England and Wales Cricket Board

England and Wales Cricket Board

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
England and Wales Cricket Board
England and Wales Cricket Board.svg
SportCricket
AbbreviationECB
Founded1 January 1997
LocationLord's Cricket Ground
ChairmanColin Graves
Chief ExecTom Harrison
CoachTrevor Bayliss
ReplacedTCCB
Official website
www.ecb.co.uk
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) is the governing body of cricket in England and Wales.[1] It was created on 1 January 1997 combining the roles of the Test and County Cricket Board, the National Cricket Association and the Cricket Council. Like many sports governing bodies in the United Kingdom it is a company limited by guarantee, a legal status which enables it to concentrate on maximising its funding of the sport rather than making a return for investors. The ECB's head offices are at Lord's Cricket Ground in London. Although the organisation is the England and Wales Cricket Board, it is referred to as the ECB not the EWCB as a result of a decision taken in the run-up to the launch of ECB in January 1997 by those from within the game given the task of overseeing the transition from the previous bodies from which ECB was formed.[2]
The ECB is governed by representatives of the 38 first-class and minor counties and the MCC. It is headed by the Management Board (with fifteen members), a First-Class Forum (for first-class cricket) and a Recreational Forum. The ECB's chairman is Giles Clarke of Somerset.[3] On 16 July, Brian Havill was appointed acting Chief Executive Officer replacing David Collier.
An important responsibility is the direction of the England national side. The Chairman of Selectors, head coach and other coaches are ECB employees. The ECB also employs the English Test match captain and other centrally contracted players, as well as being responsible for the ECB National Academy, currently based at Loughborough University in Leicestershire.
The ECB is responsible for the financial direction and commercial exploitation of England cricket. It raises revenue from the proceeds of sales for tickets at One Day International and Test matches in England and Wales and shares in revenues when the English team play abroad. The ECB is also responsible for the generation of income from the sale of sponsorship and broadcasting rights, primarily in relation to the English team. The ECB's income in the 2007 calendar year was £93.0 million, up from £77.0 million in 2006.[4] In 2007 the ECB distributed £31.6 million in "fee payments" to the eighteen first class counties, or £1.75 million per team. This subsidy is an essential source of income for the counties. It also pays certain costs of the domestic cricket programme directly, including the salaries of first class umpires and the cost of temporary floodlights at county matches.[5]
In 1998 the ECB took on responsibility for the direction of women's cricket in England and Wales from the Women's Cricket Association.[6]
In 2005 the ECB concluded a commercial arrangement with BSkyB which gave Sky Sports the exclusive television rights for live Test cricket in England and Wales for four years (the 2006 to 2009 seasons). This deal, which took live Test cricket for home English matches away from terrestrial television for the first time generated substantial future revenues for English and Welsh cricket (220 million pounds over 4 years), but was criticised by many England cricket supporters and others. In 2007 Asian rights for live English cricket were sold to ESPN Star Sports for a period of 5 years for 40 million pounds, which is 5 times the previous figure.[7]
The ECB courted further controversy in 2005 when they appeared to dither over the employment contract of the bowling coach Troy Cooley who was seen by many as an important contributor to England's Ashes success. Cooley left the England setup and joined Australia's staff.[8]
In January 2014, Andy Flower stepped down as head coach and Kevin Pietersen had his central contract terminated in a confidential settlement following England's just completed Ashes series loss (0-5) in Australia.[3][9]

County Boards

Subject to certain exceptions, each historic county in England has an ECB County Cricket Board as follows:
  • Bedfordshire Cricket
  • Berkshire Cricket
  • Buckinghamshire Cricket Board
  • Cambridgeshire Cricket Board
  • Cheshire Cricket Board
  • Cornwall Cricket
  • Cumbria Cricket
  • Derbyshire Cricket Board
  • Devon Cricket Board
  • Dorset Cricket Board
  • Durham Cricket Board
  • Essex Cricket
  • Gloucestershire Cricket Board
  • Hampshire Cricket Board
  • Herefordshire Cricket
  • Hertfordshire Cricket
  • Huntingdonshire Cricket
  • Isle of Wight Cricket Board
  • Kent Community Cricket
  • Lancashire Cricket Board
  • Leicestershire & Rutland Cricket
  • Lincolnshire Cricket
  • Middlesex Cricket Board
  • Norfolk Cricket Board
  • Northants Recreational Cricket
  • Northumberland Cricket Board
  • Nottinghamshire Cricket Board
  • Oxfordshire Cricket
  • Shropshire Cricket Board
  • Somerset Cricket Board
  • Staffordshire Cricket
  • Suffolk Cricket
  • Surrey Cricket Board
  • Sussex Cricket Board
  • Cricket Wales
  • Warwickshire Cricket Board
  • Wiltshire Cricket
  • Worcestershire Cricket
  • Yorkshire Cricket Board
Rutland shares a board with neighbouring Leicestershire, an echo of the 18th century Leicestershire and Rutland Cricket Club. Hampshire as such has two boards given that the Isle of Wight has its own. Westmorland and Cumberland are replaced by Cumbria, a ceremonial county created in 1974. An additional board exists for the whole country of Wales and is incorporated within the ECB.
Most counties have clubs which are members of either the County Championship or the Minor Counties Cricket Championship. Rutland and the Isle of Wight do not have county clubs and are wholly integrated for that purpose with Leicestershire and Hampshire respectively. Huntingdonshire County Cricket Club has a chequered history and now plays informal matches only. Cumberland and Westmorland originally shared Cumberland County Cricket Club as a joint county club. It is now representative of Cumbria as a whole and plays matches in both of the two traditional counties; there has never been a club called Westmorland.[10][11]

Status of Wales

Cricket Wales, who are recognised by Sport Wales as the governing body for cricket in Wales, are one of the 39 Boards that make up the ECB.[12]
Plaid Cymru have argued that Wales should have its own international team and withdraw from the existing arrangement under which Welsh players play for England. The proposal has aroused opposition from Cricket Wales and Glamorgan County Cricket Club, who argue such a move would be financially disastrous. The debate focused on a report produced by the Welsh National Assembly’s  petitions committee, which reflected the arguments on both sides. Bethan Jenkins, Plaid Cymru’s spokesperson on heritage, culture, sport and broadcasting, and a member of the petitions committee, said: "Cricket Wales and Glamorgan CCC say the idea of a Welsh national cricket team is ‘an emotive subject’. Of course having a national team is emotive. You only have to look at the stands during any national game to see that. To suggest this as anything other than natural is a bit of a misleading argument."[13][14][15][16][17][18] In their strategic plan, Cricket Wales state they are "committed to continuing to play a major role within the ECB"[19]

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