
Holy Cross Cricket Club scores 75 not out
Holy Cross Academicals Cricket Club is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year.
This 'small, friendly cricket club' based in north Edinburgh puts out two Saturday elevens in the East League in Divisions 4 and 7 and plays midweek cup ties and friendlies. After a rocky few years, the club has revived in recent seasons, drawing in a new generation of 'Crossers'. To celebrate its 75th 'birthday', an anniversary match will be played at their Arboretum Road ground. A Club XI will take on a 'Legends and Friends' XI on Sunday 29 June.
The club is the last surviving remnant of Holy Cross Academy which, founded in 1907, closed its doors in 1969. Holy Cross Academicals began life as the former pupil's club for the Catholic secondary school, but soon became a club open to all. They use what were Holy Cross' playing fields at Arboretum Road, one of a number of cricket grounds along Ferry Road. Since 1950, Holy Cross Academicals have forged a reputation for fair play, an eclectic membership, as well as for 'playing in conditions that the more fastidious would spurn'.
Action at Arboretum in 2011. photo by Mark Brown
Renowned Crosser
Probably the most famous 'Crosser' is the prominent cultural progenitor and artist Richard Demarco CBE. Demarco is, in cricketing parlance, now 94 not out (turning 95 on 9 July). An underappreciated aspect of Demarco is that, alongside his lifelong affinity for art, he has also had an interest in sport. He was, as a youth, a fanatical cricketer, playing over 40 matches in 1949 – the year after he left school. Even when at Edinburgh College of Art, he would spend hours on the boundary, noting down scores from matches.
His vast archive contains a number of exercise books full of cricket scores, cuttings and statistics. After playing for the school team and also turning out for the Academicals, Demarco set up a team St. John's, in Portobello. St. John's FP went on to play several fixtures against Holy Cross. One fixture, from July 1950, saw Demarco open the batting (scoring 27 not out) and taking three wickets.
The 1949 Holy Cross Academy school team, featuring Richard Demarco.
Demarco admits that cricket was perhaps an unusual sport for a 'Romano-Scot' to embrace, so redolent is it, for many, of England and empire. For Demarco, cricket was a way for him to connect to 'the official world of Scotland and Britain', to feel included. This is all connected to Demarco's sense of being an outsider, due to his Italian heritage and further emphasised by his Roman Catholic schooling. Being treated as an outsider has shaped him. The cricket club has a similar character, with a number of 'misfits' playing for them over the decades.
Digging in the archives
Demarco is delighted that the cricket club persists to this day. In a review of Nora Carlin's history of the school (Holy Cross Academy, Edinburgh: The Life and Times of a Catholic School, 1907-1969), Demarco stated that the cricket club 'deserves to have a history all to itself'. That is now happening. Long-time club secretary, Jonathan Bates, is putting out choice selections from the club's archives on Holy Cross's X/ Twitter feed. Bates is making use of detailed club records maintained by founding member Hugh Kilpatrick (1933-2020), Paul Bailey, Scott Russell and others.
Holy Cross Academicals, 1955
The club archive includes a handwritten diary of the club's first season by George Balfour, later 1st XI captain. Balfour opened the batting (with his brother Robin) when Holy Cross played their first match at Colinton Mains on May 27th 1950, losing a low-scoring match. Balfour later participated in a match in 1975 to celebrate the club's 25th anniversary, There the opposition was led by Heriots and Scotland wicketkeeper Hamish More. More's brother George played for Holy Cross between 1983 to 1987, after a long, distinguished career at Heriot's, detailed in a recent book by Charlie Clark.
George Balfour's report on Holy Cross's 1st ever match
Rise, fall and rise
In its early years, Holy Cross struggled to break into the 'closed shop' of the East of Scotland League, largely playing friendly matches and in cup competitions. The club began playing regular league matches in the 1970s, winning the East League 3rd Division in 1976 and the 2nd Division in 1979. The bowling feats of Roddy Regan were an important factor in these successes.
Holy Cross 1st and 2nd XIs in 1977, with Hugh Kilpatrick in the centre. (photo courtesy of John McPartlin).
During the 1980s, Holy Cross regularly played in the top East League division, taking on the cream of Edinburgh cricket. In this era, the Holy Cross First XI generally 'yo-yoed' between Division 1 and 2, lacking the depth of quality to consistently challenge the top sides such as Grange, Heriots etc. Highlights of this era included swashbuckling innings by Javed Khan, a cousin of Imran Khan, and Fraser Buchanan. In the 1980s, the club had four Saturday XIs, as well as a full set of Sunday and midweek fixtures. The decline in Sunday cricket is part of a wider trend.
