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Coldplay stump up (for new cricket kits)

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Generous ... Coldplay forked out on whites for cricket team

 

HOWZAT for generosity? COLDPLAY have emerged as unlikely sponsors for small Gloucestershire village cricket side Slaughters Utd. Bass player GUY BERRYMAN has offered to fork out for new whites and kit for the club.

 

The band are all keen players. Frontman CHRIS MARTIN even used to play for another Gloucestershire side, Great Rissington. A delighted insider at the club said: "It's knocked us for six. Never in a million years did we think we'd have connections with one of the world's biggest bands.

 

"We heard Guy had invested some money in Stow Rugby Club so we wrote him a letter asking if he'd like to help us out too. He replied that he would happily provide kits. Chris is a decent player. We'd love to have him come down for a bat one day."

 

http://www.thesun.co.uk/

 

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"We heard Guy had invested some money in Stow Rugby Club so we wrote him a letter asking if he'd like to help us out too. He replied that he would happily provide kits.

I didn't know I could love that man even more!! Guy loves rugby :bomb:

Coldplay stump up (The Sun Article)

 

I searched though the forum and haven't found this article anywhere so...

 

April 22, 2010

 

HOWZAT for generosity?

COLDPLAY have emerged as unlikely sponsors for small Gloucestershire village cricket side Slaughters Utd.

 

Bass player GUY BERRYMAN has offered to fork out for new whites and kit for the club.

 

The band are all keen players. Frontman CHRIS MARTIN even used to play for another Gloucestershire side, Great Rissington.

 

 

 

A delighted insider at the club said: "It's knocked us for six. Never in a million years did we think we'd have connections with one of the world's biggest bands.

 

"We heard Guy had invested some money in Stow Rugby Club so we wrote him a letter asking if he'd like to help us out too.

 

"He replied that he would happily provide kits.

 

"Chris is a decent player. We'd love to have him come down for a bat one day."

 

 

 

Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/bizarre/2942527/Coldplay-member-buys-kit-for-cricket-side.html#ixzz0lrUjLOqu

 

 

Sorry if this has been posted already, please tell me if it has.

 

EDIT: Sorry, my computer has just loaded some new search results and saw another thread.

Coldplay sponsor Gloucestershire cricket club

 

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Coldplay, from left, Chris Martin, Will Champion, Guy Berryman and Jonny Buckland

 

A SUPERSTAR indie band’s next big hit could be the sweet sound of leather on willow. Rock stars Coldplay have knocked village cricket club Slaughters Utd for six with a sponsorship offer.

 

Bass player Guy Berryman has offered to stump up £750 for new whites and kit set to make the stunned 60-member club the envy of the Cotswolds.

 

The multi-million selling group are all keen players and front man Chris Martin used to play for neighbouring side Great Rissington.

 

Slaughter Utd honorary secretary Paul Heming hopes the musicians might play more than just a few runs on the wicket at Lower Slaughter, near Bourton-on-the-Water.

 

“We’ve asked Chris and Guy to come and play and hopefully bring their guitars with them,” he said.

 

“They said they were flattered, but very busy – but we’ll keep on asking.

 

“It’s a bit bizarre, but exciting to be sponsored by one of the world’s biggest bands – but our youngsters think it’s cool.”

 

Coldplay, known for hits such as Yellow and Fix You have a reputation for being good sports.

 

Guy previously sponsored a new training kit for Stow Rugby Club’s under-15s as he knew their manager Dave Oughton, from Lower Swell.

 

Mr Heming said: “It was Dave, whose son Matt plays for us, who suggested we approach Coldplay.

 

“I wrote a lovely letter and they replied saying they’d be delighted – they were very pleased to help and support.”

 

Slaughters Utd captain Phil Chaple said: “Coldplay are alright, but now I’ve suddenly really been won over. We’ll now be able to sport their name on our shirts and mention it in next year’s fixture card.

 

“We’re a friendly, sociable club and play a reasonable standard of cricket but haven’t got masses of money. Paul is very good at organising our fundraising and this will be really good for the club, especially now our youth teams are really coming on.”

