1997 English cricket season


The 1997 cricket season was the 98th in which the County Championship has been an official competition. The season centred on the six-Test [Australian cricket team in English cricket team|England in 1997|Ashes series] against Australia. England won the first, at Edgbaston, by the decisive margin of nine wickets, and the rain-affected second Test at Lord's was drawn, but any English optimism was short-lived. Australia won the next three games by huge margins to secure the series and retain The Ashes, and England's three-day victory in the final game at The Oval was little more than a consolation prize. It was the 68th test series between the two teams with Australia finally winning 3-2 The three-match ODI series which preceded the Tests produced a statistical curiosity, with England winning each match by an identical margin, six wickets.
The Britannic Assurance County Championship went to Glamorgan for the first time since 1969, by a margin of just four points from Kent. The combination of captain Matthew Maynard and Steve James' batting along with Waqar Younis' and Steve Watkin's bowling propelled them to the title, although the matter was not settled until the final match of the season, when Glamorgan's maximum-points thrashing of Somerset at Taunton ensured that Kent's own victory over Surrey was irrelevant.
In one-day cricket, Warwickshire won the AXA Life League by two points from Kent, but were themselves thrashed by nine wickets by Essex in the final of the NatWest Trophy. The honours in the Benson & Hedges Cup went to Surrey, who beat Kent by eight wickets in the final.
Ali Brown's 203 for Surrey in the AXA Life League against Hampshire in July remains the only double century ever scored in a 40-over List A match.

Honours

Statistical highlights

First-class

List A

Ashes tour

Cumulative record - Test wins1876-1997
England92
Australia114
Drawn85

Benson & Hedges Cup

Averages

First-class

Batting

''Qualification: eight innings''

Bowling

''Qualification: ten wickets''

List A

Batting

''Qualification: eight innings''

Bowling

''Qualification: ten wickets''

External sources

Annual reviews