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County Cricket Ground, Hove

Cricket ground in East Sussex, England


Cricket ground in East Sussex, England

FieldValue
ground_name1st Central County Ground
imageThe County Ground, Hove - geograph.org.uk - 2406336.jpg
countryEngland
locationHove, East Sussex
establishment1872
coord
seating_capacity6,000
end1Cromwell Road End [[File:HoveCountyCricketGroundPitchDimensions.svg200px]]
end2Sea End
internationaltrue
onlyodidate15 May
onlyodiyear1999
onlyodihomeIndia
onlyodiawaySouth Africa
firstwtestdate29 August—1 September
firstwtestyear1987
firstwtesthomeEngland
firstwtestawayAustralia
lastwtestdate9—12 August
lastwtestyear2005
lastwtesthomeEngland
lastwtestawayAustralia
firstwodidate23 June
firstwodiyear1973
firstwodihomeEngland
firstwodiawayInternational XI
lastwodidate18 September
lastwodiyear2022
lastwodihomeEngland
lastwodiawayIndia
firstwt20idate5 August
firstwt20iyear2004
firstwt20ihomeEngland
firstwt20iawayNew Zealand
lastwt20idate23 May
lastwt20iyear2025
lastwt20ihomeEngland
lastwt20iawayWest Indies
year11872 – present
club1Sussex
date9 July
year2024
sourcehttps://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Grounds/11/346.html CricketArchive

The County Cricket Ground, known for sponsorship reasons as The 1st Central County Ground, is a cricket venue in Hove, in the city of Brighton and Hove, East Sussex, England. The County Ground is the home of Sussex County Cricket Club, where most Sussex home matches since 1872 have been played, although many other grounds in Sussex have been used. Sussex CCC have also played some of their games away from The County Ground, at either Eastbourne, Hastings, Arundel Castle or Horsham. It is one of the few county grounds to have deckchairs for spectators, in the Sussex CCC colours of blue and white, and was the first cricket ground to install permanent floodlights, for day/night cricket matches and the second ground (after Edgbaston) to host a day/night match in England, in 1997.

Cricket history

Prior to 1872, Sussex County Cricket Club played their home matches at Royal Brunswick Ground. The land for the County Ground was a barley field until it was bought in 1871. The turf from the Royal Brunswick Ground was then brought to the County Ground, which became the home of Sussex CCC in 1872, and continues to be so.

In 1872, George "Farmer" Bennett became the first batsman in first-class cricket to be given out handled ball during a match between Kent and Sussex at the County Ground. In 1873, Sussex bowled Worcestershire out for 19 at Hove. In 1884–85, the public raised £4,400 towards the purchase of the ground, with the Earl of Sheffield contributing an additional £600. In the 20th century, the ground was used for some other cricket matches, such as a charity match in 1927 between the "Jockeys" and the "Racing Press", in aid of the Royal Sussex County Hospital and the Royal Alexandra Children's Hospital, and an annual match between local commercial travellers and grocers, nicknamed "Travellers v. Grocers"; in 1925, the match was won by the Travellers by 1 run.

The ground has hosted one men's One Day International; the match was part of the 1999 Cricket World Cup, and was a Group A match between South Africa and India, which South Africa won by 4 wickets. The County Ground has also hosted 2 Test matches in The Women's Ashes in 1987 and 2005; in addition, the ground hosted two One Day Internationals in the 2013 Women's Ashes, As of 2017, 5 Women's ODIs and 4 Women's T20Is have been hosted at the ground.

In 2003, The County Ground was the venue where Sussex won their first County Championship title. In that match, Sussex batsman Murray Goodwin also scored 335*, which was then highest score by a Sussex player in first-class cricket. The ground also saw Sussex win their third Championship title in 2007.

Non-cricket history

During the 1890s, the County Ground was also used as a football ground for teams from the Brighton Area, including Brighton United of the Southern League (until they went bust in 1900), and Brighton Athletic of the East Sussex League. The ground was also the venue for the Sussex lawn tennis championship meetings in 1893 and 1899, and in 1948, the County Ground also hosted a rugby union match between Brighton and a Midland Bank team.

Many concerts have been held at the County Ground. Elton John has played at the ground in 2006, 2011 and 2019, the ground has also hosted Madness, Lionel Richie (with Shane Filan of Westlife as support act), Little Mix, Olly Murs, Cliff Richard and Rod Stewart. As part of the 2012 Summer Olympics torch relay, the ground hosted an official Olympic torch event.

For many years, the County Ground has hosted a popular fireworks display within the South East, for Guy Fawkes Night. In 2019, the annual fireworks night sold out with over 7,500 attendees.

Notes

References

References

  1. (15 March 2016). "Sussex announce new ground name; 'The 1st Central County Ground, Hove'". Sussex County Cricket Club.
  2. Thomson, Sam. (16 April 2009). "New Sussex cricket ground plans unveiled". The Argus.
  3. "CRICKET - Cricket's floodlit revolution".
  4. (2010). "Firsts, Lasts & Onlys of Cricket: Presenting the most amazing cricket facts from the last 500 years".
  5. (2013). "The Essential Wisden: An Anthology of 150 Years of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack".
  6. (30 December 1884). "Cricket". Sheffield Daily Telegraph.
  7. (13 July 1927). "Otter Hounds". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer.
  8. (5 June 1925). "Travellers v. Grocers.". Portsmouth Evening News.
  9. "County Ground". ESPNcricinfo.
  10. "ICC World Cup, 2nd Match: India v South Africa at Hove, May 15, 1999". ESPNcricinfo.
  11. "The Home of CricketArchive". cricketarchive.com.
  12. "2013 Women's Ashes Series – Format". ecb.co.uk.
  13. "The Home of CricketArchive". cricketarchive.com.
  14. "The Home of CricketArchive". cricketarchive.com.
  15. (2 August 2009). "Goodwin breaks records at Taunton". BBC Sport.
  16. "HIGHEST TEAM TOTALS FOR SUSSEX". Cricket Archive.
  17. (18 September 2003). "Cricket – Sussex win title". BBC.
  18. (22 September 2006). "Cricket – Counties – Mushtaq seals Sussex title glory". BBC.
  19. (22 September 2007). "Lancashire go down fighting as Sussex secure title". ESPNcricinfo.
  20. (19 December 1899). "Football". Sussex Agricultural Express.
  21. (21 January 1898). "East Sussex League". Sussex Agricultural Express.
  22. (11 January 1898). "Football". Sussex Agricultural Express.
  23. (9 September 1893). "Lawn Tennis". London Evening Standard.
  24. (11 September 1899). "Lawn Tennis". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer.
  25. (30 January 1948). "Brighton and Hove: What's on in Sport". Sussex Agricultural Express.
  26. "Updated: Elton John rocks Hove".
  27. "Madness announce their biggest city show to date at Hove's County Ground". The Argus.
  28. "New Brighton and Hove route for Olympic torch". The Argus.
  29. (23 April 2012). "London 2012: Brighton Olympic torch party moved from seafront". BBC News.
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