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Hong Kong Cricket Club
香港木球會
AbbreviationHKCC
Formation7 June 1851; 173 years ago (1851-06-07)
TypePrivate Recreation Club
Headquarters137 Wong Nai Chung Gap Road, Hong Kong
Coordinates22°15′31″N 114°11′36″E / 22.25861°N 114.19333°E / 22.25861; 114.19333
Membership2,400 members
Patron
Mike Gatting
President
Christopher C Pratt CBE
Chairman
George D Lamplough
General Manager
Kieran B Hale
Websitewww.hkcc.org

The Hong Kong Cricket Club (Chinese: 香港木球會) is a long-established cricket and private recreation club in Hong Kong.

Founded in 1851, the HKCC is located at Wong Nai Chung Gap, a short distance from the city's central business district.[1][2] It has over 2,400 members and cricket is the primary club pursuit.

HKCC has received multiple civic and community awards for its contributions to cricket and the Hong Kong international sporting community, a commitment underlined by both the HKCC President (since 2021)[3] and HKCC Chairman (since 2022).[4] The HKCC Patron (since 2017), former England cricketer Mike Gatting, described the club as a haven that continues "...to receive many plaudits from around the world."[5]

In addition to cricket, the HKCC runs sports sections for (in alphabetic order) croquet, hockey, lawn bowls, netball, squash and tennis. It also supports other sports including golf, snooker, table tennis and ten-pin bowling. Outdoors HKCC facilities include a cricket ground, adjacent to lawn bowls and croquet greens, plus three tennis courts and a 25m swimming pool. Indoors facilities include a cricket centre, with three nets, a sports hall with two badminton courts, four squash courts, a gym, multi-purpose room, two golf simulators, two snooker tables, a children's playroom and four lanes of ten-pin bowling. Family life underpins most HKCC events and the clubhouse operates half-a-dozen dining facilities, ranging from a Chinese restaurant to a pitch-side boundary bar, all with south-facing views overlooking the cricket ground and croquet and lawn bowls greens. The HKCC also operates an off-site restaurant, DotCod, (since 2000), 6 km away in the central business district adjacent to the HSBC Hong Kong headquarters.[6]

HKCC has reciprocal arrangements with 49 cricket or sports clubs in 16 countries,[7][8] including with Lords,[9] the home of cricket.

HKCC cricket

[edit]

Cricket has been the primary sport of the Hong Kong Cricket Club since 1851.

During the most recent season (2023), over 190 HKCC adults played cricket regularly, men and women combined, plus about 430 junior cricketers, outdoors from May to September and indoors with practice nets year round.

The HKCC anchors both ends of the cricket experience, from school-aged children's first encounters with cricket to the elite cricket of Hong Kong internationals.[10][11][12] The HKCC Patron has emphasised ".. cricket grassroots of the game has always been strong in HKCC. Women's and junior cricket in particular continue to grow at the club." Two HKCC staff have gone on to represent Hong Kong at national level [13] and in 2017-18, typical for many years, eight of the touring Hong Kong national team played for HKCC.[14] Several HKCC coaches have subsequently coached the Hong Kong national cricket team, most recently Mark Wright from 2017.[15]

HKCC encourages cricket for men and women. Important women's cricket competitions held at the club have included the 2023 Hong Kong Women's Quadrangular Series, won by Hong Kong[16] and featuring womens teams from Hong Kong, Japan, Tanzania and Nepal.[17][18] Hong Kong women's cricketer and former Hong Kong womens coach Kary Chan captained the Hong Kong national team while bowling two five-wicket innings on the HKCC wicket.[19]

HKCC cricket teams

[edit]

HKCC has abundant depth in cricket teams, from senior Premier and Elite XIs to many junior teams from ages U11 upwards.[20][21]

HKCC mens cricket teams usually play in three formats (two-day or one-day or T20 cricket). Sunday Elite and Cup teams are named Wanderers or Scorpions or Optimists. Saturday Championship and Cup team names are Gap-Ramblers or Nomads or Witherers, The Challenge League are Qilin or Xuanwu (Cantonese-speaking teams) and the Friday Masters League are Qilin. HKCC men also fields a team in the Hong Kong indoor league. HKCC womens cricket fields teams in the Premier League, in T20 or T10 formats, as Willow Wielders or Cavaliers. There is also a development league where the HKCC women's team are Diamonds

U19 boys cricket play the T20 League as Scorpions and women's as HKCC Women’s U19s. U17 boys cricket play in two formats (35-overs or T20) as Nomads or Gap Ramblers. U15s play two formats (30-overs or T20) as Optimists or Witherers. U13s play as Scorpions or Optimists or Witherers. The U13 womens development team are also called Scorpions. U11 League and Championship teams are Sharks or Cobras or Pumas or Hawks or Warriors or Dragons or Rebels or Strikers or Eagles or Black Rain.

