Cambridge must change course (9 April 1999)
Pressure from the England Cricket Board has forced Cambridge University to choose between changing their attitude towards cricket or losing their first-class status
09-Apr-1999
9 April 1999
Cambridge must change course
Charles Randall at Fenner's
Pressure from the England Cricket Board has forced Cambridge
University to choose between changing their attitude towards cricket
or losing their first-class status.
That is the thrust from the ECB's policy of creating six university
centres of excellence. Their selection process has been completed, and
an announcement is due by the end of this month.
Cambridge are likely to be among the chosen names, but they have been
told: Invest time and money in cricket, or else.
In the next year it is quite probable a new three-lane indoor school
will appear at the conifers corner of their Fenner's ground where the
heavy roller was parked during yesterday's first day of the match
against Lancashire.
Mark Bailey, one of the Cambridge University delegates, said that
various assurances had been given to the ECB about fulfilling the
criteria laid down. But, privately, Cambridge would admit that the ECB
process came as a nasty shock.
Bailey, bursar at Corpus Christie College and a former England rugby
international and Suffolk seam bowler, admitted that the ECB had
forced Cambridge to assess their priorities. He said: "Initiatives
like this by external national bodies help everybody to focus their
minds."
The ECB were surprised at the number of high quality applications for
their excellence scheme. John Carr, an official, said: "We had 18 very
good bids, and I'm sure any one would make a success of the
programme."
Four of the six selections are likely to go to Cardiff - the most
comprehensive of all the bids, according to one source - Oxford,
Durham and probably Cambridge.
Yesterday Quentin Hughes, the Cambridge captain, had a tilt at the
earliest 100 in an English first-class season when he was caught and
bowled for 84 driving at Chris Schofield's leg-spin. The left-hander
looked in excellent form, punching the ball sweetly off his pads.
Ken Walker, an economics post graduate freshman from Natal University,
pushed solidly for his 55 in almost four hours. His innings was not a
gem, but it did set up a respectable total.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)