Chester Road North Ground, Kidderminster

The Chester Road North Ground, often referred to simply as Chester Road, is a cricket ground in Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England. It is the home of Kidderminster Cricket Club, and is currently used for Worcestershire County Cricket Club's Second XI matches. It was opened in 1870.[1]

International cricket

Kidderminster hosted international cricket in 2005 when the second Women's One-day International between England and Australia was played here. The Australians won by 65 runs thanks largely to 7-24 from Shelley Nitschke, who became the first Australian woman to take more than five wickets in an ODI. [2]

First-class and List A cricket

Worcestershire played one County Championship match at Kidderminster every season from 1921 until 1973, and again each year from 1987 to 2002. Chester Road was then relegated to a Second-XI ground, and the only first-class game at Kidderminster for several years was Worcestershire's 2005 game against Loughborough UCCE, which the university side won by eight wickets. In 2007, with New Road badly affected by flooding, Kidderminster hosted two Championship games, while in 2008 Loughborough UCCE again visited.

In List A cricket, one Player's County League game was held here in 1969, and a further six List A matches three involving the Worcestershire team proper and three more contested by the recreational Worcestershire Cricket Board team were hosted between 2000 and 2002. A further Pro40 game was played here in 2007, as were two Twenty20 matches. In 2010, the ground hosted the Unicorns team in the Pro40 competition.

Records

First-class

List A

Notes

  1. Worcestershire Cricket Grounds Les Hatton ACS 1985 p.23
  2. "Five or More Wickets in an Innings for Australia Women in ODI Cricket". CricketArchive. Retrieved 2006-11-26.
  3. 1 2 Same match.

References

Coordinates: 52°23′20.23″N 2°13′54.74″W / 52.3889528°N 2.2318722°W / 52.3889528; -2.2318722


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.