HKCC cricket trophies

[edit]

HKCC-organised cricket shields and trophies are varied and competed for often. In addition to seasonal leagues, played on weekdays or weekends, competitive HKCC honours include the Hancock Shield for matches versus Kowloon Cricket Club (from 1948), the Hazzard Shield of Australia v the Rest of the World (from 1948), the Laurie Roberts Trophy (from 2001), the Sithawalla Cup for matches versus Singapore (from 1980), the Stragglers of Asia Cricket Club (from 1969), the Barton Cup (from 1924) and the Ben Thorn Trophy, played at Yokohama (from before 1876).[22] The HKCC also operates an extensive network of cricket officials, scorers and umpires.[23]

HKCC sports sections

[edit]

HKCC activities have expanded to half-a-dozen sports sections that happen at HKCC or under its auspices.[24] The most recently added sports section is hockey, in 2006. Reflecting the HKCC commitment to coaching excellence, almost all the HKCC sports sections (as at 2023) involve athletes competing at Hong Kong international representative level.[25]

Tennis (since 1851)

[edit]

Tennis courts have been part of club life since its formation. There are currently three tennis courts on club premises, all outdoors, where about 200 juniors receive coaching per year. As of 2024, HKCC field five men's teams and three ladies' teams in both the HKCTA Summer and Winter Leagues, one mixed doubles team in the HKTA Mixed (I) Doubles League, and two teams in the Veterans 80+ League.[26]

Croquet (since 1851)

[edit]

Croquet, along with cricket and tennis, is a founding sport of the club. The croquet green is on the northern side of the main pitch.

Squash (since 1911)

[edit]

Squash courts have been a part of HKCC facilities since 1911. HKCC fields men's and ladies' squash teams in the Hong Kong Winter League, and competes annually in Cup and Plate competitions.

Lawn bowls (since 1936)

[edit]

Founded in 1936, Lawn Balls fields over two dozen members divided among two mens and one women's teams, and the green is on the north-west end of the main pitch.[27]

Netball (since 1984)

[edit]

Netball is a thriving part of the HKCC community, with over 200 active participants (in 2023). The club fields two teams in Hong Kong Division 1, plus one team in each of divisions 2,3,4 and 5.[28]

Hockey (since 2006)

[edit]

Hockey is actively played by over 150 club members, allowing the club to field multiple junior age teams (boys and girls up to U17), youth teams (from over 17 to U21) and four women's teams (in Divisions 1, D2, D3 and D4) and three mens (D1, D2 and D4) teams. HKCC also field a Masters section.[29][30] Hockey is cultivated in the wider Hong Kong community through many initiatives including using club facilities for coaching and international tours.[31][32]

Other sports

[edit]

The HKCC clubhouse also has facilities for snooker, ten-pin bowling, table tennis and various fitness and junior sports.[33] Golf is widely pursued by several hundred HKCC members, provided they have a recognised golf handicap, and as well as playing at off-site golf courses members may access two golf simulators.[34][35]

HKCC alignment with Hong Kong's Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau

[edit]

An important HKCC strategy is alignment with Hong Kong's Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau trajectory for Private Recreation Leases in Hong Kong. Arising from a 2018 public consultation review and 2019 report [36][37][38] this includes objectives such as opening club facilities to 30% of sporting capacity plus the following three ambitions.[39][40]

Promoting sports in the community

[edit]
HKCC promoting sports in the community

Photo shows Hong Kong Cricket Club coaches in 2020 with primary-school aged students from the S.K.H. St. James' Primary School, a government school in Hong Kong. The HKCC are long-time supporters of extending cricket games and traditions into the Hong Kong community.[41]

HKCC drives many extensions of Hong Kong's cricket and sporting depth.[42] Direct bookings of facilities are open to non-members[43] and all junior cricket up to aged U17 level is open to members and non-members,[44] Scholarships are available for eligible younger players.[45] As at 2022 the HKCC had built partnerships with 26 schools across Hong Kong, ranging geographically from NTW & JWA Yuen Long nursery school, in Hong Kong's north near the China border, to the Ebeneezer school for the visually impaired in the south of Hong Kong island. In higher education, Hong Kong University and HKU Space are HKCC partners. HKCC operates active partnerships with 22 NGOs (in 2023), working to advance a variety of social and mental health initiatives expressed through sport, including the Caritas Community Centres in Ngau Tau Kok and Aberdeen, the New Life Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association, the Down Syndrome Foundation and HK Federation of Youth Groups.[46]

