Colombo Cricket Club Ground

Colombo Cricket Club Ground (CCCG; Sinhala: කොළඹ ක්‍රිකට් සමාජ ක්‍රීඩාංගනය, Tamil: கொலோம்போ கிரிக்கெட் கிளப் கிரௌண்ட்) is a multi-purpose stadium in Colombo, Sri Lanka. It is currently used mostly for domestic first-class cricket matches and for hosting warm up matches for touring teams. The stadium can hold 6,000 people and hosted its first Test match in 1984.[1] It is one of the smallest test grounds in the world. Three Test matches have been held at the Colombo Cricket Club Ground.

Colombo Cricket Club Ground
Maitland Crescent
Ground information
LocationMaitland Crescent, Colombo 7
Coordinates6.907808°N 79.865911°E / 6.907808; 79.865911
Capacity6,000
OwnerColombo Cricket Club
TenantsSri Lanka Cricket
Colombo Cricket Club
End names
Press Box End
Pavilion End
International information
First Test14 March 1984:
 Sri Lanka v  New Zealand
Last Test16 April 1987:
 Sri Lanka v  New Zealand
First WODI15 February 2017:
 Ireland v  Bangladesh
Last WODI19 February 2017:
 Ireland v  South Africa
Only WT20I24 September 2018:
 Sri Lanka v  India
Team information
Colombo Cricket Club (c.1894 present)
As of 2 September 2020
Source: ESPN Cricinfo

Ground

The Colombo Cricket Club Ground is the home ground of the Colombo Cricket Club, the oldest first-class cricket club in Sri Lanka.[2] The Ground is one of the three cricket grounds located in Maitland Crescent, Colombo, the other two being the Sinhalese Sports Club Ground and the Nondescripts Cricket Club Ground.[3] It is one of the smaller cricket grounds in Sri Lanka, and is also one of the smallest Test cricket grounds in the world. The Colombo Cricket Club Ground was formerly known as the Maitland Crescent Ground.[1][3]

The playing area of the ground takes up most of the space with a narrow area available for spectators to be seated on each side. On one end of the ground is the scoreboard and a concrete stand that houses the press box. This end is known as the Press Box End. The other end is the Pavilion End, where the main pavilion is located. The ground can hold 6,000 spectators.[3]

Matches held

The first cricket match on the Colombo Cricket Club Ground was held during the 1911-12 season.[4] Its maiden first-class cricket match was held in 1927 when the Europeans (Ceylon) hosted the Marylebone Cricket Club.[5] The ground also hosted a Marylebone Cricket Club team captained by Douglas Jardine in 1933-34.[1]

Three Test matches have been played at the Colombo Cricket Club Ground.[1] The first was held in March 1984, between Sri Lanka and New Zealand, resulting in a win for New Zealand by an innings and 61 runs.[6] Another Test match was held between Sri Lanka and Pakistan in March 1986. The last Test at the ground was in April 1987, again between Sri Lanka and New Zealand.[6]

At the ground in 1973-74, Sri Lanka played its first two international List A matches, against India. India won both matches.[7]

Domestic first-class and List A matches are regularly played at the ground. It also hosts touring teams in warm-up matches.[1] The ground was one of the five venues for the 2006 under-19 Cricket World Cup.[8]

International Centuries

There are four Test centuries have been scored at the venue.[9]

No.ScorePlayerTeamBallsOpposing teamDateResult
1180John Reid New Zealand 445 Sri Lanka24 March 1984Won
2201*Brendon Kuruppu Sri Lanka 548 New Zealand16 April 1987Drawn
3120*Jeff Crowe New Zealand 398 Sri Lanka16 April 1987Drawn
4151*Richard Hadlee New Zealand 240 Sri Lanka16 April 1987Drawn

List of five-wicket Halls

Five five wicket hauls in Test matches have been taken at the venue.[10]

No. Bowler Date Team Opposing team Inn Overs Runs Wkts Econ Result
1Richard Hadlee24 March 1984 New Zealand Sri Lanka1227353.31Won
2Ewen Chatfield24 March 1984 New Zealand Sri Lanka1226352.86Won
3Richard Hadlee24 March 1984 New Zealand Sri Lanka3162951.81Won
4Kosala Kuruppuarachchi14 March 1986 Sri Lanka Pakistan114.54452.96Won
5Ravi Ratnayeke14 March 1986 Sri Lanka Pakistan3173752.17Won

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.