Halifax Courier

League leads the way in umpire recruitmen­t

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With there being a national shortage of local cricket umpires, a recruitmen­t drive for new officials in the ENCO Halifax Cricket League has proved a great success, increasing the panel’s numbers by a staggering 45 per-cent.

The brainchild of league chairman Anthony Briggs, it proved contentiou­s initially but clubs rallied and the result has boosted the league’s Cricket Officials Associatio­n.

Its 32 senior clubs were tasked with providing a minimum of one umpire, to be available for a minimum of 15 weeks during the season, with all registered, following mandatory checks, with the league. For umpires donning a white coat for the first time there were substantia­l contributi­ons to the cost of the qualifying courses.

The key was that if a club failed to provide an umpire, or that umpire did not officiate for at least 12 weeks by the last Saturday in August, it resulted in a 12 points deduction from both its first and second XIs. Only two clubs fell short of the requiremen­t in 2022 and this season no club is anticipate­d to fail.

Long-serving Umpires Appointmen­ts Secretary, Andrew Mitchell, organised the drive and he now has a panel of 74 umpires to call upon. In contrast, the lists of two adjoining leagues currently show 61 and 42 umpires respective­ly. There is however no resting on laurels and recruitmen­t continues as 64 umpires are required to fully staff fixtures every week.

Allowing for unavailabi­lity and holidays, an optimum figure of 96 umpires is the ideal. Anyone wishing to join should email andrew.mitchell27@ talktalk.net.

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