The primary school cricket league is played on the HKCC ground and involves such teams as the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals Hok Shan school[47] and the S.K.H. St. James' Primary School in Wan Chai[48] plus teams from schools such as Kellett and the English Schools Foundation. In July 2021, senior officials at the Po Leung Kuk registered appreciation to the HKCC for hosting bi-monthly sports days for their residential children over the recent decade (2014-2024).[49] The Tung Wah Group of Hospitals Hok Shan School and the S.K.H. St James' Primary School, located in Kennedy Road, Hong Kong also raised similar appreciation.

Supporting elite sports and national sporting associations

[edit]

HKCC has a long-established tradition of supporting NSAs, Hong Kong's national sporting associations, for example to run league matches and schedule internationals. The HKCC partners with Cricket Hong Kong and nine similar NSAs in Hong Kong, including tennis, lawn bowls, netball, hockey, squash, table tennis and several others.[50] In the years immediately before Covid, the HKCC increased its playing hours offered to Eligible Outside Bodies (EOB), year-on-year, between 2014-2019, exceeding Hong Kong government expectations and lease requirements.[51]

The HKCC has introduced a Sport Pathway Programme to strengthen elite international performance. It is applicable for men and women and juniors. The aim is that "... both members and guests are exposed to world-class coaching... in the true spirit of sport the club provides opportunities for all."[52] By the early 2020s, student placements offered by HKCC had become a flourishing club tradition. Students from Eton College and Wesley College, Zhongshan University in China and Griffith University in Australia have participated. Totally, between 2001-2021, ten schools or higher education institutions in Hong Kong have attended HKCC work placements.[53]

Scheduling international sports fixtures

[edit]

The third strand of HKCC support for the Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau is ensuring international cricket is central to the HKCC and Hong Kong sporting calendars. In mens cricket, as at 2023, HKCC hosts and participates in Hong Kong's Premier League cricket leagues (2-day, ODI, and T20 formats), the men’s East-Asia Cup and the ICC World Cricket League Division 3. In women's elite cricket the HKCC involvement includes multiple women's internationals, the women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier (Asia) and the women’s championship (East Asia). A highlight of the international cricket calendar is training sessions for the International Cricket Sixes.

By the early 2020s, the HKCC had partnered with three government departments, the Leisure and Cultural Services Department, which is the primary booking platform for sporting facilities territory-wide, the former Immigration Service Staff Association and Senior Police Call.[54]

HKCC support for social and philanthropic causes

[edit]

The backbone of club social and philanthropic contributions is active engagement by HKCC staff and over 100 club members volunteer each year (2023 data, consistent over recent years).

HKCC philanthropy

[edit]

Annually in time for Chinese New Year, HKCC donations to the community are gathered for redistributions.[55] In 2020, during the height of Covid restrictions, the club collected boxed presents for distribution to the Po Leung Kuk, Love 21 Foundations, Branches of Hope, SOCO and Pathfinders. Four iPads were also donated to the Po Leung Kuk and 38 maternity packs for Pathfinders and 20 school packs through SOCO[56] In 2021, HKCC volunteers also partnered with the Zubin Foundation to create over 50,000 meal boxes.

HKCC staff volunteering

[edit]
HKCC staff growing food for the community

Photo shows Hong Kong Cricket Club staff in 2021, harvesting white turnips and beetroot. The club rents farm space in Hong Kong's northern farmlands for such purposes. Recently donated food has gone to Ho Chak Neighbourhood Centre for Senior Citizens and The Women's Welfare Club (Eastern District) Hong Kong Leung Lee Sau Yu Neighbourhood Elderly Centre.[57]

In 2013 the HKCC established a Staff Volunteering programme to advance club support for community and to cultivate staff morale. In the period 2008-2023 it undertook multiple organic farming initiatives, By tradition the HKCC donate organic vegetables that it grows to rotating causes each year, ranging from the Hong Kong Spastic Association (2014) to winter melon crops for the St James Neighbourhood Elderly Centre (2019).[58]

HKCC employment practices

[edit]

