Marylebone Cricket Club

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Marylebone Cricket Club
MCC logo.svg
Founded: 1787
Current ground occupied since 1814
Home ground: Lord's Cricket Ground
Official website: www.lords.org/mcc

Marylebone Cricket Club is a cricket club in London, founded in 1787. It owns, and is based at, Lord's Cricket Ground in St John's Wood, London NW8. MCC was formerly the governing body of cricket both in England and Wales as well as worldwide. In 1993 many of its global functions were transferred to the International Cricket Council (ICC) and its English governance passed to the Test and County Cricket Board (TCCB) at the same time.

MCC revised the Laws of Cricket in 1788[1] and continues to reissue them (from time to time), and remains the copyright holder.[2]

Since its foundation, the club has raised its own teams which are essentially occasional and have never taken part in any formal competition. Depending on the quality of the opposition in any given match, MCC has always had major cricket status: i.e., it is classified as an unofficial first-class team by substantial sources from 1863 to 1894;[3][4] and classified as an official first-class team from 1895 by itself and the County Championship clubs;[5] It has never played in a List A match.

MCC teams play many matches against minor opposition and, on these occasions, they relinquish major status. Traditionally, to mark the beginning of each English season in April, MCC plays the reigning County Champions at Lord's, this being a first-class match. MCC sides regularly tour overseas to all cricket-playing nations and to developing ones as well, e.g. Afghanistan in 2006, and the club has an extensive fixture list every season throughout Britain, particularly with schools.

History and role

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A plaque in Dorset Square marks the site of the original Lord's Ground and commemorates the founding of the MCC

Popular tradition dates the founding of the MCC to 1787[note 1] when Thomas Lord opened the ground he bought on the site now occupied by Dorset Square which the club adopted as its home venue. In fact, the 1787-MCC was the reconstitution of a much older club that had its origins in the early 18th century, or possibly earlier.[6] The former club has been referred to by names such as "The Noblemen's and Gentlemen's Club" or "The Cricket Club" and it was based for a long time at the Star and Garter on Pall Mall. It was essentially a social and gambling club but had a number of sporting connections including the original London Cricket Club, the Jockey Club, Hambledon Club, the White Conduit Club and various prizefighting promotions.

When the members formed the White Conduit Club for cricket in the early 1780s they played at White Conduit Fields in Islington but they soon became dissatisfied with the surroundings and complained that the site was "too public". The members asked Thomas Lord, a professional bowler at the White Conduit, to secure a more private venue within easy distance of London; they guaranteed him against any financial losses. When Lord opened his new ground, the gentlemen's club moved there and initially renamed themselves as "the Mary-le-bone Club".

From the beginning of the 20th century, MCC organised the England cricket team and, outside of Test matches, the touring England team officially played as "MCC" up to and including the 1976/77 tour of Australia. The England touring team wore the distinctive red and yellow stripes of the Marylebone Cricket Club as their colours for the last time on the tour to New Zealand in 1996/97.

The true provenance of MCC's colours is (and probably will remain) unknown, but its players often turned out sporting Sky Blue (incidentally the colours of both Eton College and Cambridge University) (whereas the colours of Harrow School and Oxford are similar), until well into the 19th century. The club eventually settled on the now well-recognised colours of scarlet and gold,[7] One theory is that MCC adopted these colours from J&W Nicholson & Co's gin after the company's chairman, MCC benefactor William Nicholson (1825–1909), secured the club's position at Lord's with a loan.[8] Another theory, which chimes with the club's origins, is that MCC borrowed its colours from the livery colours (racing) of a founding patron, Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond,[6] of Goodwood fame.

Laws of Cricket

Although MCC remains the framer and copyright holder of the Laws of Cricket, this role has increasingly come under pressure as the ICC seeks to exercise control over all aspects of the world game. In recent times the ICC has begun instituting changes to match regulations (e.g., in One Day Internationals (ODIs)) without much consultation with MCC. Also, in moving its location from Lord's to Dubai, the ICC gave a signal of breaking with the past and from MCC, although the lower taxation in Dubai was the official reason given. Changes to the laws of cricket are still made by the MCC.[note 2] Any changes to these laws require a resolution of the MCC committee and must be notified to those members entitled to vote no later than the next Annual General Meeting following the change. (Rule 27).[9]

Coaching

MCC has long had a deep involvement in coaching the game of cricket. As of 2013 the club's head coach Mark Alleyne heads an extensive operation involving the running of an indoor-cricket school and a team of coaches in England and around the world. MCC is famous for its coaching manual, the MCC Cricket Coaching Book, which is often regarded[by whom?] as the bible of cricket coaching.

Membership

MCC member in distinctive MCC colours

MCC has 18,000 full members and 6000 associate members.[10] Members have special rights to use the Pavilion and other stands at Lord's for all matches played at the ground.

