Association of Cricket Officials
The Association of Cricket Officials is an organisation set up to represent and support cricket officials, especially umpires and scorers. It operates under the auspices of the England and Wales Cricket Board and is often referred to as the "ECB ACO" or similar. Current membership is "near 8,000".
Formation
The ACO was formed on 1 January 2008 as a result of members of the Association of Cricket Umpires and Scorers having voted in favour of their organisation amalgamating with the ECB Officials Association.When the association was formed, an Interim Board was set up to get the new organisation rolling. Roger Knight was appointed as Chairman of the Interim Board, and has remained the ACO chairman since.
Membership
The association has the following membership categories, with respective subscription rates, as of March 2015:- Full member: £30 direct debit / £32 cheque
- Associate member: £15 / £17
- Young official or "junior member" : £15 / £17
- EC member: £30 / £32
- Overseas member: £15 / £17
Full, junior and EC members are those who are "active" in officiating in cricket – the association provides appropriate insurance cover as standard to these members. Members officiate across the cricket spectrum from village cricket to Test cricket, including women's cricket.
Full and junior members must be certified by the Disclosure and Barring Service if active in England and Wales.
County Associations
For each ECB County Board there is an attached county ACO association. Members of the ACO residing in England and Wales are also a member of one of these county associations, typically the one where they live or are active in.Counties are then grouped into four regions, which are used largely as a forum for the county associations and to represent them on the national ACO Board.
Wales has a single ECB cricket board and therefore a single ACO association, which is also the regional body.
Education programme
A new structure of cricket umpiring and scoring qualifications has now been put into place and the ACO provides training and examinations for these. Separate pathways exist for umpires and scorers. Entrants to the pathways do not have to be ACO members, but to progress beyond Level 1 membership is a requirement.Old umpiring qualifications issued by the ACU&S will be recognised as follows by the ACO:
- GL6 – Level 1
- GL5 – Level 2
Level | Umpire Courses Available | Scorer Courses Available |
Introduction | Introductory Course | Introductory Course |
Level 1 | Introduction to Practical Umpiring | How to record a cricket match |
Level 1 | Introduction to Practical Umpiring | Scoring Correspondence Course |
Level 1A | Understanding the Game | Understanding the Game |
Level 2 | Developing the experienced Umpire | Developing the experienced Scorer |
Level 3 | Introduction to semi-professional Cricket | Advanced Scorer |
A new education structure for both umpires and scorers is currently being phased in.
Board
The association's Board as of 2014 consists of:- Chairman: Roger Knight
- Special Executive Officer: Nick Cousins
- one representative from each of the five regions –
- *Midlands: Peter Mitchell
- *London & East: Sid Poole
- *South & West: Les Clemenson
- *North: Philip Radcliffe
- *Wales: Steve Davies
- a representative from ICC Europe: Nick Pink
- Laws & Universities manager at the MCC: Fraser Stewart
- the managing director of ECB Cricket Partnerships: Mike Gatting
- ECB umpires' manager: Chris Kelly
- first-class umpires representative: Neil Bainton
- the chairman of ACCS: Andrew Hignell
- an independent member: Janie Frampton
- Education
- Member Services
- Scorers
- Performance & Development
- Appointments & Grading
- Finance & Project Officer: Ben Francis
- Executive Administrator: Saira Baker
Official merchandise