The club prides itself on bonds between staff and HKCC members.[59] HKCC trains staff for on average 1,400 hours per year. It has been recognised for various employment practices, including from the Hong Kong Equal Opportunities Commission (excellence as an "Equal Opportunity Employer for Racial Equality and Inclusion" (2021),[60][61] the Hong Kong Council of Social Services (Caring Organisation, 2015-present)[62][63] the Hong Kong General Chamber of Small and Medium Business (the Partner Employer Award for strengthening training opportunities and cultivating a caring culture, 2018-2023)[64] and the Hong Kong Labour Department (the “Good Employer Charter 2020” for employee-oriented and progressive human resource management.[65]

Travelling HKCC staff are encouraged to visit overseas cricket clubs such as Lords and the MCC in Australia.[66]

HKCC environmental protection

[edit]

In 2018, the Club signed the “Glass Container Recycling Charter” and from 2008 to 2024, HKCC has achieved the 'Class of Excellence' Award for Green Management from the HK Productivity Council.[67] The club has active and long-established contacts with Hong Kong's turf management education and practices, such as Hong Kong Baptist University and elsewhere.[68]

HKCC History

[edit]

HKCC history corresponds closely with Hong Kong's historical milestones. Following the city's foundation under British administration in 1842 as a consequence of the First Opium War, shortly afterwards the port's British community had sufficient interest to establish a cricket club. The HKCC has since flourished in every decade bar one, the Japanese occupation of the 1940s, with hundreds of thousands of spectators and tens of thousands of young Hong Kongers from varied schools and backgrounds encountering cricket and other sports through HKCC.

Establishment in 1851

[edit]
HKCC changed playing locations (1 of 2)

Photo shows the Hong Kong Cricket Club in Central, Hong Kong in the 1900s. The site is now open to the public and occupied by Chater Garden, a park open to the public.

A meeting in 7 June 1851 proposed that a club with a turfed playing field be built on the Murray parade ground, creating one of the first cricket clubs outside England.[2] Tennis and croquet sporting sections were also established. Advantageously situated on the Victoria harbour waterfront, a ceremonial stone stood near the cricket pavilion between 1890 and 1975.[69][70][71]

19th century

[edit]

A cricket pavilion was constructed in 1893. Regular league cricket matches settled into the cricket calendar including home and away legs versus the Shanghai Cricket Club, first played in 1866 (home) and 1867 (away). Tragedy befell the 1892 away leg, in the era before air travel, when all but two players of the Hong Kong Cricket Club team drowned in the Pescadores Islands, on the passage home from Shanghai. The event is memorialised in the HKCC clubhouse.

20th century

[edit]

Cricket at the HKCC had become a regular fixture in Hong Kong weekends by the 20th century. The Hong Kong cricket ground was also used occasionally for civic ceremonies, such as the coronation proclamation of Britain's King Edward VII in 1901.[72] After a domestic cricket league was founded in the 1903-04 season, augmented by a further (second) division in 1921-22, squash (1911) and lawn bowls (1936) were added to HKCC sporting sections. A new pavilion was completed in 1923[66] and an inaugural Hong Kong men versus Hong Kong women cricket match was played in 1924.

During the Japanese occupation in the early 1940s cricket was extinguished from city life, club records were vandalised, and only basic ground maintenance happened. The HKCC resumed meetings in 11 February 1946, when the Chairman was thanked by acclimation, and the first post-war Hong Kong versus Kowloon cricket match was played later that year. The HKCC centenary was celebrated in 1951 when the club's President lauded HKCC for its unique contributions to promoting cricket in Asia and encouraging fair play.[73] A number of cricket matches commemorated the centenary, including HKCC v Rest of Hong Kong, a territory-wide selection, and HKCC v Singapore Combined Services.[74] HKCC centenary programmes still sell at auction, seventy years later, into the 2020s.[75]

HKCC changed playing locations (2 of 2)

Since 1975, HKCC has operated from a custom-designed location in Happy Valley. Photo above shows the club viewed from the south, with the greens for lawn bowls and croquet visible adjacent to the cricket ground. The club tennis courts are elevated (in blue).

During 1975, the club surrendered its cricket pitch in the heart of Hong Kong's Central District, immediately facing the LegCo building, and relocated to Wong Nai Chung Gap, 6 km away and the club's current home ground.[76][77] The old pitch had been used for 125 years and was repurposed into Chater Garden, now an open amenity for the Hong Kong public. Amplifying the spirit of renewal and fresh starts, the opening of the new HKCC cricket ground was attended by international cricketers English fast-bowler Harold Larwood and Australian wicket-keeper Bert Oldfield, who had opposed each other during the controversial Bodyline tour of 1932-33. [78] HKCC v KCC, Kowloon Cricket Club, a central fixture of the Hong Kong cricketing calendar, was first played at the new ground in 1980.

