
Cricket in Singapore has been played for well over a century. The first recorded mention of cricket in Singapore was in 1837 when a “Mr Z” complained, in a letter to the Singapore Free Press, of cricket being played near a church on a Sunday in violation of the Christian Sabbath. The next surviving report is a newspaper record on 20 April 1843 that ‘the manly game of cricket resumed in the settlement, a match being played between Singaporeans and the “Dido”. The first fully recorded match was played on 14th October 1852 under the title of ‘A Picked Eleven Vs The Club’ (Singapore Cricket Club) between 6 on one side and 9 on the other. The picked lot made 11 in the first innings and 1 in the second. The club scored 14 and 12.
Cricket was an important recreational activity, with matches often played against the officers of visiting ships. The Singapore Cricket Club was formed in 1852 and played its first match amongst themselves the same year. The quality of cricket in these early years was quite poor, and it wasn’t until 1865 before a team total of more than 100 was scored. Louis Glass became the first person in Singapore to record a century two years later.
The Singapore Cricket Club eventually began to play against teams from other parts of British Malaya such as Penang, Perak and Kuala Lumpur and this eventually led to an invitation from Hong Kong to send a team there, which saw the beginning of the long running series of “Interport matches”.
Straits Settlements Cricket Team
The 1890 invitation from Hong Kong led to the formation of the Straits Settlements cricket team, and Singapore played Hong Kong in two two-day matches, both of which were lost. The series was the beginning of the “Interport Matches”, which continued until 1987. Hong Kong and Ceylon came to Singapore the following year, and the Straits Settlements won both matches, also drawing against a combined Ceylon/Hong Kong team. The Straits Settlements team beat Ceylon in Colombo in 1893, and played a match in Jakarta in 1895. Matches against the Federated Malay States began in 1896, and against Shanghai in 1897.
The Straits Settlement team played Burma in 1906, and their involvement in the Interport Matches ceased in 1909, when they were replaced by an All Malaya team. The Straits Settlements visited Bangkok in 1910, though from them their only matches came annually against the Federated Malay States until 1940. These fixtures continue in the modern era as the Saudara Cup matches between Singapore and Malaysia.