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2024

Impact Report 2024

22,001 adult league players; 18,660 young players in Surrey Junior Cricket Championship (SJCC); 5,414 women and girls in league cricket; 4,126 All Stars and Dynamos participants
Key Metric 1
19,323 children received coaching through Chance to Shine; 1,400 children reached across all disability programmes; 433 candidates trained on coaching courses (109 female); £232k grant funding awarded to facilities projects
Key Metric 2
98 Clubmark accredited clubs; 167 clubs using SafeHands management system; 46,000+ players actively participating in SCF-supported leagues; SJCC is largest junior cricket league in the country; 1,682 teams, 306 girls teams, 7,853 fixtures
Key Metric 3
Pirbright CC case study: grew from 26 members in 2019 to nearly 300 — adult, junior, women and girls and walking cricket sections all established with £17,000+ SCF/ECB funding; SJCC finals week celebrated at Valley End and Normandy
2022

Impact Report 2022

300+ school children attended annual Schools Day; 2,000+ community day attendees with 15+ participating partners; 100% of attendees from families interacting with cricket for the first time
Key Metric 1
Sporting Memories groups running in 5 locations across Bristol; Walking Cricket weekly sessions; Walkers and Talkers group (new for 2022) — 100% of participants report social isolation reduced; 300+ contact hours across isolation-reduction activities; 10x increase in participant engagement year-on-year
Key Metric 2
Kit Drop and Swap: 70 people attended; significant kit donated enabling free equipment distribution; BOLA school and community day partnership; 20+ kit bags handed out to promote physical wellbeing at home; Children's Hospice South West (CHSW) raised £4,000+ through partnership
Key Metric 3
Only UK cricket club signatory to UN Sports for Climate Action framework (since 2020); sustainability achievements include 100% locally sourced food, reusable cups, biodegradable cutlery, recyclable cooking oil, electric vehicles, solar panels, onsite community growing space; 31 electrical charging points
2025

Impact Report 2025

164 free-to-access cricket Hubs delivering to 5,500 young players in 2025 (up from 77 hubs/3,200 players in 2023); 120,000 attendances by young people in Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda
Key Metric 1
8,000 beneficiaries in Nepal; 50+ young players trained and qualified as ICC-accredited coaches in Nepal; 1,100 boys' and girls' teams from 820 state secondary schools entered inaugural Barclays Knight-Stokes Cup (one-fifth of all state secondary schools)
Key Metric 2
Barclays Knight-Stokes Cup Final to be held at Lord's on 10 September 2026; MCCF won County Board of the Year award in Bucks; Girls U18 played hard ball cricket on Lord's Main Ground for first time in history
Key Metric 3
First U18 Girls XI played hard ball cricket on Lord's Main Ground; 45% of professional cricketers were privately educated — MCCF directly addresses this pipeline; Labong (Uganda) identified by national team through MCCF — school now provides scholarship and free education
2024

Impact Report 2024

114 sessions delivered across the county (Taunton, Wembdon, Bridgwater, West Huntspill, Chard, Yeovil) totalling 157.5 hours (Sept 2023 to Oct 2024); 160 unique participants through 15 community providers
Key Metric 1
~100 young people with additional requirements engaged weekly through Super 1s hubs across 7 locations (free to attend); Walking Cricket launched county-wide with approx. 100 participants in Year 1
Key Metric 2
Fortnightly Walkers and Talkers group at Cooper Associates County Ground with Somerset cricketing legends Q&As; 58 sessions delivered at local cricket clubs using club volunteers trained/bursaried by Foundation
Key Metric 3
Super 1s case study: participant gained confidence, made friends, improved social skills and reduced anxiety — offered place on residential (attended despite anxiety) and now invited to Super 1s Leadership Academy; 'cricket programme provided numerous physical, mental and social benefits'
2025

Impact Report 2020-2025

Over £1.2 million in direct grants awarded since 2020; 87 projects supported; 43 project partners worked with (as of April 2025)
Key Metric 1
Member of Conservation Collective — global network of local foundations funding effective grassroots nature-based solutions; focus on landscape regeneration, river restoration and marine conservation
Key Metric 2
Specialist in identifying innovative grassroots nature-based solutions in Devon to tackle the climate and nature crisis; Devon is home to two coastlines, two moors and diverse wetlands, woodlands, meadows and rivers
Key Metric 3
Nature rebounds quickly given the right conditions — Devon's growing movement of nature restoration workers shows the grassroots model works; nature-based solutions sequester carbon, increase biodiversity, prevent flooding and droughts and offer opportunities for community connection
2025