From the start of the 20th century until the Japanese occupation, HKCC were First Division winners ten times, including a joint HKCC and Indian RC team, and after the occupation until the 1997 handover HKCC were winners twelve times, an overall win rate about 1-in-3.[79]

21st century

[edit]

The club's sesquicentennial anniversary, held in 2001, was marked by varied celebrations, including a triangular series played at the HKCC versus select teams from the United Kingdom's Lords and Australia's Melbourne Cricket Club.[80] The club patron at the time, Tung Chee-Hwa commenting on 150 years of cricket, noted that "...cricket is an integral part of the heritage of Hong Kong." Reflecting on the Club's legacy as a conduit for international sport in the SAR, he added "...Hong Kong has a splendid reputation abroad as an excellent city in which to hold a sporting event.[81] Cementing the club's international stature, the home of cricket, Lords, and Australia's premier cricket club, the Melbourne Cricket Club, promulgated reciprocal membership arrangements with HKCC.[82] In keeping with the club's maturing international stature, HKCC facilities were further expanded in 2009 with a new Sports Annexe and gym facilities.[83]

The 150th anniversary of the Interport fixture, Hong Kong Cricket Club versus Shanghai Cricket Club, was played in December 2016, competing for the Bokhara Bell Trophy, in honour of the souls lost in 1892 on the SS Bokhara, including eleven lives from the Hong Kong First XI.

Between 2002 and 2020, the HKCC completed 62 tours, all sports combined, to elsewhere in China, within Asia including Japan, Thailand, Vietnam and Singapore, to India, Australasia, South Africa and the United Kingdom.[84] Marking increasing bonds with Cricket China, in 2009, on the HKCC women's tour to Shenzhen the club played with the China national team. Between 2004 and 2019 the HKCC hosted 24 international and sporting events, including the Hong Kong Cricket Sixes in various years and the HKLBA Golden Jubilee International Bowls Classic (2011). Marking the club's 170th anniversary, the Board of Cricket Hong Kong registered their appreciation to the HKCC in 2021 for "...their outstanding and unstinting support of cricket in Hong Kong."

As a fresh 21st century development for cricket conducted in native languages, HKCC established HKCC Qilin in 2019 and HKCC Xuanwu in 2021, both teams founded on instructions and umpiring communications in Cantonese.

HKCC publications

[edit]

Most sports sections at HKCC publish recent news of sporting activities, game fixtures, tours and contributions to the community (hockey for example [85]).

The HKCC has published two memoirs about the club's historical bond with Hong Kong. "150 not out" covers cricket in Hong Kong during the years 1851-2001,[86] and "170 years of cricket in Hong Kong"[87] updates HKCCs unfolding contributions to Hong Kong's cricketing community and sporting life up to 2021. The International Cricket Council, Marylebone Cricket Club in London, and Melbourne Cricket Club in Australia registered their congratulations to the HKCC when "170 years" was published.[88]

