Cricket history timeline

This is a very basic list of key events in cricket history, divided into six eras – six being a very important number in the game. This website covers the first two eras and represents more than half of the game’s history to date.

Year Event
1. 1550 to 1725 – FOLK CRICKET
Cricket established itself, possibly via the newly established free schools, as a popular recreational activity in South-East England.

Known dominant player – William Bedle

1550 Cricket is played by boys at Guildford. First known instance of cricket being played.
1593 A school in St Omers (France) is opened for the Catholic education of the sons of English recusant aristocracy, taking with them an embryonic form of cricket. The school was much later resettled at Stoneyhurst.
1593 Sgrillare defined as ‘to play cricket-a-wicket and be merry’ in Florio’s Italian-English Dictionary. First known instance of the use of the word cricket being attributed to a game.
1624 The first cricket death-inquest on Jasper Vinall, accidentally hit with a ‘cricket batt’ while trying to catch the ball – a group were playing cricket on Horsted Green, Sussex.
1697 ‘The middle of last week a great match at Cricket was played in Sussex there were eleven of a side, and they played for fifty guineas apiece” Foreign Post,7 July. First known County match, first match played for money.
2. 1725 to 1800 – PROFESSIONAL CRICKET GROWS
The recreational game grew in importance, attracting both the aristocracy and the London populace, both groups sharing a passion for sporting spectacle and gambling. In the 1770s, Hambledon provided the key counterpoint of excellence in a rural setting that defined the era.

Dominant players includeLumpy Stevens, David Harris, Billy Beldham, John Small.

c1735 First appearance of curved bat, replacing hockey-stick style.
1744 First known code of Laws produced at the Star and Garter.
1744 First available Scorecard – Sussex and Surrey v London.
c1770 Modern bat shape comes into being.
1772 Hampshire XI v England – the first recognised first-class match. Hampshire, essentially the Hambledon team, win the game.
1776 Ball passing through wickets three times in an innings (at Artillery Ground, between five of the Hambledon Club and five of All England) giving rise to the introduction of the third stump.
1787 MCC formed. The club some became the major force in the game and still determines the laws.
3. 1800 to 1864 – CRICKET BECOMES A NATIONAL GAME
Cricket spread from the South-East to the rest of England.

Dominant players includeLord Frederick Beauclerk, Fuller Pilch, Alfred Mynn.

1814 Lord’s ground at St John’s Wood is opened. To become known as the home of cricket.
1833 John Nyren writes ‘The Cricketers of My Time‘, probably the most influential cricket book ever written.
1841 Trent Bridge, Nottingham opens.
1844 First international cricket match, indeed first international of any sport – USA v Canada.
1855 Brammal Lane, Sheffield opens.
1857 Old Trafford opened as the home of Manchester Cricket Club.
4. 1864 to 1918 – CRICKET AS A MULTI-NATIONAL GAME
The game took root across the Empire. This period also includes the so-called Golden Age of Cricket, 1890-1914 where the game flourished before appreciative audiences.

Dominant players include WG Grace, Victor Trumper, CB Fry, Andrew Stoddard, Hugh Trumble, Fredrick Spofforth, KS Ranjitsinhji, Wilfred Rhodes, SF Barnes.

1864 County Championship concept established. First champions are recognised as being Surrey.
1864 Debut of WG Grace. The Great Cricketer.
1864 Overarm bowing legalised – in many people’s view, the start of the modern game.
1864 First edition of Wisden Cricket Almanack produced
1877 First Test Match played – on 15–19 of March 1877 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground between Australia and England. Australia won by 45 runs.
1882 Australia defeat England at the Oval, giving rise to the Ashes legend.
1886 A team from India, a group of Parsees, tours England.
1889 South Africa becomes the third test-playing nation when it played against England at Port Elizabeth.
1891 First inter-Colonial tournament in the West Indies. Cricket established at a high level on five continents.
1912 Triangular test match tournament in England, involving England, South Africa and Australia. It was not a success.
5. 1918 to 1975 – TEST CRICKET ASCENDANT
Test cricket came to define the game, with Don Bradman emerging as the greatest of all batsmen. The International Cricket Council, became the governing body with representatives from England, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, West Indies, India and Pakistan.

Dominant players include – Jack Hobbs, Don Bradman, George Headley, Keith Miller, Garfield Sobers, Clive Lloyd, Sunil Gavaskar, Michael Holding, Graeme Pollock, Rachael Heyhoe Flint.

1930 Don Bradman scores 334 v England.
1932 First Test match for India – lost to England by 158 runs.
1934 First Women’s Test Match. England beat Australia by nine wickets.
1938 Len Hutton scores 364 for England v Australia, a new Test record.
1956 Jim Laker takes 19 wickets in a test v Australia.
1958 Garry Sobers scores 365 v Pakistan, a new Test record.
1963 The first professional one-day trophy begins – the then 65 over-a-side Gillette Cup.
1968 England tour of South Africa was cancelled by the South African government as they would not accept Basil D’Oliveira as a member of the touring party. Largely as a result, South Africa’s involvement in international cricket was severely restricted until 1991.
1973 The first World Cup, the Women’s, is concluded. In the final match, England beat Australia by 92 runs to take the trophy.
6. 1975 to date – THE RISE OF WHITE-BALL CRICKET
In this era, West Indies provided the greatest team of all time, and Shane Warne emerged as the finest bowler. Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Ireland and Afghanistan became full members of the ICC. Meanwhile, cricket moved from being a five-day game to a three/four-hour game, India became the dominant force, its vast population meaning cricket is often listed as being the second most popular sport.

Dominant players include: Shane Warne, Ricky Ponting, Steve Waugh, Ellyse Perry, Vivian Richards, Malcolm Marshall, Curtly Ambrose, Muttiah Muralitharan, Imran Khan, Ian Botham, Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Virat Kohli.

1975 First Men’s World Cup final. West Indies beat Australia by 17 runs.
1976 West Indies beat England 3-0 in a test match series. They would only lose one series (to New Zealand, 1980) in the next 20 years.
1977 Kerry Packer employs most of the world’s best cricketers to take part in a series of unofficial matches over the next two years. First use of floodlights, coloured clothing and white ball.
1983 India beat the West Indies to win the World Cup for the first time, igniting the interest in limited-over cricket in the sub-continent.
1992 Pakistan won the World Cup in Australia under the inspired leadership of Imran Khan, who later became President of Pakistan.
1993 Shane Warne bowls Mike Gatting with what has become known as the ball of the century.
2000 Hansie Cronje of South Africa was found to be involved in match-fixing.
2004 Brain Lara scores 401 for West Indies v England, a new Test record.
2005 England win the Ashes for the first time since 1986–87 in one of the greatest Test Match Series.
2007 First International T20 final. India beat Pakistan by 5 runs.
2008 Start of the Indian Premier League, soon to become the second richest league in world sport.
2010 Pakistan team captain Salman Butt, and bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir found to be involved in spot fixing.
2011 Muttiah Muralitharan retires from Test Match cricket, taking his 800th wicket with his final delivery.
2012 Sachin Tendulkar scores his 100th international century.
2025 South Africa won the first World Test Championship final to be played at Lords.