Roma Capannelle Cricket Club

Roma Capannelle Cricket Club is a Serie A[1] cricket team founded in 1978 in Rome. It is one of the most successful teams in Italy, as well as being one of the oldest (with continuous activity) and with the most years of militancy in Serie A Cricket. With four Serie A titles, ten Italian Cups, five Italian Trophies, and one Championship Six a side for the first team are joined by two women's Serie A titles and the youth Champions of Italy titles: five times Under 13, four Under 13, two Under 17 and one Under 19.[2]

Roma Capannelle Cricket Club
Personnel
CaptainLeandro Jayarajah
CoachDane Kirby
OwnerFrancis Alphonsus Jayarajah
Team information
ColorsBlack & Green
Founded1978
Home groundRoma Capannelle Cricket Ground, Rome
History
Serie A Cricket wins5 (1988-90-91, 2000, 2013)
Italian Cup wins1986-96 (ten years straight)
European Winners’ Cup wins2nd place - 1992 in France
Women Serie A wins2 (2009-10)
U19, U17, U15, U13 winsU19 (2005), U17 (2004 & 2009), U15 (2002-3, 2008, 2018) U13 (1999, 2001, 2005, 2007, 2017-18)
Official websiteOfficial website
2021 Season

History edit

In the 1960s in Rome, numerous cricket teams made up of officials from FAO, from the embassies of the United Kingdom, Australia and India, and from pupils and teachers from English schools and colleges gave life to a tournament called Rome Ashes.[3] The matches took place in the Villa Doria Pamphilj, made available by Princess Orietta who had married an English nobleman. Subsequently, following the expropriation of the villa by the Municipality of Rome, cricket began to disappear. At this point, in 1978, the Doria Pamphili Cricket Club, today's Roma Capannelle Cricket Club, was founded by Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah[4][5] together with Massimo Brian Da Costa, Desmon O'Grady and Sam Kahale in Rome.

At the end of the same year the Italian Cricket Association (today the Italian Cricket Federation) was founded in Rome and the first regional championship took place, won by the Doria Pamphili Cricket Club. In March 1997 the Italian national team played the World Cup II group in Malaysia and among those called up there were five Capannelle athletes (Amati, Da Costa, Maggio, Rajapakse, while FA Jayarajah was also present as AIC delegate for international contacts).

Roma Capannelle C.C. since 1983, thanks to the availability of the Hippodrome, it has the best pitch in Italy. Many of his players have played in the Italian national team confirming the policy implemented for years by Roma Capannelle C.C. which brings young Italians who are discovering this game closer to foreigners residing in Rome. Its captain Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah[6] spread, together with Simone Gambino, former president of the Italian Cricket Federation, this sport in Italy and was the first captain of the Italian national team.

In 1988 the R.C.C.C. has seen all four competitions organized by the Italian Cricket Federation, and eight of its players have been selected to play for the national team. He has participated in international tournaments in Spain (in the Costa del Sol), in Paris, in London, in two editions of the European Club Cricket Festival in Durham in which teams from Norway, Sweden, Luxembourg, France, Denmark, Switzerland took part. and Germany finishing second. In England, he faced off against the Ascot racecourse team, resulting in a derby between famous racecourses. She also participated, as winner of the 1991 Scudetto, in the Champions Cup in Paris, where, albeit with a reduced line-up due to five holders absent for university exams, she came second.

In October 1996 she was invited to participate in the tournament for the 20th anniversary of the FEAX C.C. in Corfu (Greece) with good results. The club's overseas tours are still organized during the summer months, especially visiting England and the city of London against which, after more than three decades, real rivalries have been created against historic London clubs that come to Rome to challenge the Roman club again.

The Roma Capannelle Cricket Club in the following years won the Italian Championship five times (1988-90-91-2000-2013) and finished second nine times. Eight times, however, he won the Italian Cup. He was also the winner of numerous tournaments reserved for Italian and young players such as the Italy Trophy (5 out of 7) and the six-a-side Italian Championship to which are added the twelve titles of Italian Champions for Under 13,[7][8] U15, U17 and U19. In recent years, thanks to the numerous projects to develop and promote Cricket in schools, the club has brought forward the women's section,[9] which won its first two national titles in 2010 and 2011 and has produced dozens of cricket athletes born in Italy.[10]

On July 28, 2013, beating the Kingsgrove Milano, the Roma Capannelle Cricket Club becomes champion of Italy for the 5th time in its history.[11]

In recent years, Roma Capannelle, the only team in the capital to serve in Serie A, is applying a "rejuvenation" that sees in the starting line-up the use of some of the most interesting players in Italian cricket, including Leandro Jayarajah, Michele Morettini, Kevin Kekulawala, Emi Ghulam and Giorgio Scalco together with the younger Maruf Anowar, Ion Racila and Zaryan Ijaz.