A key player in the early 1990s was Mark Oldham (1st XI captain 1993-1994), who set the club record 1st XI league score of 132, playing against a St. Modans' side including Indian international Robin Singh. Opening the bowling for the 1st XI at that time was Robin Worsnop, founder of the tour company Rabbies. These days, Worsnop captains the 2nd XI.
Agony and ecstasy
After league reorganisation (including the formation of the Scottish National League) in 1996, the 1st XI under the captaincy of Mark Robertson competed near the top of East League Division 1. There they battled against the likes of Glenrothes and St. Modans, and were narrowly beaten to the league title by Cupar in 1997. An infamous match in the club's history was their ingredibly low scoring encounter with St. Modans in May 1996. On a tricky pitch with a very thick outfield at Bluebellwood Park (near Bannockburn), Holy Cross dismissed their opponents for a mere 37 runs. Agonisingly, Holy Cross fell 1 run short in their chase. The memory of that match still lingers for those involved in it!
The frustration of cricket (photo by Mark Brown)
A further reorganisation saw the club in East League Division 2, which they won in the club's 50th anniversary of 2000. The final match saw Robin Worsnop take 8 wickets against Freuchie with high class swing bowling. The 50th Anniversary was celebrated with a memorable tour of Hampshire, Dorset and Somerset, led by Brian Palmer and John Brown, President of the club till his early death in 2011. The tour included a match versus Hambledon at Broadhalfpenny Down, a beautiful ground in Hampshire which hosted the inaugural First Class cricket match in 1752. Hambledon officials suggested that Holy Cross were the first Scottish team to play at their ground!
Mixed fortunes
Preceded by the loss of several key players (including batsman and club secretary James Bradley), the 1st XI suffered a disastrous 2001 season, finishing at the foot of East League Division 1. A period of recovery followed the arrival of Australian bowling allrounder Shannon Bonfield, and opening batsman Keith Fraser. Under Fraser's captaincy, the 1st XI had a run of good seasons. Highlights of this era included victory in 2003 in Cricket Scotland's Small Clubs' Cup. They defeated Dollar by 9 wickets in the final, with Bonfield the man of the match.
The Edinburgh Active Trophy Winners 2015 (captained by Simon McOscar), at Myreside (photo by Mark Brown).
The club went through a drastic dip in fortunes between 2016-2020, losing most of its 1st XI squad (including 1st team captain Simon McOscar) in the space of two seasons and plunging down the leagues. They struggled for numbers and were forced to drop their 3rd XI. In the last few seasons, the club has stabilised, drawing in a new generation of players, including the likes of Ben Reiss. The 1st XI have made a strong start to their 2025 league campaign in Division 4 of the East League, topping the table in June. Promotion would be a good way to mark the 75th anniversary.
Action at Arbo (Photo by Mark Brown)
Ground improvements
The club's ground at Arboretum Road improved during the 1970's when it was tended by groundsman Eddie Watson, who lived in the pavilion. In the 1990s, the cricket square was turned round and moved in the early 1990s. This was a response to too many balls struck into the retirement home on Arboretum Road! It took years of hard effort by the club, led by Colin Smith (then head groundsman at Edinburgh University's Peffermill) and Colin McGill to get the cricket square back up to standard.
Since 2013, the ground has been managed by Stewart's Melville. The school who use the ground, with Holy Cross Academicals (and Inverleith Rugby Club) holding protected rights to play matches there. The pavilion, badly damaged by fire in 2003, was restored in 2014. Arboretum has, once again, become a good quality cricket facility.
The restored pavilion at Arboretum (photo by Mark Brown)
In 2020, the club lost two significant figures. In the January, the club lost founder member and Honorary President Hugh Kilpatrick. Kilpatrick was dedicated to Holy Cross Academicals and to East League cricket (serving as league president). After a very successful playing career (including a period as first team captain) he continued to be involved with the club right up till his final months. For many seasons, Kilpatrick and former 1st team wicketkeeper Alan Reid.
The club also lost Colin McGill who contributed massively to the club from the mid 1970s. As Jonathan Bates put it, he was 'a Crosser for over forty years, a swing bowler of guile, captain of the 2nds and 3rds, long-time match secretary, club statistician, umpire, groundsman, raconteur. A fierce competitor but a sporting man.' In August 2021 a well attended memorial match for McGill was played. Movingly, at the end of the game his ashes were spread across the cricket square, reflecting his many hours preparing wickets there. In 2021, the club lost its President, Mahmood Din, who had recruited a substantial number of players for the club.