Since the 1960s, HKCC has published a magazine for members ten times per year, called the Pinkun in reference to the original paper stock.[89][90] It also publishes a live television schedule.[91]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hong Kong Cricket Club profile by ESPN. "Hong Kong Cricket Club ground at 137 Wong Nai Chung Gap Road". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 17 December 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Introduction to the Hong Kong Cricket Club". Archived from the original on 2017-10-11. Retrieved 2016-09-09.
  3. ^ Pratt, Christopher. "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Message from the President". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Retrieved 3 February 2021. Remarkably, HKCC celebrated its 170th Anniversary in October. Just reflect on that for a moment. There are a mere handful of still active sporting clubs in the world that can boast such longevity and provenance. The resilience and adaptability that has allowed the Club to continue to flourish for so long is remarkable and a source of much pride, particularly in these troubled times.
  4. ^ Lamplough, George. "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Message from the Chairman". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Our engagement with the Community is critical to our remaining an important voice of sport in Hong Kong. As a Club, we host major international sporting events through our close ties to National Sporting Associations. We also work closely with Hong Kong schools, orphanages and registered charities and provide them with essential training and playing facilities.
  5. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.2
  6. ^ "10 Private Club Memberships in Hong Kong You Need To Know In 2023". Savvy Hong Kong. 3 November 2021. The Hong Kong Cricket Club is well-known for its beautiful surroundings, convenient location, and ample outdoor activities.
  7. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.110-113
  8. ^ Lamplough, George (22 October 2020). "Chairmans Speech to new members". We have reciprocal arrangements all around the world with other clubs in the UK and India, Pakistan, Singapore, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the US, pretty much anywhere you may need to go on business.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "Lords reciprocal arrangements with other sporting clubs". Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC). The Marylebone cricket club has reciprocal arrangements with.... the Hong Kong Cricket Club
  10. ^ "HKCC Gappers and Ramblers". Retrieved 3 Feb 2024. Cricket Hong Kong, China is pleased to announce the joint merger and partnership with The Hong Kong Cricket Club Junior Gappers and Ramblers programme from the 2023/24 season onwards.
  11. ^ "History of cricket in Hong Kong". Hong Kong cricket has enjoyed a meteoric rise in recent years, having only earned promotion from ICC World Cricket League Division 4 in 2010, it has since gone on to be ranked as high as 10 in T20 Internationals.
  12. ^ Lamplough, George. "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Message from the Chairman". Retrieved 3 February 2022. At the time of writing, nine of our cricketers are on international duty with the Hong Kong women's national squad in Kuala Lumpur, where they are competing in the ACC Women's Asia Cup Qualifiers. Four more of our cricketers are on international duty for the Hong Kong men's national squad in Kampala, Uganda, where they are competing in Round 2 of the ICC Challenge League B. HKCC cricket coaches Nizakat Khan and Kary Chan captain the men and women's teams respectively.
  13. ^ "A window into the local Chinese cricket scene". p. 1.
  14. ^ "Hong Kong announce national team for 2016-17". Cricbuzz. 4 May 2016.
  15. ^ "Hong Kong appoint Mark Wright as director of cricket". Cricbuzz. 28 April 2017. Wright has played five List-A games for Hong Kong and has been associated with them for a decade. He has coached the national team and the Hong Kong Cricket Club.
  16. ^ "At the Womens Twenty20 cricket final at Hong Kong Cricket Club, Hong Kong (W) won by 5 wickets (with 5 balls remaining)". ESPNcricinfo.
  17. ^ "Records in HKG: Hong Kong Cricket Club for Womens Twenty20 Internationals". ESPN Cricinfo.
  18. ^ "Sunday blockbuster for HK cricket with three big matches lined up". This Sunday also sees the grand final of the Premier League One Day finals at the Hong Kong Cricket Club between hosts HKCC and Pakistan Association Cricket Club
  19. ^ "Hong Kong national women's cricket team's Kary Chan on the importance of mutual support".
  20. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club list of teams". Cricket Headquarters. Retrieved 20 February 2024.
  21. ^ "Cricket Hong Kong China". National Governing Body | Hong Kong.
  22. ^ <Lockhart, 2002, p.68-67
  23. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.48-49
  24. ^ "Cricket Club articles of foundation". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Retrieved 3 Feb 2024. The Club's articles A3 (b), The objectives for which the Company is established are to promote the game of cricket, tennis, croquet and other athletic sports
  25. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.98-101
  26. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Tennis". Retrieved 10 Feb 2024.
  27. ^ Christopher, Pratt. "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Message from the President". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Retrieved 3 February 2024. Congratulations to the Lawn Bowls Section who celebrated their 85th anniversary in 2021.
  28. ^ "HKCC - Netball". HKCC - Netball. Retrieved 3 Feb 2024.
