County Championship | |
---|---|
Champions | Essex |
Runners-up | Somerset |
Most runs | Dom Sibley (1324) |
Most wickets | Simon Harmer (83) |
Royal London One-Day Cup | |
Champions | Somerset |
Runners-up | Hampshire |
Most runs | Billy Godleman (521) |
Most wickets | Saqib Mahmood (28) |
t20 Blast | |
Champions | Essex Eagles |
Runners-up | Worcestershire Rapids |
Most runs | Babar Azam (578) |
Most wickets | Ravi Rampaul (23) |
Women's Cricket Super League | |
Champions | Western Storm |
Runners-up | Southern Vipers |
Most runs | Danni Wyatt (466) |
Most wickets | Freya Davies (19) |
Women's County Championship | |
Champions | Kent |
Runners-up | Yorkshire |
Most runs | Sophia Dunkley (451) |
Most wickets | Katie Thompson (15) Natalie Rowbottom (15) Rebecca Silk (15) Beth Langston (15) |
Women's Twenty20 Cup | |
Champions | Warwickshire |
Runners-up | Lancashire |
Most runs | Sophie Luff (316) |
Most wickets | Laura Ellison (15) |
PCA Player of the Year | |
Ben Stokes | |
Wisden Cricketers of the Year | |
Tammy Beaumont, Rory Burns, Jos Buttler, Sam Curran, Virat Kohli | |
← 2018 2020 → |
The 2019 English cricket season ran between 26 March and 26 September. It was the 120th in which the County Championship has been an official competition and featured first-class, one-day and Twenty20 cricket competitions throughout England and Wales.
The season saw the 2019 Cricket World Cup played in the country between 30 May and 14 July, followed by an Ashes tour by Australia in August and September. Pakistan took part in a one-day tour before the World Cup and the England men's team played a One Day International in Ireland and a Test match against Ireland at Lord's, the first Test between the two teams. The West Indies and Australian women's sides both toured during the season.
The 18 first-class counties was competed in the 2019 County Championship, One-Day Cup and T20 Blast competitions, whilst women's teams competed for the Women's Cricket Super League, the Women's County Championship and the Women's Twenty20 Cup. The 2019 Minor Counties Championship and MCCA Knockout Trophy was competed for by the Minor Counties of England and Wales and club cricket was played throughout both countries.
The season was the last before the scheduled introduction of a city based 100-ball competition by the ECB in 2020 and changes to the organisation of Minor County cricket.[1][2]