Saturday 6 July 2019

Caribbean Cricket Club

Currently playing Dales Council, Division A

The Caribbean cricket club was established in 1948, being the first Caribbean cricket club set up in the UK. It was created by the Jamaican society in Leeds as a social gathering for mainly West Indian men, although predominately those from Jamaica. The club now has 3 senior teams, which moved to Central Yorkshire Cricket Club in 2010, and 4 junior teams which are currently in the Wetherby League and Leeds League respectively. The senior teams train on Fridays and play Saturdays and Sundays, whilst the junior teams train on Saturdays and play Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays.
Since then the club has expanded and evolved inviting people from all ages and sex to take part in social and sporting activities. A group that has formed from the cricket club is Republic, both male and female football teams which focus on equality and anti racism, travelling around Europe raising awareness. Semi professional cricketers have don the whites at Caribbean’s Stuart Williams Dave Joseph and Cory Collimore, who went on to play for the West Indies team.
In 2007, a women’s group was formed to organise fundraising events and “put a women’s touch to the club”.


The grounds for the club is situated 2 miles north of the city centre on Scott Hall Road.

Many thanks to Grosvenor Casino for being the sponsor for the Cricket Club. A lot of our funds come from the support of the club and the public. We rely on fundraisers and donations in order to raise money to fund the club. If you would like to donate please take a look at our get in touch page, all donations, big or small are highly appreciated and help make the club go further. We pride ourselves on being a passionate, hard working team. We're very proud of how far our team has come and look forward to our future achievements.
 


1948 – First Caribbean Cricket Club in the UK.
1970 – 1st Club to have won all 3 trophies (league and Sunday cup).
1988 – Lord Mayor, Councillor Arthur Vollans opened our own building on Scott Hall Road.
2007 – Opened a women’s group to help fundraise.
2007 - Caribbean Cricket Club 1st & 2nd teams both won the Leeds West Riding League and also the 20/20 Festival club.
2008 – Celebrated our 60th Birthday with a church service at St. Martins Church and a dinner after at the club originals players and former chairmen of the club was invited along with Councillors.

It was going so well with the website, but it's out of date, and if you want batting averages, then play-cricket website will give you those from 2011



Sat 26th & Sun 27th July 2014
Caribbean Cricket Soca 4th Festival

Saturday
Party & Dance - 7pm “TIL THE SUN COMES UP”
A number or local and regional DJ's will feature on the night!
Admission: £3

Sunday 27th July 2014
Cricket - first ball bowl - 10am
This event will be broadcast live and music provided by
Peoples FM 104.5
Venue - Caribbean Cricket Club, Scott Hall Rd, Leeds, West Yorkshire LS8 3AL Including;
Big Raffle Prizes, Games, Many Giveaways, Bouncy Castle, Face Painting, Fairground Amusement, Authentic Caribbean Barbecue, Rum Punch, Local Beverages, Dominoes & Card Table, Stage Performances and a Talent Showcase!
Admission: Free
For further info or to book a stall please contact:
Harwood Williams on 07932567520


Is that the ex-Batley player Ian Hanley, listed for the 2nd XI?
He's as old as I am. :-)

Update - Maybe, Tony Bowry is vice-chairman


That's my effort at a Caribbean font 

Here's another good piece from Cricketyorkshire

Leeds Caribbean: Life in the Dales Council Cricket League
OCTOBER 14, 2017 BY JOHN FULLER


Rocking up at Leeds Caribbean Cricket Club for their last Dales Council match of 2017 was an exercise in crossing digits and glancing anxiously at the lashing rain pinging off the bonnet of the car.
This Division A contest at Scott Hall Road against Bradford Moor looked doomed from the outset as cricketers and officials hunkered in their vehicles or lounged on sofas in the concrete foyer, smoking, chatting and sipping on cans of Red Stripe lager.
Out in the middle, groundsman Mark is doing his level best to make sure the saturated square is fit for play but is operating with limited resources, despite having been at the ground since before 8 am.


Their groundsheet protects a single strip and has seen better days; looking like a stretched bin bag with holes and tears. If there’s any cricket on here today, spikes will be a must with fielders capable of waterskiing rather than walking between overs.
The intended 1.30pm start is pushed back after the umpires inspect the square and decide to have a look another look in an hour or so.
The forecast is for deteriorating weather and further rainfall later in the day but, such is the frustration with cricket, the clouds have melted and it’s temporarily a sun-splashed scene in North Leeds.
This oval surface on Scott Hall Road with sweeping views down into the city centre is a gargantuan size requiring a mighty blow in any direction to breach the boundary.
I was assured with a beaming smile and Caribbean lilt that sixes and fours are commonplace at Leeds Caribbean.
Indeed, one of the stars of their first-eleven is a young batsman, Wesley, casually sat scrolling through his phone, baseball cap at a jaunty angle.
The week before against Farnley Hill, he had struck 164 out of his side’s 208 all out and needed another innings to qualify for the end-of-season league averages.
Remember the name Wesley Bell. He averaged 793 runs in 2016 and has followed that up with 766 in 2017 across league and Pool Paper Mills Cup that Leeds Caribbean won for the first time ever since its inception in 1957.
The rain delay allows a look inside their clubhouse which is small, dotted with memorabilia as a nod to Caribbean heritage, their own cricketing success and community involvement.


A West Indies Test shirt from yesteryear is up on the wall in a frame; its signatures dating the garment immediately with Chris Gayle, Devon Smith and Chiv Chanderpaul some of the mottled scrawls in felt tip pen.
Another framed picture is in memory of Royston Rouse (123*) who had struck a partnership of 250 with David Smithen (119*) (May also have played at Batley with Tony & Ian) while a plaque to Harwood Williams (former Caribbean Chairman and stalwart at Dunnington Cricket Club for many years) is for his contribution to sports tourism in St Kitts and Nevis.
They are evidently proud of all of the people who are part of this community that began in 1948 as the first Caribbean cricket club in the country.
A number of West Indies Test cricketers once turned out here including dynamic batsman Stuart Williams and fast bowler Corey Collymore.
But it’s a tale encapsulating more than the high-profile names; Leeds Caribbean has been a hub over the decades for those from across the Caribbean, predominantly Jamaicans at first who came to settle in the Leeds area but has expanded to be a home from home for those across the islands.
In the last ten years, their cricket squads have included Chinese and Afghani cricketers, to name just a couple of nationalities, demonstrating the inclusive policy.
We can take succession and sustainability for granted in cricket but it’s to their credit that junior sides have developed over time (U11 and U13s now compete in the Leeds and District Junior Cricket League).
In fact, the aforementioned Wesley Bell and his captain, Shan Khan, both recall being given a lift as kids to the club by a Leeds Caribbean committee member after being spotted batting and bowling out in the streets.
Wesley, Shan (and others) were kitted out, coached and have progressed to being key cogs in the first team. Tellingly, both admit that they would never have got into cricket, had it not been for the kindness of a stranger who came to their patch. 

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