Colin McGill (photo by Mark Brown)
Club spirit
Though geographically close to the former pupils' clubs of the big private schools (Fettes, Heriots, Stewart's Melville), Holy Cross has had a different identity. When Holy Cross Academy closed in 1969, it lost one source of players. The club had a junior section in the 1980s but no longer has such a 'feeder'. For some time, it was a more 'open' club than others in the city, drawing to it a range of newcomers to Edinburgh, including several who worked in further and higher education. Players recruited from Edinburgh University have historically added depth to the playing resources. In recent decades, the club has recruited well from the wealth management company Baillie Gifford.
Those who arrive at Arboretum come from a range of backgrounds and geographic locations, creating an eclectic mix. The eccentric and friendly spirit of the club has attracted and retained players over the decades. The club will hope that the 75th anniversary celebrations will help propel the club towards future success and its next target – a century.
Sunset at Arboretum (photo by Mark Brown).
Like this:
Like
Related
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Bob MacIntyre ends Travelers in stunning style to make more key Ryder Cup moves as he sets immediate goal
Scottish star delivers final flourish at TPC River Highlands to end seven-week US run in style Buoyant Bob MacIntyre delivered a searing sign-off from his seven-week sequence in the States as he finished with a fabulous flourish at the Travelers Championship. The Scottish star completed his latest impressive spell on the PGA Tour with a brilliant late-Sunday burst to boost his finale at TPC River Highlands. MacIntyre played his last four holes of his tournament in four-under par to card a Sunday 66 and surge up the final standings in Connecticut with his best round of the week. Understandably, after such an epic performance, he was unable to recreate the scintillating magic of Oakmont the previous week and get into title contention as he had done when coming within a whisker of winning the US Open before being dramatically pipped at the death by winner JJ Spaun. But the Oban star still delivered mostly-strong work before the thrilling finale which has secured another positive step forward in the race for the FedEx Cup play-offs and, more crucially, the The Ryder Cup team. MacIntyre's Oakmont display rocketed him to fourth place in the European List and he cemented that excellent effort by banking more valuable points in Cromwell. Staring the week, the Tartan ace was one place behind Shane Lowry and one ahead of Sepp Straka in the List heading into the tournament and finished well ahead of both the Irishman and the Austrian in the closing positions at the Travelers to make more key ground. The 28-year-old went into the 28th and final competitive round of his gruelling seven-successive week spell on the two-under par mark and exchanged shots with the course to stay on that number through 14 holes of his final effort before the flying late flurry. MacIntyre first jumped forward with a chip-in eagle three on his 15th, the par-five sixth on the course as he started from 10th tee due to weather delays and restructured tee-times, to lift his position and backed it up immediately with a long-birdie putt at the next to stretch to five-under par. Following a par on his penultimate hole, MacIntyre concluded with another birdie at his last hole to cap the week and the lengthy spell of events in perfect fashion. The Scot's work has seen him take in the Truist Championship, PGA Championship, Charles Schwab Challenge, Memorial, RBC Canadian Open and US Open before this Travalers and MacIntyre will now return home for a short break before the defence of his Genesis Scottish Open title and The Open Championship at Royal Portrush the following week. Former Ryder Cup star David Howell is convinced the Scot can have a strong run in Northern Ireland having come sixth at the course in 2019 in his debut Open. He said: 'Yes [Scottie] Scheffler is going to be the favourite for that Championship, of course. But he is made for links golf, Bob MacIntyre. And he has proved to himself last week that he can win a Major because, when he had the chance, he did everything right. So he'll have his own expectations to deal with, but surely we'll have a good performance from him.' MacIntyre made it clear in the immediate aftermath of Oakmont that he isn't shying away from the Major challenge and admitted it has handed additional belief as he said: 'There's no reason why I can't win a major championship in my career and that's my goal now. I said I wanted to win the Scottish Open and I got that. I just want to win Majors now.'


