Cheshire County League are Premier pioneers (24 February 1999)
NORTH-WEST pioneers of the England & Wales Cricket Board's vision for the future of club cricket are the Murray Smith Cheshire County League, who have been officially accredited as a Premier League for the 1999 season starting on Saturday, April 17th
24-Feb-1999
24 February 1999
Cheshire County League are Premier pioneers
by Mike Talbot-Butler
NORTH-WEST pioneers of the England & Wales Cricket Board's vision
for the future of club cricket are the Murray Smith Cheshire
County League, who have been officially accredited as a Premier
League for the 1999 season starting on Saturday, April 17th. As
ever, a step ahead of their regional rivals, the County League
are the first outside Birmingham and Kent to be awarded such
status by Lord's, having got their act together over a two-year
period with a specially qualified senior division, together with
a pyramid of feeder leagues below them.
The 12 clubs who earned premier status by finishing at the top of
an enlarged qualifying tournament last season are Alsager,
Bowdon, Brooklands, Cheadle Hulme, Chester Boughton Hall,
Didsbury, Hyde, Macclesfield, Neston, Oxton, Toft and Widnes, all
of whom will receive 1,000 pound grants direct form the ECB. This
will help them cover the additional expense involved in playing a
longer game of 120 overs with wickets pitched at 12:30pm for the
majority of the season. All Premier grounds have had to reach ECB
criteria governing the size of grounds, quality of pitches,
covers, sightscreens and practise facilities. There are to be
three breaks in play: for 30 minutes two hours after the start;
10 minutes between innings; and for 15 minutes 25 overs into the
second innings. This will give players, umpires and scorers the
breathers they will undoubtedly need with many games expected to
last up to seven hours.
The principal idea behind premier league is to give batsmen,
including those in the middle order, a genuine chance to build an
innings, to encourage spin bowlers and to rid the top echelon of
club cricket of the 'Crash Bang' stuff which has handicapped the
career of many an up and coming youngster who are expected to be
encouraged by this sort of game. Although some clubs have
expressed concern about the early starts, it is hoped this will
not deter family men from taking part although, if the new-style
cricket is clearly not working, the league have promised to
reassess the whole situation in October.
The league will be enlarged in 1999 by the acquisition of
Ashton-on-Mersey and Stockport Georgians from the Manchester
Association and both will go into a new 12-strong Second
Division, which will feed into a First Division comprising a
further 14 clubs, with promotion and relegation applying between
each division, although clubs with premier ambitions will need to
have an 'A' graded ground.
The full Cheshire pyramid will begin to take shape in season 2000
when an estimated 30 clubs will be entering the system from the
county's fringe leagues to join either the Meller Braggins
Cheshire League or the Oxbridge Cheshire Alliance. While each
league will retain its own autonomy, promotion and relegation
will apply between each, although, once again, the grounds of
aspiring promotion clubs will need to adhere to a certain set of
criteria. Cheshire County League Chairman David Humpage doubles
up as Chairman of the Cheshire Cricket Board's Clubs Cricket
Committee, which has been the body responsible for encouraging
clubs to join the pryamid. Says David: "It's been a really
exciting development and we have been delighted at the response
from clubs wishing to come and join us. Ideally we would like all
Cheshire clubs, both senior and junior, to join us and perhaps
they will in time when they see the success of the system. By the
season 2000, there will be more than 120 clubs in the pyramid
giving the humblest village teams a chance to rise to the top. It
is bound to raise the standards of play and of grounds in the
county and we are only too happy to be acting as guinea pigs for
the ECB in the region."
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