  29. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Hockey section". HKCC Hockey section. Retrieved 3 Feb 2024.
  30. ^ "HKCC - Hockey section on Instagram". Hong Kong Cricket Club - Hockey section on Instagram. Retrieved 3 Feb 2024.
  31. ^ "HKCC - Hockey section". HKCC - Hockey section. Retrieved 3 Feb 2024. HKCC Hockey are actively promoting the sport of hockey through coaching programmes involving local schools, as well supporting NGOs and recognised youth organisations working with disadvantaged youngsters. HKCC make the facilities of the club available to the wider community along with our expert coaches, inviting young people to get involved in the sport for the first time. {{cite web}}: line feed character in |quote= at position 207 (help)
  32. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Hockey section". HKCC - Hockey section. Spring 2024 tour to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
  33. ^ "Hong Kong Inter-Club Snooker League". Retrieved 3 Feb 2024.
  34. ^ "Golfing facilities constructed at the Hong Kong Cricket Club". Asian Golf Construction. 15 June 2011.
  35. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club". Golf at the Hong Kong Cricket Club. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
  36. ^ "Hong Kong Legislative Council" (PDF). Legislative Council Panel on Home Affairs. Retrieved 25 February 2019. Report on Outcome of Public Consultation on Review of Policy on Private Recreational Leases
  37. ^ "Panel on Home Affairs (Agenda) 25 February 2019". Panel on Home Affairs (Agenda) 25 February 2019. 25 February 2019.
  38. ^ "Consultation Papers and Publications". Culture Sports and Tourism Bureau. Retrieved 10 February 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  39. ^ "Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau". Report on Public Consultation on "Review on Policy of Private Recreational Leases". A six-month public consultation was launched from 20 March 2018 to 19 September 2018 to gauge views from the public and stakeholders on the review of Private Recreational Leases (PRLs) policy.
  40. ^ "Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau" (PDF). Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau. 1 February 2019. Report on Results of Public Consultation on Review of Policy on Private Recreational Leases
  41. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Recent community activities
  42. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club Community". Hong Kong Cricket Club. The Hong Kong Cricket Club continues to advance its already-established relationship with the HK Community. Providing Sports facilities for 'eligible outside bodies' (EOBs), essential training bases for National Sporting Associations (NSAs), promoting sports in the community and hosting local and international sporting competitions.
  43. ^ "Community Registration Form for HKCC". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Retrieved 7 Feb 2024.
  44. ^ "HKCC Junior cricket". The Gappers and Ramblers junior development cricket programmes are hosted at the HKCC and are available to both Club members and non-members.
  45. ^ "Cricket for all - HKCC Gappers and Ramblers" (PDF). HKCC Gappers and Ramblers. This merger with HKCC will open more doors to the general public, and we are delighted to offer a new system of scholarships for local cricketers
  46. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.103
  47. ^ "TWGS Hok Shan School - Our Partners". TWGS Hok Shan School. Hok Shan school cub visit to Hong Kong Cricket Club
  48. ^ "全港小學學界板球聯賽2022-2023 (in Chinese)". St James Settlement primary school. Retrieved 3 Feb 2024. Hong Kong Primary School Cricket League 2022-2023
  49. ^ [Po Leung Kuk "Po Leung Kuk"]: 1. We wuold like to express our sincere gratitude to Hong Kong Cricket Club for hosting bi-monthly sports days to our residential children since January 2014 {{cite journal}}: Check |url= value (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  50. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.104
  51. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.104
  52. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.88
  53. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.108
  54. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.103
  55. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club - Hockey section. Contributing to the community". Our Annual HKCC Giving Tree collects presents, maternity supplies for young mothers, and school books and shoes that are distributed to families by partnering with registered charities and NGOs at Christmas time and during Lunar New Year.
  56. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.106
  57. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club". Hong Kong Cricket Club. Recent community activities
  58. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.134-135
  59. ^ Lamplaugh, George (20 October 2020). "Chairmans Speech to new members". The Hong Kong Cricket Club. p. 2. There is this wonderful bond that the staff have with our members and our families and his children. They will look after you all beautifully, as beautifully as you will look after them.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  60. ^ "Hong Kong Equal Opportunities Commission". Hong Kong Equal Opportunities Commission.
  61. ^ "Community Awards to the Hong Kong Cricket Club".
  62. ^ "Hong Kong Council of Social Service (2015-16) annual report". 15 June 2016.
  63. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club caring company award from the Hong Kong Council for Social Service". 1 March 2023.
  64. ^ "Partner Award to Hong Kong Cricket Club by Hong Kong General Chamber of Small and Medium Business (2023)". 15 June 2023.