Scotsman
an hour ago
- Scotsman
'Made for Italy' - next emerging Scotland star encouraged to join exodus to Serie A
18y/o told he would thrive like Lewis Ferguson has in Italian football Sign up to our Football newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Lennon Miller returns to Motherwell today for the start of pre-season training but how long he remains with the club remains to be seen. The 18-year-old midfielder is Scottish football's hottest property right now and, if speculation is to be believed, he will be off to pastures new before the end of the summer transfer window. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The newly capped Scotland international may not have played his last match in claret and amber just yet though. Motherwell have eight competitive matches - four in the Premier Sports Cup group stages followed by the opening four Premiership games of the season - before the September 1 transfer deadline, by which time Miller will have turned 19. Lennon Miller made his Scotland debut off the bench against Iceland earlier this month. | SNS Group Clubs linked with a move for the talented playmaker include Celtic, Sunderland, Udinese, Strasbourg and Union Saint-Gilloise. Others will also be watching with interest. His father, Lee, himself a former Scotland striker who played for Aberdeen, Hearts and Falkirk among others, has hinted that his son is open to moving abroad. Another footballing dad, Derek Ferguson, believes Miller possesses the ability to follow his own son's career path. Lewis Ferguson joined Bologna from Aberdeen three years ago and has taken Serie A by storm, winning individual awards and captaining the side to Coppa Italia glory last month. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad "The style of footballer that he is, I think he's made to measure for Italy," ex-Rangers midfielder Derek Ferguson said in reference to Lennon Miller on BBC Sportsound on Sunday where he was a guest alongside Lee Miller. "I've watched Lennon as a 16-year-old, he's added to his game already this season, so he's improving. You can just see he's going to thrive." Bologna captain Lewis Ferguson holds the trophy after the 1-0 win over AC Milan in the Coppa Italia final. (Photo by ISABELLA BONOTTO/AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images The success of Lewis Ferguson at Bologna, along with Scott McTominay and Billy Gilmour at Napoli, Che Adams at Torino, Josh Doig at Sassuolo, and previously Aaron Hickey at Bologna, makes Italy an attractive destination for young Scots. Miller senior revealed that Lennon had "asked questions" of the foreign-based Scots when on international duty. "He's confident in his own ability, but he's not arrogant with it," he said. "It's good to see him in this environment and thriving in it. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad "He's mature enough to go and kick on in his career and he needs to do that himself. I'm more confident that he would go over there and thrive. I think it would take his game to another level. "That's the way he plays. He organises, he takes the ball under pressure. It was proud for me as a dad watching it, seeing him being himself and not changing for anyone." After two years and 76 appearances in the Motherwell first team, the time feels right for Miller to move on. The club also has good reason to think so as it may be their last chance to properly cash in on a player who has just one year left on his contract with a value of around £5million mooted. "He's back in at Motherwell training tomorrow," Lee Miller added. "We'll just wait and see what happens, but he just ultimately wants to play football. Yes, he wants to further his career and there's been lots of chat about different clubs.


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Kevin De Bruyne makes Jack Grealish transfer stance clear after Napoli talks
Manchester City have frozen out Jack Grealish with the England star free to find a new club this summer and Kevin De Bruyne would like to play with him again at Napoli Kevin De Bruyne wants Napoli to reunite him with Jack Grealish in Naples this summer with the Manchester City star now on the lookout for a new club. De Bruyne, 33, linked up with the newly minted Italian champions earlier this month after being told he would not be offered a new deal by City. And Grealish looks set to follow the Belgian maestro out of the Etihad before the summer is out after being axed from City's squad for the FIFA Club World Cup. A host of clubs have been linked with a move for Grealish, however, it emerged earlier this week that City have received no offers for the 29-year-old England star. Napoli are the latest club to be credited with an interest in Grealish - and De Bruyne is said to have been sounded out by Antonio Conte over a potential move for the former Aston Villa man. As per The Sun, De Bruyne has given Grealish a glowing reference to the Napoli boss in the hope that the club will make a move for the winger. City are prepared to take a significant financial hit on a player they paid £100million for back in the summer of 2021. And Grealish would likely have to take a huge pay cut in order to move to Napoli, with the report claiming he earns around £300,000-a-week. Napoli are also considering a move for Alejandro Garncho - who they linked with back in January - and Jadon Sancho, both of whom are free to leave Manchester United. But it remains to be seen which of the players they will actually pursue given they have no need for all three. Pep Guardiola recently confirmed that Grealish is available to leave the club, explaining: 'It was a conversation between him and the club and they decide. Jack is an exceptional player, the only reason why he didn't play last season is of course my decisions, and we decide that he has to play - and the club was honest, he was honest. 'We decide the best is that he has a place that he can feel he can play and come back to be the player that he was in the year of the treble or all his career at Aston Villa; without him it would have been impossible or more difficult to achieve the treble. 'The fact is the last two seasons he hasn't played much minutes and he has to come back to play and get the butterflies back in his stomach that he can play every three days and show again the quality that he has.'