Impact Report 2025

£1,061,931.34 awarded to 249 projects supporting 169 organisations in 2024/25; 120,000 people supported
Key Metric 1
Four consecutive years of £1m+ granting — fourth most successful granting year ever; 120,894 total beneficiaries across Berkshire; top beneficiary groups: children and young people, victims of crime/violence/abuse, older people
Key Metric 2
Last Resort Fund supported 27 charities and community groups; Together for Women and Children Fund awarded £1.29m to 224 projects reaching 35,000+ vulnerable women and children since 2019; IDVA hospital-based domestic abuse advocates funded
Key Metric 3
Won 2024 LGC Award for Diversity and Inclusion for exemplary work reducing health inequalities; Former PM Baroness May of Maidenhead spoke at Together for Women and Children event; Amanda Stephens (Olly's Work) addressed supporters on children's online safety
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2026

Year 1 Impact Report 2026

£200,000 distributed in first round of grants to 12 charities across Great Britain (2025); average annual proceeds from lotteries £14.5m with 20% of every ticket going to good causes
Key Metric 1
First 12 charities funded include: CAST, Farms for City Children, Feeding Britain, FoodCycle, Phab, Sport in Mind, Student Minds, Support Dogs, Tapping House, The Brain Charity, Forest of Avon, The Royal Countryside Fund
Key Metric 2
Support Dogs received £15,000 to fund an instructor working with 10 dogs on Disability Assistance Programme; Health Lottery Foundation operating from January 2025 (previously The Health Lottery operated as main structure); six themes for future grant rounds covering health and wellbeing across Great Britain
Key Metric 3
Health Lottery Foundation officially established January 2025 — previously The Health Lottery funded good causes directly; 12 inaugural grantees represent a diverse mix of health causes across disability, food poverty, mental health, animal-assisted therapy and outdoor learning
2025

Impact Report 2025

8,633 players featured in 1,539 completed junior fixtures; 2,212 All Stars and Dynamos participants (up 7%); 625 female All Stars and Dynamos (up 18%); 9 MCC Foundation Hubs (128 players, 90 training sessions, 30 match days)
Key Metric 1
49 teams in 262 fixtures in Bucks Girls Leagues (70% fixture increase from 2024); 25 women's sections across 20 clubs (up 25%); 14 female umpires qualified from female-only ECB course; 68 teams in primary competitions (65% increase); 57 Chance to Shine programmes in primary schools
Key Metric 2
Won County Board of the Year at MCC Foundation; Bucks Men won NCCA Championship Final vs Devon; NCCA Championship final record: Conner Haddow took 9/73 (first 9-wicket innings in NCCA Championship Final history); Chance to Shine Street Cricket teams reached Quarter Finals (Girls and U12s) and won Nationals at Nottingham University (U16s)
Key Metric 3
7 boys and 8 girls progressed from MCCF Hubs to Bucks County Age Group squads; 5 players selected onto Vipers Emerging Players Programme from Girls Pathway; Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Indian PM Narendra Modi presented signed bat to Chance to Shine Street Cricket hub participants at Chequers
2025

Annual Impact Report 2024/25

£1,731,376 distributed through 275 grants to 138 groups and organisations; 244 nominations, 18 awards, 150 guests at Derby Volunteer Awards Night
Key Metric 1
Holiday Activities and Food (HAF) Programme: 16,459 children in summer, 4,468 in Easter, 2,459 in winter — across 36 summer, 32 Easter and 22 winter providers; £1,031,657 in HAF grants allocated/facilitated
Key Metric 2
Derby Social Prescribing: average 175 referrals per month (2,100 per year); 10,901 attendances across 585 DE23 Active sessions (11 trained volunteers); Warm Welcome Hub grants: 84 providers, £233k, 69,768 people supported through cost of living
Key Metric 3
Won 2024 LGC Award for Diversity and Inclusion for exemplary work reducing health inequalities through DHIP; 130 families supported via Youth Alliance referrals from schools, further education, housing providers, youth offending service and Derbyshire Constabulary