The East and Central Africa Cricket Conference was a regional body which organised cricket teams from Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda,[1] and Zambia.[2][full citation needed][3][4]
It ceased to exist in 1997 with the formation of the African Cricket Association, which now oversees all cricket administration across the African continent.[5][6]
Originally created as the East African Cricket Conference (EACC) from the Kenya, Tanganyika and Uganda Cricket Associations as the governing body of cricket in East Africa, the Conference was tasked primarily with controlling and regulating official and semi-official cricketing tours to and from East Africa.[7]
The EACC was probably at its strongest in the 1970s when the EACC organised the East African Cricket Team with members from Kenya, Tanzania,[2][full citation needed] and Uganda. The team was invited to, and participated in the 1975 Cricket World Cup. The team continued to be an associate member of the ICC until being replaced by the East and Central African cricket team in 1989.
The East and Central African cricket team continued to have ICC associate membership until 2003, when each of the member nations joined the ICC separately as independent members of the African Cricket Association.
Members
References
- ^ History of Kenyan cricket Archived July 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Encyclopedia of World Cricket by Roy Morgan, SportsBooks Publishing, 2007
- ^ Nigeria and Tanzania to seek ICC Associate membership
- ^ A history of Kenyan cricket Archived July 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Sameer Cup Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine at Cricket Archive
- ^ "3rd Africa Cup 2002". cricketeurope4.net. Archived from the original on 2008-07-09.
- ^ Decolonisation and the Imperial Cricket Conference, 1947–1965: A Study in Transnational Commonwealth History?