Derbyshire set foot outside the East Midlands for their fifth game of the campaign, travelling to Wales to face Glamorgan at Sophia Gardens.
Heritage Officer David Griffin previews the match.
This will be the 141st scheduled first-class game between the two sides who first met at Cardiff in 1921, a match Derbyshire won by two wickets.
Glamorgan batted first in that match and made 168 before dismissing Derbyshire for just 83. In their second innings the home side succumbed to the bowling of Bill Bestwick who, at the age of 46, took all ten wickets for 40 runs before lunch, the best innings bowling performance in Derbyshire’s history.
Derbyshire then made 193 for eight in their second innings with Bill Carter making an unbeaten 50 batting at number nine.
Derbyshire have won 49 games and Glamorgan 32 with 58 draws, one of which was a completely abandoned fixture at Chesterfield in 1956.
When the sides last met, at Derby last August, Derbyshire won by 10 wickets thanks to Zak Chappell’s six for 47 on the opening day and half-centuries from Harry Came, Anuj Dal and Wayne Madsen.
The most recent match in Cardiff was a draw in April 2024 when Alex Thomson recorded match figures of 12 for 201, the first Derbyshire spinner to take ten wickets in a match against Glamorgan since Edwin Smith in 1956.
Derbyshire’s highest innings total of 598 for five came at Swansea in a drawn game in 2019, while Glamorgan’s best was at Cardiff in 1951 when they amassed 587 for eight which was enough to secure an innings win.
Derbyshire have scored 52 hundreds against Glamorgan, four of them doubles, by Billy Godleman (227), Peter Kirsten (213 not out and 206 not out), and Luis Reece (201 not out).
Kirsten’s 213 not out at Derby in 1980 was a masterpiece. With the first innings scheduled to close after 100 overs – a regulation of its time – Kirsten was 105 not out at tea with 18 overs until the forced closure of the innings. Resuming after the break, Kirsten scored 108 from the remaining 18 overs in a majestic display of strokeplay which included 32 fours and five sixes.
Luis Reece has scored more centuries for Derbyshire against Glamorgan than any other player – five – with four of them coming in 2023. In the process he became the first player to score two centuries in a match twice for the county, making 131 and 201 not out at Derby, and 139 and 119 at Cardiff.
He also enjoyed a magnificent 360-run partnership with Harry Came in the second innings of the game at Derby, the second highest in the club’s history and a record for the first wicket.
To date, Reece has 1,098 first-class runs against Glamorgan, averaging 84.46, although Madsen tops the list of most runs against Glamorgan with 1,435.
Derbyshire’s bowlers have been frustrated by their opponents on more than one occasion, especially at Cardiff in 2022 and at Colwyn Bay in 2016.
Current Derbyshire player David Lloyd made a splendid 313 not out at Cardiff at the end of 2022 and Aneurin Donald – another new recruit in 2024 – scored what was then the fastest ever double hundred in the history of the game at Colwyn Bay in 2016. He made 237, reaching his double century off 123 balls and when he was finally dismissed, had struck a remarkable 26 fours and 15 sixes.
Luke Sutton and Brooke Guest are the only wicketkeepers to make first-class hundreds against Glamorgan, Guest making two in the game at Derby in 2022, the sole occurrence of a Derbyshire wicketkeeper scoring a century in each innings of a match.
There have been 99 instances of Derbyshire bowlers taking five wickets in an innings against Glamorgan, Cliff Gladwin topping the list having done it eight times, and unsurprisingly the best match figures belong to Bill Bestwick who ended the 1921 game with 14 for 111.
For Glamorgan, the best innings figures were produced by Frank Ryan who took eight for 41 at Cardiff in 1925, while Jim McConnon recorded the best match analysis of 14 for 153 at the old Cardiff ground in 1951.
Just one hat trick has been taken by a Derbyshire bowler against Glamorgan, slow left armer David Steele performing the feat at Derby in 1980, while three bowlers have taken three wickets in four balls, Bestwick at Cardiff in 1921, Garnet Lee at Swansea in 1927, and Kevin Dean at Derby in 2002.