To many cricket lovers, the community aspect of county clubs and societies – who, unsurprisingly, have a hefty crossover in membership base – is paramount. At Somerset, for example, the club’s foundation hosts monthly Walkers & Talkers events throughout winter, inviting members to chat to one another and invited guests, while strolling around Taunton’s County Ground. Rob Kelly, the Norfolk Cricket Society secretary, suggests their group’s social value is at the heart of its monthly events. “It’s an opportunity to converse and keep in touch with people outside of the cricket season,” he says. “There’s a wellbeing element to it. During the dark winter months it provides people with a bit of focus.” Yet, as noted by the arrivals in the Sheffield golf club car park, a common struggle between the societies is an ageing demographic. Mirroring the endless wranglings over domestic first-class cricket, their future is a worry. “We are trying to attract younger people but I’m in my 50s and probably the youngest person we get regularly is in his mid-40s,” says Kelly. “It is a concern, but we’re enjoying it while it lasts.It is sad when I look back 10 years at a list of people who came on any given night and there are those who are unfortunately no longer with us. “We’re always trying to attract new members. We all put on a good evening and want more people to come along because it’s a nice thing to come to. At the moment I’m still positive about it, but I don’t look too far into the future.” There are about 4,000 cricket society members in Britain, gathering to chew the fat during the autumn/winter months. At the Derbyshire Cricket Society, the first hand up during my post-talk Q&A results in an unexpected barrage over the ECB’s recently amended transgender policy. At the Yorkshire Southern Group, it shamefully takes me an hour – “So did you used to play cricket yourself?” rapidly surging to the top of daft questions I have asked someone – to realise the person I have been happily chatting to over lunch is the former Yorkshire and England all-rounder Richard Hutton, son of the great batter Sir Len Hutton. Every society meeting promises surprises, informed discussion and no shortage of passion. The first delivery of the new season would be a longer time coming without them. ICC too in thrall to India In the least surprising cricket politics powerplay, it appears India have confirmed they will not travel to Pakistan for next year’s Champions Trophy. That should be that then: if you choose not to attend then you forfeit. There is precedent. Australia and West Indies did not send teams to Sri Lanka for the 1996 World Cup and accordingly forfeited their games there. The same happened when England chose not to travel to Zimbabwe and New Zealand to Kenya in the 2003 World Cup. Those were tournaments with multiple hosts. This time, Pakistan are hosting solo, which should leave India the choice of either turning up or dropping out. But cricket in 2024 does not work that way. The International Cricket Committee, and all its members, are so in thrall to the sport’s most powerful nation that everything will be done to find a solution amenable to the Indian cricketing and political – often one and the same – hierarchy. Whether that is a hastily arranged hybrid hosting model remains to be seen. It leaves a tournament that starts in less than 100 days with no certainty over its schedule, location or even which teams will be playing. It is a sorry state of affairs and one, regardless of the underlying tensions behind India’s stance, is shameful from cricket’s most dominant force. Quote of the week “Sam Curran’s been calling him the King of Barbados” – Jos Buttler reveals Saqib Mahmood’s new nickname, after the Caribbean-loving fast bowler’s fruitful return to the England team against West Indies. Memory Lane Two Durham greats embrace the cold. Steve Harmison swings away in front of Paul Collingwood at Chester-le-Street in April 1999, with the opening day of their County Championship fixture against Worcestershire abandoned due to snow. |