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Club |
Location |
Notes |
Map and Directions / Web
Site |
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Wimbledon Club |
Wimbledon Club |
First fixture in 2004. The ground is located opposite the
All England Tennis Club |
Wimbledon Club, Church
Road, Wimbledon, London, SW19 5AG |
Hartley Wintney |
Hartley Wintney CC |
The match against Hartley Wintney is played on their pretty
village green, where quite a few spectators turn out to watch the day's
play. On one side of the ground is a pub where it’s always good to arrive
early and warm up with a sandwich and a pint. Hartley Wintney play in the
Hampshire league and it has been a competitive fixture that has recently
changed to a limited overs match. For example; in 2001 LNZCC were chasing
290 and lost by only 15 runs, a little over a run a ball |
Hartley Wintney, Hampshire
www.hwcc1770.co.uk |
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Royal Household |
Frogmore |
A long standing fixture, The Royal Household at Windsor is one of
the jewels in the crown. The setting itself couldn't be more majestic with
the oval within the grounds of Windsor Castle. It is a fixture that
is always eagerly anticipated not only by the players. On more than one
occasion Her Majesty the Queen has stopped by to cast an eye over the New
Zealanders taking on her staff. The opposition are friendly but also very
competitive therefore ensuing an entertaining match |
Shaw Farm Gate off Albert Road, Frogmore, Windsor, Berkshire |
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Chenies and Latimer |
Chenies & Latimer CC |
Quite close to Amersham, Chenies and Latimer is a big
ground, surrounded by hedges with a wicket that has a bit of everything in
it. Chenies like to play a declaration game, with wins proving elusive for
us over the years.
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Chenies, Amersham, Hertfordshire
www.cheniesandlatimer.co.uk |
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Harefield |
Harefield |
Another nice location and close to
London, the Harefield ground is ringed by trees and hedges. Well used to
Kiwis, in 1994 Harefield approached the Auckland Cricket Association,
offering to assist a promising player. The first to arrive was the now
well-known Danny Morrison! Since then a few other useful Kiwi cricketers
have taken up residence at the Harefield bar, including former (Pat Hounsell) and
current (Chris Lee) LNZCC club
members. Harefield at one stage last season
fielded no fewer than 6 Kiwis in their first team. This is a keenly
contested fixture that leads to plenty of good kiwi banter in the bar
afterwards.
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Harefield, Middlesex
www.ukcricket.org/harefield
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Wiltshire Queries |
Dauntseys School |
The match is this year back at Dauntseys School, one of
England's top boarding institutions. It’s a fabulous setting with a great
wicket. Lunch and tea held in the school-dining hall are lavish affairs, a
great problem if you're batting at the time! Being situated on Salisbury
plain the atmospherics can be spectacular, as illustrated when we were
happily batting away a couple of years ago on a good wicket with sunny
skies above, suddenly a storm blew in from nowhere. We took refuge in the
pavilion as a bolt of lightning that thankfully missed the willow, struck
a fence post. |
West Lavington, Wiltshire
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Oxford Downs |
Standlake |
Played for the first time in 2002 |
Abingdon Road, Standlake, Oxfordshire |
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Hagley |
Hagley Hall |
Hagley is LNZCC’s most stately fixture and should not be
missed even as a spectator. In terms of distance it is the furthest the
club travels but once you have arrived you will agree it was worth every
mile of motorway. Set directly in front of the magnificent Hagley Hall,
this ground was bequeathed to the local Hagley village team by an ancestor
of the present Lord Cobham. Cobham is a name that some Kiwis may have
heard of as it was the present Lord Cobham's father that was a popular
Governor General to NZ in the 1960's. With the Hall, a church and the
thatched pavilion providing the backdrop on one side and fields with deer
grazing to the other, there can surely be no more idyllic setting in which
to play cricket. Our patron Lord Cobham entertains us splendidly with
silver service at lunch and tea no less. Ham off the bone is de rigeur and
the cakes for desert….well…come and see for yourselves anyway.
A
LNZCC tradition has been the infamous Hagley Sprint, which is a very
short race designed to find the slowest LNZCC member present. Run over a
taxing 10 yard course, the holder has the right to challenge any one other
member he thinks is more hung-over than he is. The tradition continued in
our jubilee season. when the nominated member Tony Penman, whilst
carrying a hamstring injury, beat the challenger, Richard Fish.
During the
50th Season, journalist Gordon Harcourt recorded a video of Hagley and the
game which was later broadcast on 'The Holmes Show' in NZ.
Click on
the file below to view the full program.
Dialup /
Broadband /
Local Lan
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Hagley, Near Stourbridge, West Midlands
www.hagleycc.licomnet.com
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Datchet |
Datchet CC |
Datchet featured for the first time in
our 2001 fixture list. Their lovely postage stamp sized ground hosted a
special New Zealand celebrity match for us, with many New Zealanders and
local spectators enjoying an entertaining match along with a traditional
kiwi barbie. Black caps’ opening batsman and 2000 NZ cricketer of the year
Mark Richardson featured as their professional. Former NZ one day
internationals Hamish Marshall and Aaron Gale also played. It came down to
the last over, with LNZCC coming out winners. If the cricket ever becomes
a bit slow you can always ponder your own mortality by wondering if any of
the low flying jumbos might fall out of the sky onto you as they land at
nearby Heathrow.
