, with promotion and relegation.The Laws of Cricket revised and rewritten.2001 Sir Donald Bradman dies, aged 92.2003 Twenty20 Cup, a 20-over-per-side evening tournament, inaugurated in England.2004 Lara becomes the first man to score 400 in a Test innings, against England.2005 The ICC introduces Powerplays and Supersubs in ODIs, and hosts the inaugural Superseries.2006 Pakistan forfeit a Test at The Oval after being accused of ball tampering