 

Children at flood-hit St David’s CoE School, Moreton-in-Marsh, also benefited from the band’s generosity two years ago.

 

Hearing the primary had lost all its instruments in the disaster, they donated a £3,000 piano.

 

Pupils recorded their own special version of Yellow as a thank-you to the band.

 

Coldplay formed in London in 1998 and shot to worldwide fame, selling 30 million albums.

 

http://www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/gloucestershireheadlines/Coldplay-sponsor-Gloucestershire-cricket-club/article-2063596-detail/article.html

 

“We’ve asked Chris and Guy to come and play and hopefully bring their guitars with them,” he said.

 

 

If they did, I guess they would play "Six You", "The Hardest Part" and "Whites Shadows", along with "Covers In Japan", "Speed of Ground" and "Centuries of London".:rolleyes:

Then of course there's "A Rush of Glove To The Head", "Don't Panic", "Willow" and "In My Face".

Already been done , lol CHRIS MARTIN plays cricket for new zealand hahahaha omg

Didn't guy hate team sports?

 

I didn't know I could love that man even more!! Guy loves rugby :bomb:

 

Isn't Guy on the record as saying he hated team sports when he was at school? People do change their views over the course of their lifetime though don't they?

 

Perhaps his long term partnership with his fitness trainer Dan has opened his mind to new experiences? :wink3:

Already been done , lol CHRIS MARTIN plays cricket for new zealand hahahaha omg

 

No he doesn't - he plays football for Norwich!:rolleyes:

:D:D:DOMG that's extremely true, thats my husbands home town and loves those CANARIES!!!!!! lol

No he doesn't - he plays football for Norwich!:rolleyes:
:D:D:DOMG that's extremely true, thats my husbands home town and loves those CANARIES!!!!!! lol

 

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  • 5 weeks later...
  • Author

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How Coldplay saved the sound of leather on willow

 

When a village side faced closure, they asked some famous locals for help. Simon Turnbull on an unlikely alliance of rock and cricket

 

The sun was not the only one with its hat on in the village known as "the Venice of the Cotswolds". By the gentle slopes of the River Windrush, a group of men with peacock-feathered head gear, blacked-up faces and red and green ribboned clothing were dancing up and down, banging their sticks and whooping.

 

 

It was, it transpired, Morris Dancing Day in Bourton-on-the-Water – to the obvious bemusement of one camcorder-toting Japanese tourist wearing a Chelsea strip. Life must be like that in this chocolate-box corner of the Cotswolds. You never quite know what you're going to get.

 

A five-minute drive up the road in Lower Slaughter, the village cricket team were busy pulling their new cellophane-wrapped shirts from a cardboard box. "We've just got them today," said Paul Heming, distributing them to his team-mates. "I'm sure they'll do the job. They're what all the players are wearing these days: three-quarter-length textured shirts."

 

Maybe so, but only the players of Slaughters United have them with the name "Coldplay" emblazoned on the chest. "Yeah, I'm sure very few cricket clubs are sponsored by a world-famous band," Heming pondered. "Coldplay was a bit of a coup for us."

 

How Slaughters United – of the Gloucestershire County League Fourth Division and representatives of the rural idylls of Upper and Lower Slaughter – came to be backed by one of the planet's leading rock bands was painlessly simple. Heming, the club's secretary, batsman and wicket-keeper, learned that Guy Berryman, Coldplay's bass player, had sponsored the under-15 team at Stow Rugby Club and wrote to him asking if the band might consider helping Slaughters United to get some new kit. Berryman replied, saying the band would be "delighted". A cheque for £750 swiftly followed – a Parachutes payment, you might call it.

 

For village cricket clubs, even in this picturesque part of the world, it is a constant struggle to keep on top of the costs. Slaughters United run two Saturday sides and a Sunday team, plus under-15s, under-13s, under-11s and under-9s. They would appear to be living proof of the ECB's claims that the game is booming in popularity at grass-roots level. Their under-15 team, managed by club chairman Nic Hayward, have won their way through to the regional finals. Slaughters (population 200) face Bristol (pop 421,300) in a David and Goliath contest.

