- England and Wales Cricket Board
Infobox Sport governing body
assocname= England and Wales Cricket Board
logo=ECB_Logo.gif
sport=Cricket
abbrev = ECB
founded = 1997
aff =
affdate =
region =
regionyear =
location =Lord's Cricket Ground
president =
chairman =Giles Clarke
chiefexec =David Collier
secretary =
coach = Peter Moores
womenscoach =
replaced = TCCB
url = www.ecb.co.uk
country
countryflag2= WalesThe England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) ( _cy. "Bwrdd Criced Cymru a Lloegr") is the governing body ofcricket inEngland andWales . It was created on1 January 1997 combining the roles of theTest and County Cricket Board (TCCB), the National Cricket Association (NCA) and the Cricket Council. Like many sports governing bodies in the United Kingdom it is acompany limited by guarantee , a legal status which enables it to concentrate on maximising its funding of the sport rather than making a return for investors. The ECB's offices are atLord's Cricket Ground inLondon .The ECB is governed by representatives of the 38 first-class and minor counties and the MCC. It is headed by the Management Board (with 15 members), a First-Class Forum (for
first-class cricket ) and a Recreational Forum. The ECB's chairman isGiles Clarke of Somerset and its chief executive isDavid Collier .An important responsibility is the direction of the England national side. The Chairman of Selectors
David Graveney , head coach Peter Moores and other coaches are ECB employees. The ECB also employs the England Test match captainKevin Pietersen and other centrally contracted players, as well as being responsible for theECB National Academy , currently based atLoughborough University in Leicestershire.The ECB is responsible for the financial direction and commercial exploitation of England cricket. It raises revenue from the proceeds of sales for tickets at
One Day International and Test matches in England and Wales and shares in revenues when the England team play abroad. The ECB is also responsible for the generation of income from the sale of sponsorship and broadcasting rights, primarily in relation to the England team. The ECB's income in the 2007 calendar year was £93.0 million, up from £77.0 million in 2006. [http://static.ecb.co.uk/files/ecb-annual-report-and-accounts-2007-2400.pdf] In 2007 the ECB distributed £31.6 million in "fee payments" to the eighteen first class counties, or £1.75 million per team. This subsidy is an essential source of income for the counties. It also pays certain costs of the domestic cricket programme directly, including the salaries of first class umpires and the cost of temporary floodlights at county matches. [http://static.ecb.co.uk/files/ecb-annual-report-accounts-2006-finance-directors-report-1844.pdf]In 2005 the ECB took on responsibility for the direction of women's cricket in England and Wales.
In 2005 the ECB concluded a commercial arrangement with BSkyB which gave
Sky Sports the exclusive television rights for liveTest cricket in England and Wales for four years (the 2006 to 2009 seasons). This deal, which took liveTest cricket for home England matches away fromterrestrial television for the first time generated substantial future revenues for English and Welsh cricket (220 million pounds over 4 years), but was criticised by many England cricket supporters and others. In 2007 Asian rights for live English cricket were sold toESPN Star Sports for a period of 5 years for 40 million pounds, which is 5 times the previous figure. [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/cricket/article2532690.ece]The ECB courted further controversy in 2005 when they appeared to dither over the employment contract of the bowling coach
Troy Cooley who was seen by many as an important contributor to England's Ashes success. Cooley left the England setup and joined Australia's staff. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/cricket/4537256.stm]Major domestic competitions
*Liverpool Victoria County Championship
*Friends Provident Trophy
*NatWest Pro40
*Twenty20 Cup ee also
*
Cricket in England
* [http://www.skysports.com/ Offical Broadcaster of ECB SKYSPORTS]External links
* [http://www.ecb.co.uk Official ECB website]
* [http://www.lords.org/cricket/laws.asp The official laws of cricket]
* [http://www.kentcricketboard.co.uk Kent Cricket Board - The development of the game in the Garden of England]
* [http://www.cricket-online.org Cricket-Online]
* [http://www.thetwenty20cup.co.uk Twenty 20 Cricket]
* [http://www.cricinfo.com CricInfo]
* [http://cricketlearn.tripod.com Cricket Introduction]
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