Rhodesia cricket team
The Rhodesia cricket team played first-class cricket and represented originally the British colony of Southern Rhodesia and later the unilaterally independent state of Rhodesia which became Zimbabwe. In 1980 the Rhodesia cricket team was renamed as the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia cricket team, and in 1981 it adopted its current name of the Zimbabwe national cricket team.
Honours
- Currie Cup –
- Gillette/Nissan Cup – 1977–78
Club history
Rhodesia was visited by a New Zealand team at the start of their tour of South Africa in October 1961. They played two three day first-class games against Rhodesia, the first in Bulawayo and the second in Sailsbury. Both matches ended in draws.
A total of 242 cricketers represented Rhodesia with noted Rhodesian players including Denis Tomlinson, Chris Duckworth, Tony Pithey, David Pithey, Jackie du Preez, Joe Partridge, Godfrey Lawrence and Colin Bland. These were the only Rhodesian born cricketers to represent South Africa, together with Shropshire-born Percy Mansell and the South Africans Paul Winslow, Mike Procter, Peter Carlstein and Egyptian-born John Traicos but the team never won the Currie Cup. The team played in 1979–80 as "Zimbabwe-Rhodesia" and left the competition for good at the close of that season, after Zimbabwe officially became independent.
Rhodesian players were eligible to represent South Africa in Test cricket until the country became Zimbabwe.
Venues
Rhodesian venues included:- Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo :
- Salisbury Sports Club : Mashonaland venue since 1954
- Raylton Club, Bulawayo
- Old Hararians A Field, Salisbury
- Bulawayo Athletic Club : a Matabeleland venue since 1994
- Police A Ground, Salisbury
- Police B Ground, Salisbury