C Ellis: England Cricket Diary (11 Jul 1998)
THE eyes of the football world will be on France tomorrow for the World Cup final
11-Jul-1998
11 July 1998
England Cricket Diary
Clive Ellis
- THE eyes of the football world will be on France tomorrow for the World Cup final. On Tuesday the eyes of the cricket world will also be trained on France, or so it is hoped.
A gala match is being staged at Chfteau de Liettres near St Omer in
northern France to celebrate what is claimed to be the first written
mention of cricket.
A document has been found in the National Archive in Paris noting that
a petition was sent to King Louis XI relating to a dispute in the
village of Liettres on Oct 25, 1478.
Gunner Le Grant, stationed at the castle, was on his way through the
village when he came across "people playing with a ball near a stake
at criquet". Apparently, there was an appeal while he was watching
and he raised his hand and said: "C'est la!"
One of the players, C"taine Le Brasseur, did not agree with the
decision; a fight ensued and Le Brasseur later died from a knife
wound. Le Grant claimed self-defence, hence the substance of his royal
appeal.
The French brush aside any suggestion that cricket was played in
England as early as the 14th century, arguing that accounts of a young
Edward II "playing at creag" actually concern a different pastime.
Apart from Tuesday's encounter - against Kent Over-50s - in the very
field where blood was shed in 1478, a plaque will be unveiled to
commemorate the unholy exchange of Le Grant and Le Brasseur.
The only trouble is, if the French beat Brazil tomorrow, the World Cup
party could merge with Bastille Day celebrations on Tuesday, and
events in the Pas de Calais may just be overlooked.
Cricket still awaits the television benefits of de-listing home Tests,
but it hasn't done a bad job of tapping into Lottery money over the
past three years.
Figures released by the English Sports Council this week show that
cricket has received 428 awards - 48 more than the next most
'deserving' sport, tennis -bringing in a total of more than oe52
million.
The majority of the small-scale awards have gone towards small-club
facilities, changing rooms and pitches, but Nottinghamshire's
re-development at Trent Bridge received a oe5 million nudge in the
right direction and Hampshire have been given oe7 million towards their
new ground.
For the record, the present chart-toppers in a Ted Dexter-inspired
scheme which was launched in 1987 are Sachin Tendulkar and Allan
Donald.
Aravinda de Silva and Sanath Jayasuriya, who flew in earlier this week
for Sri Lanka's short tour, will be guests of honour at an event which
will raise funds to buy sports equipment for needy children in the
provincial areas of the island. Organisers have been encouraged by a
good wishes letter from Buckingham Palace.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)