In order to join the waiting list of candidates for membership one must obtain the vote (of which each full member has one a year) of three members, and the additional sponsorship of a person on the List of MCC Sponsors (which consists of members of all MCC Sub-Committees; MCC Committee; MCC Out-Match Representatives; and the Current, Past, and Designate President). As the demand for membership always outstrips supply each year (i.e., there being just over 400 places in 2005), there continues to be a substantial waiting list for Full Ordinary Membership, currently around 27 years.[11] This waiting list has increased in recent years (up from 18 years in 2006), and is beginning to reflect the 30-year wait which was the norm in the 1920s. There are, however, ways to lessen the time it takes to become a full member: one may qualify as a Playing Member, or Out-Match Member (although this carries none of the privileges of membership, apart from being able to play for the club).

Alternatively, some are awarded Honorary Life Membership. Current Honorary Life Members include Wasim Akram, Mike Atherton, Dickie Bird, Sir Ian Botham, Keith Bradshaw, Aravinda de Silva, Andy Flower, Kumar Sangakkara, Sunil Gavaskar, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar,[12] Adam Gilchrist, David Gower, Sir Richard Hadlee, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Rachael Lady Heyhoe-Flint, Nasser Hussain, Glenn McGrath, Sir John Major, Henry Olonga, Barry Richards, Sir Vivian Richards, Sir Garfield Sobers, Hashan Tillakaratne, Michael Vaughan, Shane Warne, Waqar Younis and Mahela Jayawardene. Four members of the British Royal Family are also Honorary Life Members, including The Duke of Edinburgh, The Prince of Wales, and The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.[13]

The current British Prime Minister David Cameron is a Member. His name was initially put down in 1987, and he passed over for membership as he had lost contact with the club when they offered him Associate membership. When Mr Cameron re-contacted them in 2010 his name would have been on the waiting for long enough to have been offered full membership, which was subsequently offered to him.[14]

Controversies

The club's members persistently refused to allow female membership well into the 1990s, with club ballots on the change unable to attract the two-thirds majority amongst the membership required for implementation.[15] A 70% majority of members eventually voted to allow female membership in September 1998, so ending 212 years of male exclusivity. Up until this time the Queen, as the club's patron, was the only woman (other than domestic staff) permitted to enter the Pavilion during play.[16] Later five women were invited to join as playing members.[17]

Further controversy occurred in 2005 when the club was criticised (including by a few of its own members)[18] for siding with the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) over the latter's decision to award television rights for Test cricket to British Sky Broadcasting, thus removing Test cricket from terrestrial television. The Secretary & Chief Executive of MCC at the time, Roger Knight, represented the club on the board of the ECB and was party to this controversial and much criticised decision.[citation needed] Test cricket had been shown free to viewers on British television for more than half a century.

Another controversy was MCC's decision to allow members and other spectators to continue to bring limited amounts of alcoholic drinks into the ground at all matches. This decision challenged the ICC, which was attempting to implement a ban on this practice at all international matches around the world. MCC has opted to write to the ICC on an annual basis to seek permission for members and spectators to import alcohol into Lord's Cricket Ground. No other Ground Authority has thought it necessary to seek permission from the ICC for their members and spectators to import alcohol into their cricket ground, there being money to be made out of selling alcohol themselves.

Given its heritage, MCC continues to participate in the administration of English cricket, and in 2010 offered Lord's as a neutral venue for Pakistan to stage a "home" Test match, as scheduled by the ICC, versus Australia; the club's initial offering was made with the intention that Pakistan, whose terrorist-stricken country had rendered it a no-go area for international cricket, could remain within the international cricketing fold.

The Secretary & Chief Executive of the club has a place on the administrative board of the England and Wales Cricket Board and it is reported that Keith Bradshaw (the outgoing Secretary & Chief Executive) may have been influential in the removal from office of England Coach Duncan Fletcher in April 2007.[19]

In 2012 MCC made headlines over a controversial redevelopment plan, Vision for Lord’s, that would have increased capacity but included construction of residential flats on some of the MCC site. Internal strife over the process of making a decision on the proposal led to the resignation of former prime minister Sir John Major from the main committee.[20][21]

MCC today

MCC teams continue to play regularly, occasionally still at first-class level. The club has traditionally produced its MCC Coaching manual, a bible for cricket skills, and runs training programmes for young cricketers, including at its Indoor Centre at Lord's.

MCC also continues to tour around England, playing matches against various state and private schools. This tradition has been followed since the 19th century. The club also has a real tennis and a squash court, and active golf, Chess, bridge and backgammon societies.