 

Their shirts, too, will feature the name of the band whose front-man has first-hand knowledge of village cricketing life. Chris Martin has played for Countess Wear club in Devon; his father is the president. The Coldplay singer, reputedly fairly handy with a bat, has been involved in a game or two at Great Rissington, near-neighbours of the Slaughters club.

 

"A local umpire recalls having a chat with Chris Martin after one game and asking him what he did for a living," Heming said. "He told him, 'I'm in this band called Coldplay. We've just made our first album and we think it might do quite well.' And everyone at the bar went, 'Yeah, yeah'." While raising disbelieving eyebrows, no doubt.

 

Heming has invited Martin and his band-members to "come down and have a knock". Not that there was any sign of Gwyneth Paltrow's other-half as the butchers, bakers and candlestick-makers of Slaughters United gathered in their pavilion, kitted out in their cool new Coldplay shirts, ready to take on St Phillips North. They won the toss and the club captain Phil Chaple, a 51-year-old painter and decorator who once reached the final of a "Find a Fast Bowler for England" competition run by The Sun, strode out to open the batting with Wayne Rose, a 42-year-old farmer.

 

Rose rattled off 63 before his off-stump was dislodged – the top score in a Slaughters tally of 235 all-out. "In Emmerdale and The Archers, they have the farmers playing," Farmer Rose reflected, polishing off a rock bun at the tea interval. "I'd love to be in the village team in The Archers because they stop harvest to play cricket. I could play all season then."

 

The eclectic ranks of the Slaughters first XI also include an antique restorer, an electrician, a builder, an opera house furniture fitter, some students and an internet entrepreneur. "That's what it's all about in rural communities," Rose mused. "We're doing different things, but all joining together for the cricket."

 

It was not hard to see the attraction, with the sun beating down on a glorious, timeless rural setting: the green sward of the Lower Slaughter pitch backing on to allotments and the church, with the manor and the water mill just beyond. By the end of the home innings, it had drawn the grand total of eight spectators. Four of them were bicycling by-passers: Tobias Woerner, Rachel Peacock and their children, Theo, five and Ruben, three.

 

Though a native German, Woerner was familiar with the quintessential English game. "I've been to cricket matches," he said. "I've been to Lord's. I don't understand a thing. I watch it for the beer and for the barbies."

 

And now he has watched the Coldplay club. "Yeah, we wondered about the name on the shirts," his partner said. "Chris Martin lives not far from us, actually. He lives in Primrose Hill; we live in Belsize Park. I used to take Theo to a football thing, Little Kickers, and he used to take his son."

 

It remains to be seen whether the Coldplay front-man will take his son, and indeed his daughter, to the Slaughters. "I'd definitely hang around for that," Wayne Francis, the St Phillips North captain, said. Was he not a little envious that Slaughters had bagged their big-deal sponsorship? "Not at all," Francis replied. "Just glad to see someone like Coldplay supporting a village team. It looks good on their shirts, doesn't it?"

 

The whole scene at Lower Slaughter looked pretty good. Quite what possessed John Milton to sit down by the banks of the River Eye, on the other side of the village, and pen Paradise Lost is one of life's mysteries.

 

Resplendent in their Coldplay tops, Slaughters United prevailed by a margin of 69 runs. It was their first win of the season. As the sun set over their Cotswolds paradise, and the glasses were being raised in the bar, you could not but help think: we live in a beautiful world. Yeah we do, yeah we do.

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/

Cool they actually put the band's name on the shirts! If they are smart, they will offer replicas online for sale because they could make a load of cash selling them! I can see some small village team outselling Ronaldo at Real! :p

 

Southampton won't have a shirt sponsor next year for the club's 125th anniversary. OK William here's your chance to have Coldplay on the red and white! It would so kick Flybe's ass! Get in there! :wink3:

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