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Chester Road North Ground, Kidderminster

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(Redirected from Chester Road North Ground) Cricket ground in Worcestershire, England

Chester Road North Ground
The pavilion at the Chester Road North Ground
Ground information
LocationKidderminster, Worcestershire, England
Home clubKidderminster Cricket Club
County clubWorcestershire
Capacity2000
End names
Railway End
Pavilion End
International information
Only WODI19 August 2005:
 England v  Australia
As of 21 August 2020
Source: Cricinfo

The Chester Road North Ground, often referred to simply as Chester Road or Kidderminster, 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.

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.

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. First-class cricket returned to Kidderminster in June 2019 when Worcestershire transferred their game against Sussex to the ground because of the threat of flooding at New Road. Worcestershire's first two home matches in the 2024 County Championship were played at Kidderminster in April 2024 because of flooding at New Road.

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 there in 2007, as were two Twenty20 matches. In 2010, the ground hosted the Unicorns team in the Pro40 competition.

Wide view of the ground, looking toward the Railway End in 2024

Records

First-class

List A

  • Highest team total: 281/7 (40 overs) by Worcestershire v Northamptonshire, 2007
  • Lowest team total: 56 (27.1 overs) by Middlesex v Worcestershire, 1969
  • Highest individual innings: 100 by Moeen Ali for Worcestershire v Northamptonshire, 2007
  • Best bowling in an innings: 5-36 by Imran Jamshed for Worcestershire Cricket Board v Dorset, 2002

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. Archived from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2006.
  3. Scott, Ged (14 June 2019). "Worcestershire: Championship game with Sussex moved to Kidderminster". BBC Sport.
  4. "Worcestershire move two County Championship games to Kidderminster because of floods". BBC Sport. 23 February 2024. Archived from the original on 27 February 2024. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  5. ^ Same match.

References

Worcestershire County Cricket Club
Players
Grounds
Current
New Road (since 1897)
Chester Road, Kidderminster (1895–2024)
Previous
War Memorial Athletic Ground (1895–1982)
Malvern College Ground (1895)
Boughton Park (1895–1896)
Bournville Cricket Ground (1910–1911)
Tipton Road (1911–1977)
Racecourse Ground, Hereford (1919–1983)
Evesham Cricket Club Ground (1951)
Seth Somers Park (1964–1969)
Chain Wire Club Ground (1980)
Flagge Meadow (2007)
Honours
Seasons
Central Sparks
History
Home grounds
Leagues
Seasons
Coaches
Captains
Players
See also

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


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