2011 English cricket season

The 2011 English cricket season was the 112th in which the County Championship had been an official competition. It began on 2 April with a round of university matches, and continued until the final of the Clydesdale Bank 40 on 17 September. Three major domestic competitions were contested: the 2011 County Championship won by Lancashire, the 2011 Clydesdale Bank 40 won by Surrey and the 2011 Friends Life t20 won by Leicestershire.[1]

2011 (2011) English cricket season
County Championship
ChampionsLancashire
Runners-upWarwickshire
Most runsMarcus Trescothick (1,673)
Most wicketsDavid Masters (93)
Clydesdale Bank 40
ChampionsSurrey Lions
Runners-upSomerset
Most runsChris Nash (649)
Most wicketsShane Mott (21)
Friends Life t20
ChampionsLeicestershire Foxes
Runners-upSomerset
Most runsAndrew McDonald (584)
Most wicketsTim Phillips (26)
PCA Player of the Year
Marcus Trescothick
Wisden Cricketers of the Year
Tamim Iqbal
Eoin Morgan
Chris Read
Jonathan Trott
Not awarded
2010
2012

During this season, two Test teams toured England: Sri Lanka lost both the Test series (1–0) and the One Day International (ODI) series (3–2), but won the solitary Twenty20 International (T20I). India also toured, losing to England in four Tests. Five ODIs were played, England winning 3-0 with one tie and one no result. England also won the single T20I match.

Roll of honour

Test series
ODI series
Twenty20 International series
County Championship
Clydesdale Bank 40 (CB40)
Friends Life t20
Minor Counties Championship
MCCA Knockout Trophy
Second XI Championship
  • Winners: Warwickshire II
Second XI Trophy
  • Winners: Nottinghamshire II
Wisden Cricketers of the Year
PCA Player of the Year
PCA Most Valuable Player of the Year

County Championship

Divisions

Division OneDivision Two
Durham Derbyshire
Hampshire Essex
Lancashire Glamorgan
Nottinghamshire Gloucestershire
Somerset Kent
Sussex Leicestershire
Warwickshire Middlesex
Worcestershire Northamptonshire
Yorkshire Surrey
Icon
Team promoted from Division Two
Team relegated from Division One

Division One Standings

  • Pld = Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, D = Draws, T = Ties, A = Abandonments, Bat = Batting points, Bowl = Bowling points, Ded = Deducted points, Pts = Points.
TeamPldWLTDABatBowlDedPts
Lancashire (C)1610402037441.0246
Warwickshire169403046459.0235
Durham168404047450.0232
Somerset166703045390.0189
Sussex166604034400.0182
Nottinghamshire165605035430.0173
Worcestershire1641101031440.0142
Yorkshire (R)163607034372.0138
Hampshire (R)163607030368.0127

Division Two Standings

  • Pld = Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, D = Draws, T = Ties, A = Abandonments, Bat = Batting points, Bowl = Bowling points, Ded = Deducted points, Pts = Points.
TeamPldWLTDABatBowlDedPts
Middlesex (C)168206050440.0240
Surrey (P)168404043440.0227
Northamptonshire167207048450.0226
Gloucestershire166505041471.0198
Derbyshire165605042440.0181
Glamorgan165604044401.0178
Essex164408029442.0159
Kent165902030429.0149
Leicestershire1611104024360.088

Clydesdale Bank 40

Group stage

Knockout stage

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
4 September – Taunton
 
 
Durham Dynamos219 (39.5 overs)
 
17 September – Lord's
 
Somerset 165/3 (27 overs) 
 
Somerset 214 (39.2 overs) 
 
11 September – The Oval
 
Surrey Lions 189/5 (27.3 overs) 
 
Surrey Lions 228/7 (24 overs) 
 
 
Sussex Sharks157 (22 overs)
 

Friends Life t20

Group stage

Knockout stage

Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
         
N1 Nottinghamshire Outlaws 169/5
S4 Somerset 172/4
S4 Somerset (D/L; Super Over) 94/5
S1 Hampshire Royals 138/4
N4 Durham Dynamos 99
S1 Hampshire Royals 154/6
S4 Somerset 127/9
N2 Leicestershire Foxes 145/6
N2 Leicestershire Foxes 206/7
S3 Kent Spitfires 203/3
N2 Leicestershire Foxes (D/L; Super Over) 132/6
N3 Lancashire Lightning 79/6
N3 Lancashire Lightning 152/8
S2 Sussex Sharks 132/8

See also

References

  1. "Cricket in England in 2011". CricketArchive. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
  2. "Clydesdale Bank 40 2010 tables". CricketArchive. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  3. "Lumb guides Hampshire to opening win". CricInfo. 1 June 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
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