Authors Cricket Club
The Authors Cricket Club is a wandering amateur English cricket club founded in 1892 and revived most recently in 2012. A number of prominent British writers have been featured as players on the club team, the Authors XI.
Original team (1891–1912)
The original Authors Cricket Club was an offshoot of the Authors' Club, which had been founded in 1891 as a place for British authors to gather and talk. Sherlock Holmes author Arthur Conan Doyle, an excellent cricketer who would go on to play ten first-class matches for the Marylebone Cricket Club in 1903, was a frequent bowler for the team. The bat that Doyle used when he made 101 in a game of Authors vs. the Press in 1896 is still on display at the MCC Museum at Lord's Cricket Ground.Doyle was joined by other writers including Winnie the Pooh creator A. A. Milne, reputed to be the best fielder on the team, and Jeeves author P. G. Wodehouse, who was regarded as a decent player. Peter Pan author J. M. Barrie, however, was not, despite his great enthusiasm for the game. In 1887, Barrie had set up his own team, the Allahakbarries, for others with similarly limited playing abilities. The Authors and the Allahakbarries existed side-by-side for a number of years, with Milne and Wodehouse joining Barrie in playing for both teams.
Some of the other writers who played for the team were E. W. Hornung, E. V. Lucas, John Snaith, H. V. Hesketh-Prichard, Albert Kinross, Shan Bullock, George Cecil Ives, and A. E. W. Mason. Other players included Gordon Guggisberg, Hugh de Sélincourt, E. Temple Thurston, and Cecil Headlam.
The original Authors XI played their last game in 1912. The team failed to reassemble after World War I ended in 1918, both due to the advancing ages of the players and because many of them found that their appetite for games had been diminished by the war.
20th-century revivals
The Authors Cricket Club has been revived at least three times since the original team disbanded. The first revival lasted from the 1940s into the '50s, and there was also a team for a brief period in the 1980s.Poet Edmund Blunden, a fanatical cricketer who celebrated his love of the sport in 1944's Cricket Country, captained the first revival for a time in the 1940s. He was joined on the team by novelist Alec Waugh and Test cricket legends Len Hutton, Douglas Jardine and Denis Compton.
2012–present team
In 2012, 100 years after the original team last played, literary agent Charlie Campbell and novelist Nicholas Hogg announced they were starting the Authors XI anew.The team adopted as its motto the phrase "Praeter ingenium nihil". This is a reference to a remark Australian cricketer Kim Hughes made dismissing England's Mike Brearley when they captained opposing Ashes teams in 1981: "He had nothing going for him except that he was intelligent."
Players
Among those who joined Campbell and Hogg on the team were novelists Sebastian Faulks, Richard Beard, Mirza Waheed, and Alex Preston, historical non-fiction writers Tom Holland, James Holland, and Peter Frankopan, memoirist William Fiennes, young adult author Anthony McGowan, journalists Jonathan Wilson, Amol Rajan, Chris Hemmings and Jon Hotten, poet Tim Beard, biographer Ben Falk and editor Matt Thacker.Comedian Andy Zaltzman and actor Dan Stevens, best known for his role on the television series Downton Abbey, both played on the team during the 2012–2013 season, as did Ed Smith. Novelist Kamila Shamsie, the only woman on the team, played during an Authors XI game against the Shepperton Ladies team in the same season.
Charlie Campbell is team captain and Nicholas Hogg is vice-captain. Both are regular bowlers for the team, along with Tom Holland, while Richard Beard and Matt Thacker often open the batting. William Fiennes frequently plays in the position of wicket-keeper.
Fixtures and foreign tours
The Authors XI play against village cricket clubs in England, as well as against clubs such as the Lords and Commons, the Actors XI, the Royal Household and the Eton College team.In 2013, they defeated the national team of Japan, which was then ranked in the top 40 in the world, in London. In September 2019, they won a celebrity match against a Lord's Taverners team that included Andrew Caddick, Matthew Hoggard and Gladstone Small, all former Test and One-Day International players for England. Caddick was clean bowled by Tom Holland.
In addition to games in England, the Authors XI have traveled to several foreign countries to play cricket. In 2013 and 2015, they went to India, where they played against the Rajasthan Royals as part of the 2013 Jaipur Literature Festival. The team captains rode onto the cricket pitch atop camels and the next day, the Authors made the front page of the world's largest newspaper, The Times of India.
They toured Sri Lanka in 2014 and again in 2016. They donated pitches and kit bags to local schools while there, as well as sponsoring a promising young player. In 2015, they played against the Vatican team in Rome and presented Pope Francis with his own Authors XI cricket cap, and in 2017, they traveled to Reykjavik and played against Iceland's national team in a three-game match, losing 2–1.
In 2018 and 2019, they visited the island of Corfu, Greece to take part in the first and second Corfu Literary Festivals, where they participated in literary panel discussions and writing workshops and played cricket against local teams.
Book
Some of the team members collectively wrote a book about their first season playing together, The Authors XI: A Season of English Cricket from Hackney to Hambledon. Sebastian Faulks wrote the foreword, in which he noted that "Amateur cricketers tend to be vain, anecdotal, passionate, knowledgeable, neurotic and given to fantasy. So do writers. The game is made for the profession."Eighteen of the Authors XI's 2012-13 players contributed chapters about a particular aspect of the game. Among those with chapters: actor Dan Stevens wrote a chapter about filming a cricket game on that television series, Tom Holland wrote in "Youth and Age" about learning to love the game as a boy after at first finding it both tedious and humiliating, and William Fiennes penned a piece on "Cricket and Memory" that ended with him drifting away in a haze as he was stretchered off the field after snapping his collarbone while diving to make a catch. In Anthony McGowan's chapter, titled "Cricket and Class", he noted that he, Nicholas Hogg and Jon Hotten were the only players on the 2012–13 team to have attended state schools: "The Authors CC is crammed to the gills with the quite ludicrously posh… the team is packed with the full range of characters from a Fifties public school story – the hearty, sporty type; the etiolated intellectual; the endearingly modest earl; even an exiled Ruritanian princeling"
Reviewing the book for The Guardian, Peter Wilby called it "a distinguished addition to the game's extensive and eclectic literature". Sir Michael Parkinson wrote a blurb for the book which read "I once said I never met a cricketer I didn't like and this book goes some way to explaining why. A wonderful celebration of the best of games." Journalist Simon Barnes wrote "Most cricket writers are better at cricket than at writing. Reversing this principle is a revelation."
Sponsorship and charities
auction house sponsored the Authors XI starting with the 2012-13 season. In 2019, Rathbones investment firm announced that they would be sponsoring the team in connection with their annual Folio Prize literary award.The team has raised "tens of thousands of pounds" for charities including Chance to Shine, which encourages competitive cricket in state schools and First Story, an organization co-founded by team member William Fiennes which fosters literacy through creative writing in low-income schools. They also raised money for the conservation group Alde and Ore Estuary Trust in 2014.