Often viewed as overly staid and pontifical (i.e. "Establishment"), the club has of late improved its image in the eyes of the public and media, partly because it remains a citadel for tradition in a fast-changing landscape and partly because it has made a concerted move towards image-improvement. "It would be overstating things to claim that the MCC has come full circle," admitted Andrew Miller at the beginning of October 2008, "but at a time of massive upheaval in the world game, the... colours of NW8 have ceased to represent everything that is wrong with cricket, and instead have become a touchstone for those whose greatest fear is the erosion of the game's traditional values."[22]

In April 2008 in Mumbai, the Indian Premier League, viewed by some as the very antithesis of MCC, pledged its allegiance to the club's Spirit of Cricket campaign. Since then, the MCC has embraced and indeed promoted T20 at Lord's.

Up until 2013 the MCC was a private members club (and this meant that it had the status of an unincorporated association). This status had several limitations. Since an unincorporated association is not a legal entity, it could not own property (such as Lord's Cricket Ground itself) in its own name. It could not sue anybody, or indeed be sued (any legal action had to be taken against the Secretary & Chief Executive personally). In the event that a claim was successful, the committee and even the members themselves would have had to fund any financial shortfall. The club therefore called a Special General Meeting in June 2012 to consider petitioning the Queen in Council to incorporate the club by Royal Charter.[23] The charter would remove many of the barriers and simplify the administration of the club.

Resulting from the petition, in December 2012 the club was granted a Royal charter, two previous attempts having been unsuccessful. As a result, the club became an incorporated association and is now able to hold assets, including the Lord's ground, in its own name instead of via a custodian trustee. It also meant that the individual members, as the club's owners, ceased to have a potential liability should the club ever get into serious financial trouble.[24]

MCC Universities

Since 2005 the MCC has funded six university cricket academies known as the MCC Universities (MCCUs). (Prior to 2010 they were known as the University Centres of Cricketing Excellence (UCCEs).) They are based at Cambridge, Cardiff, Durham, Leeds/Bradford, Loughborough and Oxford, and incorporate a total of thirteen educational establishments.[25] As of 2012, all six MCCUs have been granted first-class status by the ECB. Each MCCU plays a trio of matches against professional county sides at the beginning of each season, with first-class status conferred on the first two of these matches.[26]

Officers of the Club

Presidents serve a twelve-month term and cannot serve two terms in succession. Each President is required to nominate his successor at the AGM which takes place during his term of office.[27]

The Club Chairman and the Treasurer serve a three-year term. Both are appointed by the committee (but subject to approval of the voting members). Both can serve terms in succession.

The Secretary and Chief Executive is the senior employee of the club and is appointed solely by the MCC committee.

The committee consists of the above officers plus the chairmen of any other committees that may exist at the time of any meeting plus 12 elected members. Elected committee members are appointed for a three-year term. An elected committee member cannot be re-elected upon retirement unless there is a gap of at least one year between terms of office.

HRH The Duke of Edinburgh has served twice as president. The current officials (2013-14) are:[28]

See also

Notes

  1. The only evidence for this is a poster for an 1837 match proclaiming the MCC's Golden Jubilee.
  2. This is currently the MCC's position. The recently granted Royal charter of incorporation specifically states that "The objects for which the club is incorporated shall be ... [list of other objects] ... making and owning the laws of cricket. This was necessary because previously as an unincorporated private members club, it could not directly own the laws or their copyright."

References

  1. Chris Roberts, Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind Rhyme, Thorndike Press,2006 (ISBN 0-7862-8517-6).
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  5. Birley, p. 145.
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  7. Rule 1 of the MCC club rules (dated 1 July 2013) states, "The club shall be called the Marylebone Cricket Club and its colours shall be Scarlet and Gold".
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  9. Rules of the Marylebone Cricket Club (1 July 2013).
  10. Rules of the Maylebone Cricket Club: Rule 2.6.
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  23. Notice of Special General Meeting to be held on 25 June 2012
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  27. Rules of the Marylebone Cricket Club (1 July 2013)
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Further reading

  • Harry Altham, A History of Cricket, Volume 1 (to 1914), George Allen & Unwin, 1962.
  • Derek Birley, A Social History of English Cricket, Aurum, 1999.
  • Rowland Bowen, Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1970.
  • G. B. Buckley
    • Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket, Cotterell, 1935.
    • Fresh Light on Pre-Victorian Cricket, Cotterell, 1937.
  • David Frith, The Golden Age of Cricket 1890-1914, Lutterworth, 1978.
  • Stephen Green, Lord's, Cathedral of Cricket The History Press Ltd, 2003.
  • Arthur Haygarth, Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 (1744–1826), Lillywhite, 1862.
  • John Major, More Than A Game, HarperCollins, 2007.
  • Jonathan Rice, Presidents of MCC, Methuen Publishing, 2006.
  • Graeme Wright, Wisden at Lord's, Wisden, 2005.

External links