How not to start a cricket league
Just like Marmite (Vegemite to those antipodeans) Indoor
Cricket never seems to have any in between there are people who would rather
have some time off and maybe net when it comes to January or there are those
(myself included) who absolutely love it.
I have tried to seek out indoor cricket wherever I have
lived in the country, gracing sports halls of Tipton, Hastings, Beckenham, Redhill
and Sheffield. There is also the bitter debate about what the format should be,
in England we play a 6 a side version which is designed for a traditional
sports hall, but when you say indoor cricket to cricketers front the Southern
Hemisphere they think of a pairs game played with a softer yellow ball in a
modified “court”.
In my view both are good games, nether replicate actual outdoor
cricket completely but it’s a much better way to keep skills over winter than
nets, the slight competitive element and being able to practice fielding helps
as an addition to nets. The big difference is your bowling to take wickets and
batting to score runs something a net just can’t replicate especially for us
hyperrational thinkers.
But to my horror for circumstances the 6 a side indoor
cricket league here in Sheffield was cancelled at very short notice by the
organisers Sheffield Hallam University. This left plenty of cricketers without
a league to play in. I felt that maybe the local cricket board could help or
the original organisers but nothing came of this. I thought if this happened in
the summer the board would have to help teams who suddenly found themselves
without a league to play in.
How to start a league in a week.
So, what did I do? Well, I got hold of a local cricket
centre, a classic of the new genre of centres, old industrial units on a
trading estate left empty and bought up to be turned into a cricket centre.
They already hosted a highly successful women’s softball indoor league on a Sunday
and I wanted to work out weather we can use the facility for a league.
There is a smaller hall at the centre only three lanes wide
without a lot of run up, this on closer inspection seemed ideal to have for the
“Aussie” style indoor cricket, official name Action Indoor Cricket. This 8 a
side game uses a softball so no pads required but batting in pairs and fast
paced nature of it means you get a good work out. Maybe I look at the ECB
version with rose tinted glasses having played it from so young and also making
the University Finals at Lords for the tiny Aberystwyth University back in 2009
but I do slightly prefer this format but I really warmed to the 8 a side
version as games went on.
First things first how do you get teams for a league that didn’t
exist 48 hours ago, well you go old school, you get on WhatsApp on the phone
and you message anyone you can think of, you go on play cricket sites for teams
and send random messages and emails to officials. There is just no short cut to
this.
Week one began with 4 teams and week two had 6 teams, we
ended up with some sort of makeshift league by the end and have plans to run
this again in 2026 irrespective of the other local league coming back or not.
But my word it was hard work, I was stressed out for the first three weeks and
finally as things ran a bit smoother it came to an end it was a whirlwind but
there are a few things to remember for anyone embarking on such a feat in their
area.
Persistence
Recruiting people to a league to very difference to being a
club captain, you rely on yourself to get payers for your team but when running
a league so many people totally outside of your control are involved you are
crossing your fingers each week in the hope that teams are turning up, paying their
fees behaving themselves etc. There is no other way to do this other than nag,
if you feel embarrassed you’re nagging to much you must just get over it and
nag some more. “Are you turning up?” “Do you have 8?” “Who hasn’t paid their
fees for this week?” the list goes on.
Delegate things as soon as you can
I was not the best at doing this and found myself taking on
all the tasks and spending far more of my free time arranging a makeshift
cricket league than I ever thought I would do. I eventually found volunteers to
help with umpiring and explained how to score I was able after the first few
weeks to not be there for the whole three and a half hours of the nights 3
matches, but I had to convince myself that I didn’t need to be there (my wife
also explained this to me several times).
Going forward I appreciate that a one-person committee isn’t
sustainable but getting volunteers isn’t always easy I’ve got to be savvy. One
thing that was easy was the cricket centre, the previous league run by a
University or other I’ve been unevolved in using school sports halls etc are
always at the mercy of other bookings and financial decision also you can
always feel unwanted. The key difference with using a cricket centre is well,
they want cricket on! Sorting out markings stumps and dealing with my various
week in and week out rule changes they were more than helps because well its
brings money pre-Christmas when nets for clubs haven’t quite started.
Don’t take things to heart
This one is easier said than done, when you start something
off your own back and are the only person running a league, I felt personally responsible
for everyone having a good time, games being on time, player behaviour, balls, scoreboards,
play cricket. There were times if wanted to give up and times where I felt hurt
by things that happened but mainly because I was taking everything as if it was
me personally it pays to take a step back and remember this. I didn’t really
know the rules and printed some off a website and had to interpret them,
changed the game to 5 ball overs to get three games in a 3-hour period, we
managed 3 hours 10 minutes at best but this is a learning point for next year.
Something to remember here is when something is new you must
change things on the hoof, things worked and things didn’t by being new and not
having rules set in stone it enables flexibility and trying out format changes
as things went on. But you cannot allow for certain people’s natural combative
spirit, they want to win and can’t cope with just playing the game and seeing
how things turn out, my “lets see how it goes” style of management wasn’t quite
ready for this.
I felt that I needed to explain the context a lot to people,
this was a league set up in a week following a cancellation and I was doing all
I could to sort out a game for people primarily form my own club and then
others who had been let down. Using my contacts though a number of the teams involved
were ones I knew and people I felt could be trusted to sort a team out without
to much input from myself, in addition the University provided a team for some
games which was a dream they just turned up and played without worry.
What Have I learned?
Well first things first is to pester your own players, I arranged
a league following a cancellation of one but had not bargained with having such
issues getting my own team out, possibly he cancellation lead to people doing
other things and looking at the softball as slightly demeaning, but anyone who
does play this format of indoor cricket will know the softer ball doesn’t diminish
the game at all.
Things take longer than you think, when new we didn’t know
the rules and umpiring was a challenge I did a few games and then after I had
some help from someone who had played before. But without a “proper” standing
umpire the authority to make people get round was hard, this is so important in
indoor cricket as the hall is booked for a set time, we were chased out at
10:15pm most weeks.
I have learned that most people once experiencing playing
come back again, but the initial way of getting players to come to something
new and not fully understood is hard work, I don’t know if it’s a modern world
thing but people want everything sorted for them and I couldn’t provide that. Moving
on from this I knew the people in my mind who would be keen and targeted them,
being at the cricket centre helped, other teams netting spotted the games and
were keen. But attracting the more “serious” big clubs was hard as I think they
saw the whole things as disorganised and turned their nose up to a “soft” ball
but this format is much more international than the 6 a side version so I would
argue it has more traction.
Finally making a play cricket site was much easier than I
thought, I got a domain from them and was able to sort out a league table
fixtures and results easier than I anticipated and found out how to amend rules
like balls per overs. But how to input pairs cricket scorecards is odd and I didn’t
explain this to people so this ended up with me adding them up in my own time
and putting them online I think more delegation is in order. I did this with
balls where each team bought their own ball front he centre and it was their responsibility
to bring it each week, I think I would do this with results also, the more
clubs have to do the less strain it is on yourself a big message if you set up
your own league.
The Future
I have spoken to the national association for Action Indoor Cricket,
and I hope to run the league form September 2026 I have all my learning written
down and primarily looking at things like advertising and streaming which can contribute
a lot to sponsors keeping costs down for teams and maybe brining in more teams
in future.
Anyone else who find themselves with this situation indoor
or outdoor then my advice is to go with it, so what if it fails you and a few
others get some cricket out of it and well that’s the point of life isn’t it? In
the end my team never won a game, but everyone had fun I’ll certainly get a
team next year.
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