ROTHERFIELD CRICKET CLUB - MAIN RECORDS 1914-2009

The first record of a Rotherfield cricket team in action notes two matches against Brighton, home and away, in 1818. It seems unlikely that a brand new club would have been involved in fixtures against such prestigious and distant opponents. But the team had probably been going no more than a couple of years. Cricket in England virtually died out during the Napoleonic Wars, which ended only in 1815. Rotherfield cricket appears to have continued healthily throughout the remainder of the nineteenth century, though not a lot of detail has survived. Early in the twentieth, participation and support began to dwindle, and the original club folded in 1912. The Village Institute subsequently received notice to give up its tenancy of the ground, which had been granted on the condition that cricket was played there. Rather than lose the ground, the Institute formed a new Rotherfield Cricket Club in 1914.

In 1993, the 175th anniversary of Rotherfield's first recorded match was celebrated with a splendid history produced by Brent Simmonds and Kingsley Miles. Copies may still be obtained from members of the committee. Through reference to the authors' excellent work and source material, and the statistics diligently compiled since by Kevin Simmonds, it has been possible to assemble the main records of the present club from its formation in 1914 to the end of the 2009 season. Some source data is missing but not a significant amount. There is enough information to identify the leading performers, and where necessary to arrive at a good estimate of former players' career aggregates.

For Rotherfield, the inter-war years were dominated by the Crowborough & District League which ran from 1921 to 1939. The town clubs of southern England, staunchly amateur in spirit, began playing league cricket only forty years ago. Local Sussex village leagues go back much further. Rotherfield were founder members of their league, entering Division 1 with Buxted Park, Crowborough, Mark Cross and an Army Signal Corps team based at Crowborough Camp. Subsequent opponents included Boarshead, Fairwarp, Five Ashes, Hadlow Down, High Hurstwood, Jarvis Brook, Lye Green, Nutley, Ridgewood, St John's and United Churches. Only five of the clubs involved still exist. Rotherfield never won the league but finished runners-up three years in a row between 1926 and 1928.

The first thing that stands out when compiling village cricket records is the vast change in levels of scoring. Until the 1960s average scores were universally low. The average all-out total in recorded Crowborough League matches involving Rotherfield's 1st XI was 57. Today's norm is three to four times higher. Many matches between the wars ran to two innings a side. There were several reasons for low scores. Rough underprepared pitches; overgrown outfields; lack of coaching; no television for observing the batting technique of professional players. Folk also travelled less and had fewer things to do on a summer's afternoon. Players of limited ability, who would never be seen anywhere near a cricket ground today, regularly occupied the lower order and seldom made any runs.

In the decades after the Second World War, scoring levels increased gradually at first then steadily as more money became available for ground preparation. With Rotherfield, the most significant step-change in run-scoring occurred from 1995 when the club joined the East Sussex League. Today's leagues compel member clubs to prepare true pitches and keep their outfields in order. Conditions for Rotherfield's batsmen are far more favourable than they used to be, and life for bowlers is correspondingly harder. This is why the club's records feature more bowlers of the past and more batsmen from the present. One example will suffice. When Alf Blackman took his thousandth wicket for the club in 1964, not one Rotherfield batsman had reached five thousand runs. Since then, no bowler has followed Blackman to a thousand wickets while fourteen batsmen have passed five thousand runs, eight of whom were playing in 2009.

 

TEAM RECORDS
Highest Total For:  	  290-3 v Coleman's Hatch, 2002
Highest Total Against:    364 by Ken Suttle's XI, 1966
Lowest Total For:  	      8 v Boarshead, 1931 
		      	          8 v Nutley, 1936
Lowest Total Against:     3 by Hartfield, 1930

Highest Partnership: 270* for 1st wicket: John Baldock & Tom Williamson v Glynde III, 2007

