Surrey start County Championship title defence at Essex

Surrey all-rounder Cameron Steel and captain Rory Burns holding the County Championship trophyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Surrey won the 2024 County Championship by 17 points from Hampshire after winning eight of their 14 games and losing only two

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Surrey will begin their bid for a fourth successive County Championship title with a tough away game against Essex.

No team has won four in a row since Surrey lifted the trophy in seven successive years from 1952 to 1958.

Last season's runners-up Hampshire will start at home against promoted Yorkshire, while Sussex, who were promoted as champions, will be away to Warwickshire.

The opening round of fixtures in Division Two, which also starts on 4 April, sees relegated Lancashire travel to Lord's to play Middlesex, while Kent begin life back in the second tier with an away game against Northants.

Worcestershire will play their first three games away from home before their first New Road fixture of the season against Durham, starting on 25 April.

In the One-Day Cup, 2024 winners Glamorgan will play Hampshire at Neath on Tuesday, 5 August, but the 50-over women's competition will begin in April, with the two finals taking place over the weekend of 20-21 September.

The men's final will again be played at Trent Bridge, with the women's showpiece at Utilita Bowl the following day.

"This is the start of an exciting new era for domestic cricket and women’s cricket as we elevate and embed women’s teams in the county structure.

"There will be more women’s professional players than ever before, more games at HQ venues and more women’s matches under lights as we further build the profile of women’s cricket across England and Wales," said ECB women's professional game director Beth Barrett-Wild.

The County Championship will follow the same schedule as this year, with eight rounds of Friday to Monday games through April and May, then a break before resuming for two weeks at the end of June, both beginning on Sundays.

Another pair of back-to-back games will follow at the end of July before the red-ball campaign reaches its climax with the final three rounds of games in September.

They will begin on 8, 15 and 24 September, with the last day of the season on Saturday, 27 September, two days earlier than in 2024.

Kookaburra balls will again be used for the Championship games in June and July, with the Dukes ball retained for the early and season-ending rounds.

Sussex will be back in the top flight for the first time since 2015, having finished 20 points clear of Yorkshire at the top of Division Two.

The Tykes - who will have Anthony McGrath in charge as their new head coach, replacing Ottis Gibson - secured their promotion with a run of wins in the second half of the summer.

Essex have yet to confirm a replacement for McGrath, who left them after nine seasons at Chelmsford, while relegated Kent have yet to appoint a successor to departed head coach Matt Walker.

One-Day Cup shake-up

The men's One-Day Cup has again seen a shake-up for the group stage, with Derbyshire, Hampshire and Worcestershire swapping with Sussex, Warwickshire and Yorkshire.

Group A: Notts Outlaws, Essex, Worcestershire, Surrey, Gloucestershire, Glamorgan, Hampshire, Leicestershire Foxes, Derbyshire Falcons.

Group B: Kent Spitfires, Yorkshire, Somerset, Lancashire, Durham, Warwickshire, Northamptonshire Steelbacks, Middlesex, Sussex Sharks.

The winners of each group will advance to the semi-finals, with the teams finishing second and third meeting in a quarter-final for a place in the last four.

As with the T20 Blast, the women's competition will feature separate tournaments for the eight fully professional county teams and a League 2 tier of 10 other sides.

The main competition will see each of the eight teams playing the other seven home and away, with the top four progressing to the semi-finals.

There will be 10 teams in League 2 with nine games for each in the group stage and the top four again advancing to the knockout stage.

Next season sees the women's game move away from regional teams following five seasons of the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy, which was won in 2024 by Sunrisers.

County Championship opening fixtures

All games start on 4 April 2025 (11:00)

Division One

Essex v Surrey

Hampshire v Yorkshire

Nottinghamshire v Durham

Somerset v Worcestershire

Warwickshire v Sussex

Division Two

Derbyshire v Gloucestershire

Glamorgan v Leicestershire

Middlesex v Lancashire

Northamptonshire v Kent

Men's One-Day Cup opening fixtures

Tuesday, 5 August 2025

Chester LS: Durham v Sussex

Neath: Glamorgan v Hampshire

Cheltenham: Gloucestershire v Derbyshire Falcons

Sedbergh: Lancashire v Northamptonshire Steelbacks

Sookholme: Notts Outlaws v Essex

Scarborough Yorkshire v Warwickshire

Wednesday, 5 August

Radlett: Middlesex v Somerset

Guildford: Surrey v Leicestershire Foxes

Women's One-Day Cup opening fixtures

Wednesday, 23 April 2025

Chester LS: Durham v Essex

Beckenham: Surrey v Somerset

Trent Bridge: The Blaze v Lancashire

Edgbaston: Warwickshire v Hampshire