  65. ^ "Hong Kong Labour Department awards Hong Kong Cricket Club with the "Good Employer Charter (2020)"". 15 June 2020.
  66. ^ a b Lockhart 2002, p.43
  67. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club communuty awards". Retrieved 3 Feb 2024.
  68. ^ Hong Kong Baptist University (with CIE, College of International Education) (3 September 2018). "A visit to Hong Kong Cricket Club (focus on arborist, tree management student, and turf management)". Division of Applied Science. Students were introduced the concept of choosing suitable types of grasses, applying machinery to pinch holes for aeration and pruning, and the way to maintain turf in good conditions. One particular thing amazed us most was the fact that the turf should be pruned and maintained to some 5mm height evenly
  69. ^ Hong Kong Government Antiquities and Monuments Office (03/01/2024). "Old Site of Hong Kong Cricket Club". The garden contains a foundation stone bearing the inscription of: "THIS STONE WAS LAID BY H.R.H. THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT, K.G., K. T., K.P., &c. ON THE 2nd APRIL, 1890 IN COMMEMORATION OF THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE PRAYA RECLAMATION WORKS SIR G. WILLIAM DES VOEUX K.C.M.G., GOVERNOR". The stone was originally placed near the fence of the Cricket Club Pavilion. It was dismantled in 1975 and relocated to its present site in 1983. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  70. ^ Hong Kong Government. "Old Site of Hong Kong Cricket Club". Hong Kong Government Antiquities and Monuments Office. Retrieved 3 January 2024. Originally part of the Murray Parade Ground, this site was converted to a sports and recreation area in 1851 when the Hong Kong Cricket Club was founded there with a clubhouse and cricket pitch.
  71. ^ "Early cricket in Hong Kong". The Graphic (illustrated newspaper). 4 April 1876. Long after the notaries of the noble game of cricket have finished their season in England, their brother enthusiasts in the distant colony of Hong Kong awake from the long monotony of the hot summer, and once more pitch tents and wickets for their season. The ground is a very good one, situated between the Queen's Road and the sea.
  72. ^ The Hong Kong Telegraph (29 January 1901). "King Edward VII - Proclamation of Accession to the throne". The Hong Kong Telegraph. p. 1. The proclamation announcing eh accession to the throne of England of King Edward the Seventh was made by H.E. [His Excellency] the Governor (Sir Henry A Blake, GCMG) today at 4pm on the Cricket Ground. Social arrangements had been made, the route from Government House to the Cricket Ground being lined with soldiers.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  73. ^ "The 100th Anniversary of Hong Kong Cricket Club (1851)". 11 October 1951. This is a tribute to some of those who have given to the game what they have built into the unassailable tradition of the British way of life and fair play in the Far East (Editors note, page 1)
  74. ^ "HONG KONG CRICKET CLUB CENTENARY TOURNAMENT 1951/52". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 10 Feb 2024.
  75. ^ "Auction Lot 1185 - Hong Kong Cricket Club. Centenary 1851-1951'. Issued by the Club in 1951. ORIGINAL DECORATIVE". The Saleroom Auction Catalogues. 8 July 2022. Retrieved 5 Feb 2024.
  76. ^ Old Site of Hong Kong Cricket Club: Chater Garden, LCSD Antiques and Monuments Office
  77. ^ "Last matches played at HKCC ground at Chater Road.(Hong Kong Cricket)". 16 October 1975.
  78. ^ Ryder, Roland (August 10, 2020) [1976]. "Bert Oldfield: A wicketkeeper of unobtrusive excellence – Wisden Almanack". Wisden Almanack. ...and in 1976 with [England fast-bowler] Harold Larwood, [Australian wicket-keeper] Bert Oldfield flew to Hong Kong for the opening of their new cricket ground.
  79. ^ HKCC Championship rolls (1903-1984) (1 September 1985). "Hong Kong Cricket Association Handbook (1984-1985)". Hong Kong Championship rolls (1903-1973) and Sunday League (1974-1984).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  80. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club v Marylebone Cricket Club". Cricket Archive (Hong Kong Cricket Club 150th Anniversary Tournament 2000/01). Retrieved 10 Feb 2024.
  81. ^ Lockhart, 2002, p.192
  82. ^ Lockhart, 2002, p.239
  83. ^ Hong Kong Cricket Club (10 December 2016). "HKCC History". Match programme, HKCC v Shanghai. p. 4. In November 2009, an additional floor was completed to the Sports Annexe, housing the HKCC Cricket Centre for Excellence and an indoor Sports Hall. The rooftop tennis courts have been reinstated with the Club currently offering three courts to host various league matches and inter club events.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  84. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.116-117
  85. ^ "HKCC Hockey section (Internal)". Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  86. ^ Lockhart, Saul (30 April 2002). 150 Not Out. Hong Kong Cricket Club. pp. 192–193. ISBN 962-86606-1-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  87. ^ Hale, Kieran; Li, Clara (2021). 170 years of cricket in Hong Kong. Hong Kong Cricket Club. ISBN 978-962-86606-0-5.
  88. ^ Hale & Li, 2021, p.9-12
  89. ^ "The Pinkun magazine". The Pinkun.
  90. ^ "Pinkun back issues online at Fipsnack". Flipsnack. 15 January 2024.
  91. ^ "Hong Kong Cricket Club". Hong Kong Cricket Club live television schedule. 10 Feb 2024. Retrieved 10 Feb 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Category:Club cricket teams in China Category:Cricket teams in Hong Kong Category:Cricket clubs established in 1851 Category:Cricket grounds in Hong Kong Category:Multi-sport clubs in China Category:Rugby union teams in Hong Kong Category:1851 establishments in Hong Kong