BATTING RECORDS
Most Runs in Career

John Baldock	    (1982-    )	       19939
Chris Buck          (1965-    )        14056
Harold Beeney	    (1957-87)          10000+
Norman Barrett      (1956-81)		   9000+
Dick Baker	        (1951-83)		   8500+
Mark Bulmer         (1983-    )		   8375
Peter Hartland	    (1991-    )		   8132
Kevin Simmonds      (1986-    )		   7187
John Ralph          (1962-88)    	   6000+
Kingsley Miles	    (1962-2002)		   5700+
Dave Hacker	        (1994-    )		   5676
Dave Harman	        (1974-    )		   5587
Brent Simmonds      (1982-    )		   5396
Brian Harman	    (1951-79)		   5000+

Most Centuries

John Baldock	    30
Mark Bulmer			8               
Tom Williamson		7
Chris Buck			6
Peter Hartland		4

1000 Runs in Season

Year
1996	John Baldock	1642
1997	Chris Buck	    1128
1999	John Baldock	1597
2000	John Baldock	1045
2001	Chris Buck	    1068
2002	John Baldock	1067
2003	Chris Buck	    1011
2007	John Baldock	1307
2008	John Baldock	1020
2009	Ian Hartland	1148

Highest Innings

John Baldock		168*	 v  Frant, 1997
John Baldock		164* 	 v  Coleman's Hatch, 2002
John Baldock		151*	 v  Robertsbridge, 2007
Jamie Featherbee	150*	 v  Maresfield II, 2003
Kingsley Miles		145  	 v  Dicker, 1989
John Baldock		142*	 v  Maresfield, 1999
Alex Hayes		    141   	 v  Linden Park IV, 2004

BOWLING RECORDS
Most Wickets in Career

Alf Blackman	    (1938-78)       1400+
Kevin Simmonds      (1986-    )		928
Harold Beeney	    (1957-87)		900+
Wally Jopson	    (1969-75)		680+
Alm Horscroft       (1935-61)		650+
George Filtness     (1949-61)		550+
AW White	        (1919-39)		550+
Peter Hartland	    (1991-    )		523
S Howell	        (1927-46)		500+
Bev Barnes	        (1968-86)		400+
Norman Barrett      (1956-81)		400+
Geoff Pett          (1921-53)		400+
John Ralph	        (1962-88)		400+

100 Wickets in Season

Year
1950 Freddie Fidler 101
1953 Alf Blackman 111
1962 Alf Blackman 101
1970 Wally Jopson 109
1972 Wally Jopson 108
1973 Wally Jopson 111
1975 Wally Jopson 106

Best Bowling

Alf Blackman		10-32	v  Wadhurst, 1953
Kevin Simmonds	    10-46	v  Withyham, 1999
E Brasier		    9-9	v  Crowborough II, 1937
Noddy Wickens	    9-56	v  Boxbusters, 1988	

 

FIELDING RECORDS
Most Catches in Career
John Baldock		291
Dave Harman		    259
Dick Baker		    250+
Harold Beeney		250+
Chris Buck		    242
Brian Harman		200+
Kingsley Miles		200+

Most Wicket-Keeping Dismissals in Season

Rob Williamson 43 (32ct,11st) 2004

Most Outfield Catches in Season

John Baldock 30 1996

Most Outfield Catches in Innings

Chris Buck	    5	
Robin Miles	    5	

Most Stumpings in Innings

Nick Rowe 5 v Lewes Priory III, 2008

 

ALL-ROUND CRICKET
5000 Runs and 400 Wickets in Career
			 		            Runs	    Wickets
Norman Barrett  (1956-81)		9000+		400+
Harold Beeney	(1957-87)       10000+	   	900+
John Ralph	    (1962-88)		6000+		400+
Kevin Simmonds  (1986-    )		7187		928
Peter Hartland	(1991-    )		8132		523

Most Successful All-Round Season

Freddie Fidler 846 runs & 101 wickets in 1950

 

CLUB CHAIRMEN

1914-25 JW Sidey
1926-34 O Russell
1935-46 Rev HE Collins
1947-49 J Davis
1950 HW Morris
1951-53 L Vann
1954 A McQueen
1955-56 JK Hall
1957-59 J Brough
1960-65 D Rich
1966-74 KG Redman
1975-82 Dick Baker
1983-86 Chris Steel
1987 Noddy Wickens
1988-90 Jim Gallifant
1991-97 Bob Wild
1998-99 Kingsley Miles
2000-01 Brent Simmonds
2002- Dave Hacker