After days of rain, spectators were granted a day of sunshine for the 50-over Roses cricket match in Harrogate today.
Any game between Yorkshire and Lancashire is likely to be hard-fought, but this one is a warm-up for the forthcoming Metro Bank One-Day Cup 50-over competition.
The priority for both county second teams at Harrogate Cricket Club‘s St George’s Road ground is practice.

Lancashire coach Karl Krikken said the outcome of the match didn’t matter.
Lancashire second team coach Karl Krikken told the Stray Ferret:
“It doesn’t matter about the outcome today – this is just about getting the lads some overs.
“Winning’s always nice, but it’s not the most important thing today.”
Lancashire will face Essex at Sedbergh when the One-Day Cup starts next week.

Assistant coach James Lowe was confident of Yorkshire’s mix of youth and experience.
In the home camp, assistant coach James Lowe said:
“We’ve got some good players – Dom Bess, Harry Duke, Will Luxton and Ben Mike – as well as a couple of young players from the academy, so we’ve got a nice mix of youth and experience.
“It’d be nice to get a win, especially against Lancashire, but whatever happens, it’s sure to be a good game.”
Yorkshire will play Cheshire in the 50-over competition on Sunday.

Kit Turnbull (left) had brought along his children (l to r): Kit, Caspar, Elsa and Ava.
As the players practised ahead of the 11am start, Harrogate resident Kit Turnbull was settling in on the stands with his children: Caspar, 12; Elsa, 14; and Ava, 16.
He said:
“I’m here mostly as an accompanying adult for Caspar, who plays cricket at Bilton. For the girls it’s just something different to do on a nice day – and it’s free.
“For Caspar, this acts as kind of a benchmark. You can watch the cricket on TV as much as you want, but it’s different in person. Just to see the speed they bowl the ball at, you get a real appreciation of it when it’s right there in front of you.
“My only concern was the weather, but it’s looking OK. We’ve got our packed lunch with us, so we’ll be here all day.”
Read more:
- How Pateley Bridge man won two league titles with Leeds United
- Knaresborough Town pair championing women’s football after remarkable season
- Harrogate cricket club captain aiming for success after relegation survival
Harrogate cricket club captain aiming for success after relegation survival
From surviving relegation to building a young squad, Will Bates has seen a lot in his short time as Harrogate Cricket Club captain.
The 32-year-old captained two sides prior to joining the St George’s Road club.
However, his time at Harrogate has proved pivotal in the two years since taking up the position.
As he sits in the beaming sunshine next to the home pitch, Will reflects on a whirlwind period as Harrogate’s first XI captain.
Formative years in Letchworth
Growing up in Hertfordshire, Will played an array of sports including football, cricket and tennis.
But it was the bat and ball which stuck in the end.
He started playing for Harpenden Cricket Club, before going onto the adults game.
“I played all sports really. Football, cricket and tennis were my main sports.
“But cricket was the one I stuck with the most and enjoyed the most.”
Will started out as both a batsmen and off-spin bowler. However, nowadays, he says he’s more of an occasional bowler and only bowls “if required”.
He describes himself as a “classical batsman”, a contrast to some of his younger teammates who prefer the aggressive technique exemplified by Brendan McCullum’s England side.
Much of his adult career was spent at Letchworth Garden City Cricket Club.
Will describes the seven years at Letchworth as some of his formative years as a cricketer.
“As a club, it was quite formative in terms of my ethos on cricket.
“A few weeks ago they put out a first team and they had an overseas player and they had 10 other players between the ages of 18 and 40. Every single one of them had only ever played for one cricket club and come through the youth system. None of them were getting paid.
“I loved my time playing cricket at Letchworth and that’s the kind of cricket club I want to be a part of up here.”
Captaining Harrogate
Much of the ethos that Will saw at Letchworth has carried over into his time in North Yorkshire.
He moved to Harrogate five years ago to take up a job as a solicitor in the disputes department at LCF Law.
He took on the captaincy two years ago and grasped the opportunity.
“I thought there was a lot that we could do to improve things and we had a lot of young players. I was quite excited.”

