Cricket in Germany
Cricket in Germany has a history going back to 1858,[1] when a group of people from England and the United States founded the first German cricket club in Berlin. Several more teams were later founded in Berlin and the rest of Germany, as well as a national federation. Cricket lingered on over the following century, with occasional visits of German players to England and British and other foreign teams touring in Germany, but only when it got a foothold in the German universities in the 1980s did the number of German cricket clubs and players start to grow again.[2] Nevertheless, much of the cricket to date is played by British soldiers stationed in Germany.
The national organisation for the game is currently the German Cricket Federation (Deutscher Cricket Bund, DCB), founded in 1988.[1] In 2016 there are about 220 cricket teams in the country, up from 70 in 2012.[1]
International team
Germany has a national team that takes part in the European Championship and has also taken part in the ICC Trophy.
Regional associations
German Cricket is organized in several regions, which all have their own leagues. The winner of those will play for the national championship.
Those regional associations are:
- Bayrischer Cricket Verband (Bavaria)
Clubs playing in the league are:
Other clubs include:
- Berliner Cricket Verband
Bundesliga Ost 2013:
- BFC Viktoria 1889*
- Dresden CC
- Britannia 92*
- Berlin Cricket Club*
- Der Sports and Social Club zu Berlin und Brandenburg (DSSC)*
- Reinickendorfer Füchse (RFCC)*
- Havelländischer Cricket Club Werder (HCCW)
Verbandsliga Ost 2013:
- USG Chemnitz e.V. Abt. Cricket Club
- Bangladesh CC Berlin*
- Leipzig Cricket Club e.V.
Britannia, BFC Viktoria 1889, Reinickendorfer Füchse (RFCC), Dresden, HCCW and Berlin CC field a team in the Verbandsliga too.* field a team in the T20-League
Other teams:
- ACCB
- Stragglers Cricket Club
- PCCB (Pakistan Cricket Club Berlin)
- Hessischer Cricket Verband
- Cosmopolitan Cricket Club Hassloch e.V.
- Darmstadt Cricket Club (TH & FH Darmstadt)
- Frankfurt Cricket Club (FCC) e.V.
- Ruder- und Cricket-Club Hanau e.V
- FSV Hellas 71 e.V., Abteilung Cricket
- Olympia Frankfurt e.V., Abteilung Cricket
- Rodgau Cricket Club e.V
- SKG Walldorf e.V., Abteilung Cricket
- SV Wiesbaden 1899 e.V., Abteilung Cricket
- North German Cricket Federation
- Clubs playing there include:
- HSV-Cricket
- Oldenburg
- HICC
- THCC Rot-Gelb
- Pak Alemi
- Buxtehude
- Lüneburg Panthers
- Fallingbostel CC
- Jacobs Universität CC Bremen
- Hannover
- CC der Universität Göttingen
- Schwerin Cricket Club
- Kiel Cricket Club
- Nordrhein-Westfalen Cricket Union
- Köln Cricket Club e.V.
- Bonn Cricket Society e.V.
- Bonn Royals Cricket Club
- ASV Köln - CICC
- Cologne Cricket Club
- Bonn Cricket Club e.V.
- Köln Xtremers Cricket Club
- Dusseldorf Blackcaps
- Bochum Cricket Club e.V.
- Rheindahlen Crusaders CC (based in Mönchengladbach)
- Dortmund Cricket Club e.V.
- Mülheim a.d. Ruhr Cricket Club e.V.
- Deutsche Welle CC
- Bonn Veterans CC
- Duisburg Cricket Club e.V.
- Cologne Challengers
- Golden Star Cricket Club Bonn
- Baden Württemberg Cricket Verband,
Clubs playing in the league are:
- Kaiserslautern University CC
- Cricket Lions Karlsruhe CC
- Karlsruher CC
- Heidelberg Rohrbach Stallions
- TSG-Ketsch
- Stallions-TSG Wiesloch CC
- Pak Freiburg Cricket Club, Freiburg
- Freiburg Nomads CC
- Cosmopolitan Cricket Club Mannheim
- Stuttgart Cricket Eagles e.V
Club cricket
A feature of club cricket in Germany is that many clubs experience rapid fluctuation in membership, which is composed largely of expats playing the sport. Clubs which cannot join a league (mostly due to lack of available members) may still take part in independently arranged friendly matches.
The club's wicket can vary from a grass pitch (grown on the natural soil) to coconut fibre wickets on concrete, flicx® pitches, and do-it-yourself constructions. The size of the field also varies, from a good club size (English standard) to double hockey pitches which the club hires, and unusual fields such as that at Göttingen, which is large, but has a bank that rises up to 4 metres above the level of the square. Indoor cricket is played in various tournaments throughout the winter, mostly in German 3 field gyms, or in indoor tennis halls, in Twenty20 format.
Leagues
The majority of cricket clubs are organised into six regional leagues.[1] Each region hosts one or two leagues of 6 or 7 clubs. Matches are over 50 overs. In two of the leagues the first and second placed teams meet in play-offs, and the winner of the play-off is the regional champion. At the end of the regional season, national play-offs are held: the northern league champions (NDCV (North), NRCU (North Rhine Westphalia), BCV (Berlin)) play against each other, and the southern teams (HCV (Hesse), BWCV (Baden Württemberg), BYCV (Bavaria)) do likewise. The overall northern and southern winners then play off for the German Championship. Independent of the regional leagues are 20/20 tournaments which are mostly invitational tournaments initiated by one team.
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Cricket-loving Asian migrants take game to Germany". BBC News. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
- ↑ History of cricket in Germany, at the German Cricket Federation website
- ↑ "Deutscher Cricket Bund - Cricket in Germany - Cricket - wo Schläger Gentlemen sind!Deutscher Cricket Bund – Cricket in Germany | Cricket – wo Schläger Gentlemen sind!". Cricket.de. 2016-08-20. Retrieved 2016-10-25.
External links
- German Cricket Association
- References to cricket in historic German-language newspapers - The European Library
Further reading
- P.G.G. Labouchere, T.A.J. Provis and Peter Hargreaves, The Story of Continental Cricket (1969)
- James D. Coldham, German Cricket: A Brief History (1983)
- Dan Waddell, Field of Shadows (2014)