Cheam Cricket Club Ground


Cheam Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Cheam, London. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1940, when Cheam played London Counties. Cheam CC was one of the founding members of the Surrey Championship and the club was established in 1864.
More recently, the ground has held Surrey Second XI matches in the Second XI Championship and the Second XI Trophy.
In 1968, the ground held a game for John Edrich against the International Cavaliers. The game attracted 8,000 people and was the first cricket match to be televised in colour by the BBC.
The Surrey Cricket Board played 2 List-A matches at the ground, the first of which came against Norfolk in the 1999 NatWest Trophy. Their second List-A match at the ground came in the 2001 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy against Huntingdonshire.
Today Cheam Cricket Club is an illustrious club in Surrey having produced several first class and international players such as Mark Butcher, Alisdair Brown, Michael Burgess and Michael Carberry. For many years Cheam CC played in the Premier or Div 1 of the Surrey Championship. Internal issues led to a now famous walk out of the 1st XI in the early 2000s with many players migrating to neighbouring clubs in Sutton and Ashtead. The club suffered hugely and had several relegations however the club picked itself up off the canvas and recorded 4 promotions in 2019 and now plays in Div 3 of the Surrey Championship and has a thriving youth section. The story of Cheam CC continues to unfold.