|
HISTORY
OF CRICKET IN SLOVENIA
                                            
|
|
The
Origins
Cricket was born (as far as we know) in August 1974
Borut Čegovnik, then aged 13, had been introduced to our
sport in Birchington, Kent, while on an extended visit to his penpal.
Liking the game, and having been coached extensively by his host's
father, he decided that it was exactly the kind of thing that Mežica
na Koroškem needed, and so acquired the necessary equipment to get
started. This little
mountain village
is in the Karavanke mountains on the border with Austria. The local
boys took to it enthusiastically, and single-wicket games (they only
had one bat) were soon a regular sight. Initially, bruising to the
shins was not uncommon, as they played with proper cricket balls but
no pads. This deficiency was rectified some time later, we
understand. They had a copy of the Laws of Cricket, and these Laws
were religiously adhered to; the pitch was correctly marked
according to the dimensions specified, and from time to time
queries, disputes and confusion were cleared up by consulting their
battered handbook mid-game. There were all of the features you might
expect - lbws, run outs, catches, bowled, wides, and no-balls. This
was proper cricket. 8-ball overs were bowled, in accordance with the
then practice in Australia, the boys in Mežica finding that it
speeded things up a bit. A total of 17 tournaments were played in
the period 1974-1982, with
cups awarded and scores kept.
One tournament was abandoned, and there was a temporary hiatus in
proceedings, when their bat broke, but a new one was soon acquired.
In total, 24 people played, most of whom have expressed serious
interest in resuming their cricket careers. We are advised that
spectacular catches were the order of the day. Cricket was played in
Mežica until 1982, when several of the ringleaders moved to Ljubljana
|
 |
 |
 |
|
The Resurgence
1997 saw cricket restarted in
Slovenia with the formation of a Ljubljana team to play against
a visiting Dutch team. In its first 2 years Ljubljana CC played
'friendlies' against teams from Austria, Italy, Holland and
Switzerland as well as a match against a Sri Lankan Ambassador's
XI from Vienna (as the British Ambassador's XI from Slovenia).
We managed to win the Botschafter (Ambassador's) Cup in the
first two years it was held.
In 1998, Ljubljana played its first 'home' games
in sports stadia in Ljubljana, but were able to obtain a
five-year lease on a site at Valburga pri Smledniku.
In 1999, Ljubljana entered the Austrian trophy
for the first time and made the semi-final before losing to
Prague, and also entered the Lodi Tournament in Italy for the
first time, only, however, managing a disappointing fifth place.
However, in 2000 we reached the final of the Lodi tournament,
losing to Malta in the final and again reach the second round of
the Austrian trophy. The major event of 2000 was Ljubljana CC's
debut in the Austrian Open League where we played reasonably
well, eventually finishing fourth in the table. Had we been able
to snatch victory against Lords CC instead of losing by the
narrowest margin of 1 run we may have finished even higher.
2000 was also notable for
the first ever appearance of Slovenia as
an official cricket nation in the
five-nation European Representative
Tournament, held in Vienna in August.
Sadly, Slovenia only finished fourth,
suffering because of a narrow 6-run loss
to Croatia. We had a strong victory
against Finland and were competitive,
but not strong enough to win, in our
games against hosts Austria and eventual
winners Norway. We also competed for the
first of what we hope is many
Ljubljana-Concordia cup matches, which
we can happily report is safe in our
possession in Ljubljana.
In 2001, Ljubljana finished sixth of eleven in
the Austrian league having had a terrible start to the season,
and, in the greatest day since the formation of the club, we won
the six-team Lodi tournament in June.
2002 was another season in the Austrian league,
but, very disappointingly, we lost all of the league fixtures we
played. On a more positive note, the club expanded well, with
many new members joining.
In 2003 our off-the-field activities expanded
well, and cricket was introduced to several schools in and
around Ljubljana. These youngsters are the future of cricket in
Slovenia. Ljubljana Cricket Club also won the inaugural Velden
sixes cricket tournament.
2004 and 2005 have seen the continuation
and growth of the schools programme and
victories in an ever-stronger Velden
Sixes Competition. Furthermore,
promotion to ICC Affiliate Status has
opened new doors for the growth of
cricket in the country.
2006 saw Slovenia return to
International Competition in the
European Championships Division 4 in
Antwerp, Belgium. We also played in the
first official 20/20 International match
vs Finland.
2007 sees the
introduction of the Slovenian National
Championships and the proper
introduction of Maribor CC and the debut
of Bela Krajina CC. Mežica CC and a
Ljubljana team will also compete.
|
Just
discovered, photographs taken at Ljubljana cricket club's
first ever match. |
Many
thanks to David Smith for these photographs. This match took
place between The Hague cc and The President of Slovenia's XI
marking the debut of Ljubljana cricket
club. |
|
|
|
Original Club
President Roger Metcalfe introduces original Slovenian
President Milan Kučan to a young cricketer. |
|
|
|
Ljubjana players
relaxing during the first ever match. Club stalwart Greg
Davies (Standing with arms crossed) blissfully unaware of the
many games he would lose while playing for Ljubljana and
Slovenia in years to come. |
|
|
|
Sadly, Ljubljana
crowds would never again reach these numbers, nor would we get
such comfortable seats. |
|
|