Summer Sports - Cricket Nevill Ground
By ‘Royal’ Appointment
Cricket outgrounds are a dwindling commodity in the county game. One remaining bastion is the Nevill Ground at Royal Tunbridge Wells where Kent has played since 1901. Neville Johnson went there to talk to Jon Buddington, the man who took up the reins as head groundsman just last summer
86 I PC FEBRUARY/MARCH 2016
O
n an early January day, it’s hard to imagine a warm summer afternoon and county cricket as you squelch across the outfield towards what is one of the
loveliest of pavilions. The late E W Swanton, celebrated cricket writer and broadcaster, once described the Nevill Ground as “no mean contender for the most delectable English cricket ground”. Anyone who follows Kent cricket will agree the Cricket Week held here for over one hundred years is a high point of the season. County cricket is a changing business these days, so there’s no divine right to an
outground’s place on the fixture card. There’s no suggestion that the Nevill will lose its roll for Kent County Cricket Club, but the standard of pitches required by the ECB and all counties keeps being cranked up. I’m here to meet the man who has been
brought in to see that Kent matches - and those for main summer tenants of the council owned ground, Tunbridge Wells Cricket Club - are played on the best possible surface.
Jon Buddington is a Mackem, and there
aren’t many in Tunbridge Wells who know what that means, let alone support Sunderland. He was appointed head
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