Harrogate Cricket Club, pictured after their Addison Cup win in 2021.
Despite his excitement, Will was thrust straight into a season where Harrogate found themselves in a relegation battle.
The club stayed up on the last day after beating York. Will scored 90 in a captain’s innings to help see Harrogate over the line.
While the stress of avoiding relegation would be enough for some players to put behind them, Will sees it as one of his best games.
“We needed to win to stay up and York are traditionally our big rivals.
“I got 90 not out in that game when we were chasing about 230. In terms of satisfaction and pressure situation, that would be the one that I pick out.”

Will Bates with his man of the match award after the Addison Cup in 2021.
Among the club’s other achievements in his time include winning the Addison Cup in 2021.
Harrogate eased to victory over Wetherby Carr Manor after scoring 131 for 7 and bowling the opposition out for 99.
Will won man of the match after scoring 59 in his innings.
Building a culture
Since surviving relegation, Will has sought to help the club in its ambition to improve.
One of the aspects of that is bringing young players through and giving them opportunities in the first team.
Will points to wicketkeeper Isaac Light as an example of one of the young players that he and the club are trying to bring through.
He also wants to build a culture at Harrogate which is “close nit” and where players feel invested in the side.
Read more:
- How Pateley Bridge man won two league titles with Leeds United
- Knaresborough Town pair championing women’s football after remarkable season
For Will, this is an example of the setup he says he wants to be a part of – as he had at Letchworth.
The decision the club made over paying players exemplifies that, he says.
“Some teams we play against probably pay most players.
“But we made a conscious decision where we only pay an overseas player. Nearly every team in the division has an overseas player. Then we have one club professional who is Matt Pillans, who used to play at Yorkshire.
“The justification for both those expenses is the benefit the whole club gets from training with them and playing with them.
“They’re not just paid to play cricket and for us to win. We made a conscious decision that we didn’t want a first team where everyone is a paid cricketer.
“We are now seeing the benefit of that policy.”
While Will wants to grow Harrogate beyond what it is, does he have any ambitions?
“To get Harrogate’s first team to reach its potential.
“Although we made progress last year, we did slightly underachieve. It’s hard to say what that is because at the end of the season you know if you have won the right number of games or not.
“But I’d certainly see at as being a top four finish in the league, it could even be better than that with the team that we have got at the moment.”
For Will, he feels he has found his place in Harrogate.
As the club sits third in the league and prepares for another showdown with York this weekend, the team appears to be on an upward trajectory.
Does Will think he’ll still be in Harrogate at the end of his career?
“I can’t see myself playing for anyone else. I probably do feel quite at home here.”
This is the third article in a series of Sporting Spotlight interviews. If you have any local sporting heroes who you think should be featured, contact calvin@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Indoor cricket school plans revealed for HarrogateHarrogate Cricket Club has revealed plans to open an indoor cricket school.
The school would be built on the concrete terraced area at the club’s St George’s Road ground and cost up to £3.5 million.
Architects have drawn up plans for the project, which is likely to take five to seven years to come to fruition.
The school, which would include four lanes of nets as well as other factilities, is in addition to the club’s plans to raise £75,000 on new outdoor nets.
Co-chair Steve Clark said there was a shortage of sports hall space in Harrogate, especially in winter.
He added the cricket school would ensure junior and senior players had a large enough facility for high quality training sessions all year round.

A sub-committee will be set-up to oversee the cricket school project, which will require extensive fundraising, including applications to trusts and foundations for grants.
Mr Clark added:
“The facility will provides a practice facility which can be used when the weather is damp as well as when the sun is shining.
“The nets will be made to a professional standard ensuring the correct bounce and carry for the ball; replicating playing on real grass.”
Outdoor nets
The Stray Ferret revealed in March the club had launched a £75,000 crowdfunding campaign to replace the ageing outdoor nets with new ones.
Fundraising has gone well and the club hopes the outdoor nets will be installed at the end of the cricket season, ready for use by next spring.
Local schools will be able to make arrangements to use them.
Read more:
- ‘Netfix’ fundraiser for village cricket club near Harrogate
- Harrogate’s Archie Gray named in England under-17s Euro squad
Once the outdoor nets are finished, attention will turn fully on the cricket school project.
Harrogate Cricket Club hosted 98 first class matches between 1882 and 2000 and the two current major projects highlight the club’s ambitions to upgrade the club.

