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THE inexorable decline of the county cricket festival, an integral part of the
game in England since 1842, will be accentuated next year when another
traditional week is likely to be discontinued. Somerset, who first played at
Bath in 1880, are planning to give up holding championship matches at the
Recreation Ground and are looking instead at staging fixtures at Truro in
Cornwall, where a significant number of their members reside.
Harsh financial considerations, which a number of first-class counties who
plan to redevelop their grounds are having to take, are behind this
recommendation by Richard Gould, the chief executive of Somerset, to his
committee.
“Staging a traditional cricket week at Bath costs us £82,000 a year to set up,
yet we only have 86 members living in BA1 or BA2 post codes,” he told The
Times. “It would make more sense for us to hold one 50-over match on May
Day bank holiday, followed by an unofficial Twenty20 challenge, which would
not involve erecting marquees or bringing in Portakabins.”
Although Gould did not discount the possibility of championship cricket
returning to Bath, the reality is that, since 1969, Somerset have given up
playing at ten other outgrounds, including Weston-super-Mare, where a
festival week was staged, Frome, Glastonbury and Yeovil. A group of
businessmen have offered to underwrite a festival at Truro, whereas
financial support for the festival at Bath, in spite of being a wealthy
area, has been conspicuously lacking.
“We have been lucky with the weather at Bath, but if we did have a
rain-affected match, quite a lot of the firms taking marquees for corporate
hospitality might not want to come the following year. If councils want to
stage county cricket, they have to put the money in,” Giles Clarke, the
Somerset chairman, said. “Bath and North East Somerset Council’s ability to
support the festival has declined — they used to give us £15,000 but that
has gone down considerably.
“Although the Friends of Bath work very hard to put on the festival, we just
do not receive enough economic support. For the past two years it has been
reliant on myself and Martin Powell, the Somerset committee member for the
area, and the week cannot be dependent on the generosity of two businessmen.
So we might end up swapping one festival for another in Truro. We have 1,600
members in Devon and Cornwall,” he said.
Concerns about the takings from the Bath festival, which is staged in June,
have been omnipresent since Bertie Buse’s benefit match in 1953 was over in
a day. The cost of setting it up is heightened because, unlike at other
remaining out venues elsewhere in the country, the Recreation Ground is a
public park and not a cricket ground. Yet, overlooked by Georgian houses and
ringed with marquees, it is a highly attractive setting and is redolent of
triumphs: Warwick Armstrong, the captain of Australia, made his career-best
score, an unbeaten 303, there in 1905, and, in 1977, Somerset, led by Brian
Close, defeated the Australians for the first time.
Although the festival, comprising a four-day championship fixture followed by
a one-day match, attracts decent crowds, the reality for Somerset is that
half their supporters live within 25 minutes’ drive of Taunton, which is an
hour away from Bath by car and still more by rail, and that Twenty20 cricket
is of greater interest to the populace. “Out of 45 days’ home cricket last
summer, 41 per cent of our gate takings came from four days of Twenty20
cricket,” Gould said.
A festival at Truro would be staged on an established club ground and lead to
speculation that Somerset might become amalgamated with Cornwall and Devon,
minor counties that have provided a number of their players down the years.
However, Gould said: “Somerset represents the South West, so there is no
need for the three to be combined. I do not think the Devon and Cornwall
Cricket Boards would want that.”
Losing grounds
Venues from which county championship cricket has disappeared
BOURNEMOUTH (Dean Park): First game Hampshire v Somerset, 1898; last
game Hampshire v Middlesex, 1992
DOVER (Crabble Ground): First game Kent v Gloucestershire, 1907; last
game Kent v Derbyshire, 1976
EASTBOURNE (The Saffrons): first game Sussex v Middlesex, 1897; last
game Sussex v Northamptonshire, 2000
FOLKESTONE (Cheriton Road): First game Kent v Worcestershire, 1927;
last game Kent v Essex, 1991
FROME (Agricultural Showgrounds): First game Somerset v
Northamptonshire, 1932; last game Somerset v Hampshire, 1961
GLASTONBURY (Morlands Ground): First game Somerset v Northamptonshire,
1952; last game Somerset v Nottinghamshire, 1973
HARROGATE (St George’s Road): First game Yorkshire v Essex, 1895; last
game Yorkshire v Hampshire, 1996
LEYTON (County Ground): First game Essex v Middlesex, 1895; last game
Essex v Glamorgan, 1977
WESTCLIFF (Chalkwell Park): First game Essex v Nottinghamshire, 1934;
last game Essex v Worcestershire, 1976
WESTON-SUPER-MARE (Clarence Park): First game Somerset v Yorkshire,
1914; last game Somerset v Durham, 1996
YEOVIL (two grounds): First game Somerset v Surrey, 1935; last game
Somerset v Essex, 1967
DAVID BLACKMORE
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