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County Ground

St James Street, Taunton, England

Ground profile

The County Ground,
St. James's Street,
Taunton,
Somerset,
TA1 1JT.
(Phone 01823 272946/254287)

Also or formerly known as Athletic Ground
Established 1882
Capacity 6500
Floodlights No
End names River End, Old Pavilion End
Home team(s) Somerset
Current local time 19:06, Sat May 17, 2008 (UTC +0100)
External links Weather

Next match
Wed 14 May 2008 - Sat 17 Somerset v Sussex, County Championship Division One
11:00 local time
Full list of forthcoming matches

Records and statistics
Statistics Ground records | Statsguru ODIs
First ODI England v Sri Lanka - Jun 11, 1983 scorecard
Last ODI India v Sri Lanka - May 26, 1999 scorecard

 Profile

The County Ground, Taunton, is set right within the town of Taunton itself, minutes from the town centre. The most south-westerly of English first-class grounds, it is a ground that retains much character, despite extensive renovations and improvements. For many years the playing area was circled by a greyhound track, removed in the 1970s. The towers of St. Jame's, St. George's and St. Mary's churches rise behind the pavilion, and the Quantock Hills overlook the other end. The main entrance gates are named after JC White, who plied his trade here from 1909 to 1937. The county established itself here in 1882, although the first Championship match was not played here until 1891. The record attendance was in 1948 when 10,000 packed in to see Don Bradman's Australians. The venue also staged one-day internationals during the 1983 and 1999 World Cups.

It has seen many splendid innings, including two quadruple hundreds (a record shared with Melbourne and Karachi), Archie Maclaren's record of 424 being followed 93 years later by Graeme Hick's 405*. Viv Richards made a stunning 322 in a day for the county against Warwickshire in 1985, and Major RM Poore made 304 here during his remarkable season of 1899 (he made 1399 runs in only 12 innings). When conditions are right, however, bowlers can do well, and Tyler (1895), Trott (1900) and Rushby (1921) all took all 10 wickets here. It was on this ground as well, that Jack Hobbs first equalled, then beat the great WG's record of 126 centuries in 1925.

In 2006 Taunton was unveilled as the official home of English women's cricket.
Martin Williamson

 Latest Articles
  • Somerset set green light for Taunton development (Jun 15, 2007)
  • Taunton the new home for women's cricket (Aug 29, 2006)
  • Home comforts at Taunton (Aug 29, 2006)
  • Philip Frost runner-up in Groundsman of the Year (Oct 13, 2005)
  • Somerset to host another Women's Test in 2003 (Nov 5, 2002)

  • View the full list of 9 related articles

  •  Latest Photos

    Aug 31, 2007

    General view of Taunton
    General view of Taunton
    © Getty Images

    Aug 29, 2006

    The honours board of England women captains is unveiled at Taunton
    The honours board of England women captains is unveiled at Taunton
    © Jenny Thompson

    Aug 29, 2006

    Taunton have made a real effort to be the home of women's cricket, as the boundary board here shows
    Taunton have made a real effort to be the home of women's cricket, as the boundary board here shows
    © Jenny Thompson

  • View the full list of 15 related images


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