The ground hosted first class cricket for over 100 years.
Solicitor struck off for failing to protect vulnerable Harrogate homeowner
A solicitor has been struck off for a year after failing to protect a vulnerable client from a conman who bought his Harrogate home.
Anthony Gale was employed by Ison Harrison solicitors when he acted for both the buyer and the seller of a property on St George’s Road.
The solicitor had a long-standing professional relationship with the buyer, Sukhdev Singh, who acquired the property by telling the seller he had paid off the outstanding mortgage of just under £120,000. However, there was no evidence of any mortgage having existed or any money having been paid for the home, the tribunal heard.
Singh acquired the home through a company he had set up, before renting it back to the vulnerable man, who had no tenancy agreement to protect him. Singh was jailed earlier this year for four counts of fraud, all relating to the same property and its former owner.
A hearing of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal last month found the seller, known as Client A, was autistic and had an estimated mental age of 12 years and four months. Mr Gale said he did not realise this when he was dealing with the sale.
A report from the tribunal, published last week, said:
“The admitted misconduct represented a grave departure [from] the ‘complete integrity, probity and trustworthiness’ expected of a solicitor.
“The harm Mr Gale caused to the solicitors’ profession was extensive. The harm caused both to those directly involved and to the profession was eminently foreseeable.”
The three members of the tribunal panel said Mr Gale’s misconduct was “deliberate, calculated and repeated”, and led to a vulnerable client being taken advantage of in the transaction, which took place in 2016.
Mr Gale also faced an allegation that, in 2020 when he was employed by Lofthouse & Co, he acted without authorisation in another property sale and signed a contract without instruction.
Read more:
- Accountant jailed for conning Harrogate man out of his home
- Former Harrogate nurse struck off over 19 misconduct charges
The hearing last month heard that he had been before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal before, in 2018, relating to allegations about his conduct on five other conveyancing matters, between 2005 and 2014. While he denied all five charges, the tribunal found the majority of them proved and he was ordered to pay a fine of £10,000 and costs of £28,291.
He also had sanctions imposed on his practice, including preventing him from being the sole practitioner or owner of a law firm.
The report from last month’s hearing into the latest allegations said:
“Mr Gale’s repeated misconduct demonstrated his complete lack of insight into and understanding of his failings.
“The tribunal held serious concerns as to the risk of repetition in the future given Mr Gale’s demonstrable propensity to ignore red flags in conveyancing transactions, and his inherent inability to identify and heed warning signs of fraud or exploitation.”
‘Blind spot’
The tribunal heard that while the Solicitors Regulation Authority, which brought the application to have him struck off, had been investigating Mr Gale, he had denied all the allegations against him.
However, he admitted them shortly before the hearing, in August this year. The tribunal report said:
“It was plain to the tribunal that Mr Gale had a complete blind spot with regard to the obligations to ‘know your client’, the risks of fraud in conveyancing transactions, management of conflicts of interest, and the obligations attendant upon accepting instructions from vulnerable clients.
“The previous sanction imposed in 2018 had not rectified Mr Gale’s ineptitude in those respects, and had not protected either the public or the reputation of the profession from repeated harm.”
Mr Gale was ordered to pay costs of £12,000 and was suspended from practising for a year.
After that date, he will face restrictions on his work including being barred from running his own business, being a partner in a business, or taking on a role where he is responsible for legal practice or finance and administration.
He is also prevented from holding clients’ money and being a signatory on a client account.
In order to work as a solicitor, he will have to seek approval from the SRA, and will have to complete further training in four areas of practice, including working with vulnerable clients and understanding the risks of fraud.