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Summer Sports - Cricket


Rain certainly does not stop play at one of Northern Ireland’s oldest cricket clubs, as Chris McCullough found out when he visited the Carrickfergus Cricket Club in County Antrim to talk to Head Groundsman Michael Kennedy and the team that help with the ground preparations


I


t’s been a hectic season for the members of Carrickfergus Cricket Club in Northern Ireland, who have not only battled hard in the league, but also with the weather.


Sitting very close to the historic town of


Carrickfergus on the country’s east coast, the County Antrim club enjoys a healthy membership of over 200, seventy of whom are player members. The grounds have been well utilised by the members over the years as the club enjoys good success in the league. Just recently, the first XI team moved back into the top half of the Premier League after their first away win of the season.


Steeped in history, Carrickfergus Cricket


Club dates back to 1868 and was one of the founder member clubs of the Northern Cricket Union in 1887. Due to the passion and determination of current members, it remains one of the oldest surviving clubs in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.


Although the grounds are impressive at


Carrickfergus Cricket Club these days, it hasn’t all been plain sailing for the club over the years. Despite its long documented existence, the club has endured somewhat of a difficult history and led a nomadic existence for over a century as it had no home to call its own.


PC AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2017 I 53


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