At the same time the club, in addition to the various youth sections, and the women's team has increased the senior activity, with the addition of the 2nd XI, that is the second team, which includes players with less experience, young and old and marginal players. of the Serie A team. In addition, for the first time in Italy, a formation of Veterans was founded, namely the XL XI, the Over 40 team, mainly in challenges against foreign clubs visiting Rome.

The recent tricolor successes of Roma Capannelle CC in the youth sector with two consecutive Under 13 titles[12] and one in the Under 15 confirm that the youth and cricket promotion projects in schools [13] and in the territory that continue to be organized by the Club give own fruits so much that in 2019 the Club opened a new youth sector for the very young: Little Cricket Under 7 - introduction to sport through Cricket.

Current Squad (Players) edit

1ST XI Players
S/N Name Nat. Date of birth (age) Batting style Bowling style Note
Batsmen
28 Leandro Jayarajah   May 28, 1987 (age 33) Right-handed Right-arm off spin Captain
7 Maruf Anowar   October 25, 2004 (age 18) Right-handed Right-arm fast
4 Dane Kirby   February 25, 1972 (age 49) Right-handed Right-arm medium
17 Sumair Ali   March 15, 1994 (age 27) Right-handed Right-arm fast
27 Usman Raja   November 3, 1987 (age 33) Right-handed Right-arm leg-break
8 Ali Ghulam   September 8, 1989 (age 31) Right-handed Right-arm off-spin
22 Ijaz Ahammed   December 19, 1970 (age 50) Right-handed Right-arm spin
All-rounders
69 Kevin Kekulawala   October 28, 1996 (age 24) Right-handed Right-arm leg-break
16 Emi Ghulam   September 18, 1994 (age 26) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
10 Zaryan Ijaz   January 8, 2004 (age 17) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium
9 Suresh Anton   March 15, 1972 (age 49) Right-handed Right-arm spin
Wicket-keepers
46 Ion Racila   June 15, 2001 (age 19) Right-handed
Bowlers
58 Michele Morettini   December 25, 1991 (age 29) Right-handed Right-arm fast
169 Safi Badar   February 16, 1992 (age 29) Right-handed Slow arm fast
21 Vikram Sharda   15 December 1985 (age 35) Right-handed Right-arm medium fast
11 Kiran Ginkal   May 16, 1994 (age 26) Right-handed Right-arm off break
12 Ragesh Ramakrishnan   May 28, 1997 (age 23) Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium

References edit

  1. ^ "Cricket, per Roma è finale scudetto". lazio.coni.it. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  2. ^ "European Cricket Family – Club of the Week - Roma Capannelle CC". European Cricket Network. 2020-08-28. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  3. ^ "CCR Cricket Cup 2019". THE COMMONWEALTH CLUB OF ROME. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  4. ^ Čizmić, By: Alex; Sport (2021-03-08). "The tough balancing act of Italian cricket". New Frame. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  5. ^ "ITALIAN CRICKETER FRANCIS ALPHONSUS JAYARAJAH: HIS PASSION FOR LIFE AND SPORTS – Confluence South Asian Perspectives". 3 April 2016. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  6. ^ "Il cricket in Italia". capannellecricketclub.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  7. ^ "Cricket: Roma Capannelle Campione d'Italia Under 13". RomaToday (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  8. ^ "Cricket, Roma Capannelle è Campione d'Italia u.13 per il secondo anno consecutivo". lazio.coni.it. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  9. ^ "FRANCESCA E IL CRICKET IN ROSA – Pianeta Sport" (in Italian). 18 February 2011. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  10. ^ "Roma scopre il cricket: dal centro alla periferia nascono scuole e campi". www.ilmessaggero.it (in Italian). 14 January 2019. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  11. ^ "Roma Capannelle Cricket Club Campione d'Italia 2013". RomaDailyNews (in Italian). 2013-08-11. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  12. ^ Olimpopress, Redazione (2018-10-10). "Cricket, Roma Capannelle è campione d'Italia under 13 per il secondo anno consecutivo". OLIMPOPRESS (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  13. ^ "I nuovi italiani giocano a cricket". L'Espresso (in Italian). 2015-08-26. Retrieved 2021-04-29.

External links edit