Thames Valley Cricket League
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The Thames Valley Cricket League (TVCL), established in 1972, is a recreational cricket league based to the west of London, with 299 teams from 107 clubs drawn from Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Middlesex, Oxfordshire and Surrey.[1][2] The league, described by Berkshire Cricket as "the major league cricket competition for cricket clubs in Berkshire and surrounding counties",[2] has become a feeder league for the Home Counties Premier Cricket League since the creation of the Premier League in 2000.[3] The league is part of the ECB Premier League structure, with the Division 1 champion eligible for promotion to the Home Counties Premier League.[4]
The Thames Valley Cricket League was established in 1972.[5] The league grew to become the principal recreational cricket competition in the region, covering clubs across seven counties to the west of London.
In 2024, the league expanded significantly through a merger with the Berkshire Cricket League, the Chilterns Cricket League, and three clubs from the Mid-Bucks League. Member clubs approved the amalgamation proposal, and the Berkshire and Chilterns Leagues voted to dissolve their competitions, with the merged structure taking effect for the 2025 season.[5] Over the same period, Berkshire Cricket noted that "the TVCL has merged with other local leagues to create a structure that ensures that cricket in the Thames Valley will continue to grow".[2]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the league took early action to support member clubs facing financial hardship, using its bank surplus to waive membership fees and subsidise the cost of match balls.[6]
Format
Divisional structure
The league operates a pyramid structure with two singular divisions (Division 1 and Division 1B) at the top, and below that multiple parallel divisions (e.g. Divisions 2A and 2B, then 3A, 3B, 3C, etc.) down to Division 10. Each division contains a maximum of ten teams, playing every other team home and away over 18 rounds (9 home and 9 away). The Division 1 champion is eligible for promotion to the Home Counties Premier Cricket League.[4]
Match formats
The season uses two different match formats. "Traditional" matches are played in Rounds 6 to 14 (Divisions 1 to 4 only), while "Win/Lose" matches are played in the remaining rounds across all divisions.[7]
Traditional matches (Divisions 1–4)
Traditional matches have a maximum duration of 100 overs. The team batting first may occupy up to 52 overs; the team batting second receives the balance. A bowler may bowl a maximum of 15 overs. Matches in Divisions 1 and 2 start at 12:00pm; Divisions 3 and 4 start at 12:30pm. A red ball is used. Teams play in white clothing.
Win/Lose matches
Win/Lose matches are limited-overs contests with no declarations permitted. The maximum overs per innings vary by division: 50 overs in Divisions 1 and 2, 45 overs in Divisions 3 to 7, and 40 overs in Divisions 8 and below. A minimum of 20 overs per innings is required for a result; otherwise the match is abandoned. Free hits apply after every no-ball. The Duckworth–Lewis–Stern method is used in rain-affected matches.
In Divisions 1 and 2, matches are played with a pink ball in coloured clothing. Three powerplay phases apply (10/30/10 overs in a 50-over innings), restricting the number of fielders outside the 30-yard ring. No-balls incur a two-run penalty and bowlers are limited to one bouncer per over (over shoulder height).
In Divisions 3 and below, a red ball and white clothing are used. In Divisions 3 to 7, a maximum of five fielders may be stationed outside the 30-yard ring throughout the innings. No-balls incur the standard one-run penalty.
Points
| Result | Traditional | Win/Lose |
|---|---|---|
| Win | 26 | 22 |
| Tie | 16 | 14 |
| Draw, Loss or Abandoned (2nd innings) | 3 (+ bonus pts) | 0 (+ bonus pts for loss) |
| Abandoned (1st innings) or Cancelled | 8 | 7 |
Bonus points are available in matches that result in a draw, loss or abandonment in the second innings (Traditional) or a loss (Win/Lose). Batting bonus points are awarded on a sliding scale from 1 point (for scoring 100 runs) to 5 points (for 200 or more). In the second innings, additional batting bonus points are awarded based on the percentage of the first-innings score achieved, from 1 point (75%) to 5 points (95%). Bowling bonus points range from 1 point (for two wickets) to 8 points (for bowling the opposition out) in the first innings, and up to 5 points in the second innings.
In Divisions 3 and below, each team that provides a qualified League Registered Umpire receives 1 bonus point per match.