Leeds Caribbean Cricket Club

This article first appeared in the Cricketer Paper in 
April 2024, reporter Guy Williams.

 

Founded by the Windrush generation in 1948, Leeds Caribbean CC was the first West Indian cricket club in the country. It’s now celebrating the opening of a new clubhouse, costing more than £500,000, financed by Sport England, the ECB and the club. Guy Williams reports.
 
Shortly after the Empire Windrush docked at Tilbury in June 1948, Jamaican Alford Gardner, (pictured right), now 98 not out, but then in his early 20s and recently demobbed from the RAF, travelled to Leeds to find a job and somewhere to live. Initially, discrimination made both difficult, but as a trained engineer, Alford eventually found work and rented accommodation. Given his Caribbean heritage, cricket was a passion and along with a group of fellow West Indians, he decided to form a cricket club. 76 years later, Alford is the only survivor, fit, alert and well, he was the star attraction last Saturday when the new facilities at Leeds Caribbean, two miles from the city centre, were officially opened in a ceremony attended by the ECB, Sport England, Jane Powell, president of Yorkshire CCC, Ebony Rainford-Brent, broadcaster and anti-racism campaigner, Devon Malcolm, the former England fast bowler and Collis King who played such a sensational innings to win the 1979 World Cup Final for the West Indies. 
The growth of Leeds Caribbean from nothing in 1948 to a prosperous club today, three teams and a junior section, is a remarkable story, and even though it’s dependent on players with an Asian background, the Caribbean influence on and off the field remains strong, and it has an important mission to encourage black youngsters to take up cricket. With a steel band playing and Caribbean food being served, Alford Gardner explained the early struggles. “ It was difficult to start a club in Leeds. We had no help at all. We hadn’t a penny and decided each of us would put in 10 shillings a week to buy gear. “ Eventually, we got enough to buy a bat and ball. We had nowhere to play and had only three stumps. In fact, in the first match in a park we had eight players only and during one game the police turned up after only two balls had been bowled. “So, it took time to get going and when things settled down, I got to know a few people and they got to know us. We joined the Yorkshire Central League in 1949,so we had Saturday fixtures and we also played Sundays and went all over Yorkshire by coach with our families. “ When we started, we had trials and they said I was the best wicketkeeper. So, when we arrived in England, we thought we must have a team like every village in Jamaica. Growing up at Springfield near Montego Bay, my heroes were George Headley(the black Bradman in the 1930s) and Don himself. You wanted to be like them. 
“ Looking at the new clubhouse, it’s beyond my wildest dreams. I never thought I’d come here and see something like this.” Like Alford, Devon Malcolm, 61, emigrated from Jamaica. Now working as the ECB’s Black Communities Cricket Liaison Officer, previously, his raw pace for England(40 Tests 1989-97 128 wickets), and Derbyshire, Northants and Leicestershire enabled him to finish with 1054 wickets in his first-class career. “ I’m impressed with the facilities. It’s not often you have an Afro-Caribbean club as posh as this. It’s great to see this support from the ECB-better late than never. The ECB are trying to make cricket an inclusive sport and the Government recently announced £35m which will hopefully reach communities like this to encourage kids to play. “ Not enough attention was paid to Afro-Caribbean places and there weren’t any facilities. When I played at Richmond College in Sheffield, we had a ground, but that doesn’t exist now. It’s housing. Youngsters today have a lot more distractions. But when I go around schools, they do want to play. What I like here is that the whole community is embracing it. “ Back in the early 1980s, I played against Leeds Caribbean for Sheffield Caribbean. I bowled one of their best players, cleaned bowled him with my pace. Later, Leeds said I had a future in cricket, so this club was fantastic in my development. There’s a huge Caribbean community in Sheffield, so I hope the ECB will develop cricket there.” A popular character in Yorkshire because of his success as a league cricketer is Collis King who cut the ribbon to open the new building. The ex-West Indies Test player who memorably outshone Viv Richards in a match winning stand in the World Cup Final at Lord’s against England in 1979-King smashed 86 from 66 balls with three sixes and ten fours-is in no doubt about the significance of the new pavilion. “ This is an important day for all West Indians. The pioneers who came here in the late 1940s had it tough. It’s vital now to have a new club. When I came here from Barbados in the early 1970s,cricket was booming, but now it has died in State schools. “ So, having this new club can revive the game. People will come to see this place and say, ‘This is something we must get tucked into.’ “ I’d like to do my bit to enhance cricket here,” said King, a fit looking 72-year-old who’s hoping to play league cricket again this summer. Negotiating with the ECB and Sport England about complex financial matters and criteria which had to be met wasn’t easy for club officials and chairman Harwood Williams, 54, a former Leeward Islands batsman who later enjoyed an excellent career in the York Senior League. “ I’m ecstatic. This is like winning the Lottery and we’ve been looking forward to having a clubhouse like this for many, many years. “ When we started, we had a building where when it rained, you were better off outside than inside. This new facility is going to help our club improve, and if we can’t get young black boys and girls playing the game given this clubhouse, then something has to be said about our skills. “ We have several cricketers from Asian families, but we’ll always have a club that reflects a Caribbean culture. So, when teams from the Yorkshire Dales Council League come here, they expect to drink Red Stripe and eat curried goat.”