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London Road,Datchet, Berkshire
www.thisiswindsor.com/dcc
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Wanderers |
Gerrard's Cross |
A recent inclusion is The
Wanderers, one of England's well known gentleman's sides, with a long and
rich history. Their ranks also currently include a few talented kiwis
known to us. Apart from the special Datchet match, last year it was our
toughest fixture.
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Ripley |
Ripley CC |
Ripley a club with over 250 years history including
establishing the use of a third stump is our oldest standing fixture. But
not only a favourite for cricket historians Ripley is a batsmen's paradise
with a true wicket combined with a lightning fast outfield that makes life
difficult for the bowlers. In recent years Mike Singleton scored 150 odd
not out and in 2001 Dave Fanning was unbeaten on 149 within our club
record innings of 371 for 5. Lunch and tea at Ripley are again superb in
their challenging clubrooms. We say challenging as there is an exposed
thick wooden beam running across the roof of the bar and the Ripley boys
would make sure there was one of them who could swing themselves over it
and laugh at our desperate attempts to save some honour. Long time club
member Vance Thompson played for Ripley's Saturday League side for many
years with distinction.
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Ripley, Surrey
www.ripleycc.com
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Four Elms |
Four Elms CC |
Four Elms is one of the closest fixtures to London. The
village derives it’s name as you’d expect from 4 imposing Elm trees.
However due to a storm in recent years they’re now missing a couple of
stumps. It’s a competitive match played on an ‘away swing’ slope. Go
straight ahead at the cross roads coming south from M25
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Four Elms, Kent |
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Langley |
Langley CC |
On the Cambridgeshire/Essex border the Langley ground is a
bit different to what most Kiwis, or anyone for that matter, would expect.
It's not often when chasing a ball to the long on or long off boundary
that you have to remember your road code and look left then right, then
left again before setting off in pursuit after the ball again! The road
adds an interesting dimension to the game but most motorists seem happy
enough to wait till the end of the over before cruising through the
outfield. They are a very social lot due in no small part to one of the
team running a pub a short distance down the road.
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Langley, Essex
www.langley-cricket-club.org
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Goodwood |
Duke of Richmond's Estate |
Glorious Goodwood conjures up images of racing, but alas
due to the calendar the days when the fixture was played the day after the
races are long gone. There were also fond memories of a slap up sit down
roast in the dining room at Goodwood House. The ground is situated inside
the Duke of Richmond's immaculate estate and as such provides a genteel
atmosphere. Goodwood is quite close to Chichester on the coast and Arundel
is nearby also, so a good game to make a weekend of it. We are always made
very welcome here.
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Goodwood House, Goodwood, West Sussex
www.goodwood.play-cricket.com
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HAC |
Armoury House |
The Honourable Artillery Company (HAC) is a club steeped in
military tradition - they must be, to be able to defend it against
property developers being located within in the City of London. A flat
sward of green, dwarfed by office blocks on all sides, the wicket is
usually hard and bouncy. HAC are a very competitive outfit and with their
military outlook, frown on any lateness by the opposition (one aspect of
our game that sometimes unfortunately rears its head). Being a Saturday
fixture, the opportunity is there for the players to go on and sample the
delights of the local bars, spawning more than one club legend. In
fact a club member ended up handcuffed to his future wife on one such
occasion! Maybe a good game for the bachelors!
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City Road, London EC4
www.hac.uk.com
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North v South |
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Always one of the games of the season with plenty of
prematch talk from both sides of the Cook Strait. |
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Australia House |
Harefield |
The trans Tasman rivalry is
renewed here in the UK with a match against Aussie House – a bunch of
lads we get on very well with and in this case we usually come out on top. |
Harefield, Middlesex
www.austrailiahousecc.force9.co.uk |
| Hurlingham Club |
Hurlingham Club |
New for 2004 |
Hurlingham Club, Ranelagh Gardens, Fulham |
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Broadhalfpenny Brigands |
Bat and Ball Ground |
Broadhalfpenny Brigands is a match for anyone interested in
the history of cricket and it’s good to have the fixture back this year.
Played on the Bat and Ball ground atop the Hampshire hills this location
with outstanding views is widely claimed as the home of modern cricket,
where the game has been played for centuries. Hambledon are no longer the
force they were then when they would take on and beat the Rest of England,
but their involvement with the game continues and their association with
LNZCC goes back many years. They have a brand new pavilion and the
undulating outfield allows you to imagine games in years gone by. We
always have a beer or two with them at the Bat and Ball pub opposite the
ground in which the bar literally features the actual county line between
Hampshire & Sussex.
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Broadhalfpenny Downs, Near Hambledon, Hampshire
www.cricket-hockey.co.uk/clubs/broadhalfpenny
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