Come here to find all the information you need to help you plan your visit to the Home of Cricket, the latest news from the Ground and to book your event.
We’ve got a wide variety of formats covered with an exciting line up of matches to get your cricket fix.
Whether you like red or white ball, domestic or international, or men’s or women’s cricket, Lord’s will have the perfect cricket experience for you, your family and friends.
Marylebone Cricket Club is the world’s most active cricket club, the owner of Lord’s Ground and the guardian of the Laws of the game. Find out more about the history of MCC, our work in the Community and the famous Lord's Museum.
FIND OUT MORE
Step closer. Your new digital platform at the Home of Cricket.
Subscribe now for early access to selected international matches, exclusive content, coaching masterclasses and many more discounts and offers.
Your access to Lord's like never before.
Marylebone Cricket Club is one of the World's most active Cricket Clubs, the owner of Lord's Ground and the Guardian of the Laws and Spirit of the Game.
With around 200 full time staff members covering a wide range of sectors - from IT to Chefs to Pavilion Stewards - there is a role at the Home of Cricket for everyone.
Our Lord's Shops have a wide range of clothing, headwear and gifts and souvenirs available, so you can own your own piece of memorabilia from Home of Cricket.
These exhibitions showcase highlights from the MCC Collections in new and interesting ways, often alongside nationally important loans. Exhibitions open in April each year and can be enjoyed as part of a Lord’s Tour or with a match day ticket.
This major new exhibition is the first of its kind in the UK, examining the surprising and often overlooked history of women’s cricket. The result of three years’ research following MCC’s acquisition of the Women’s Cricket Association archive in 2017, it tracks the development of women’s cricket from its beginnings in the 18th century to a modern, professional sport which competes for media attention with the men’s game.
Drawing upon the WCA and MCC collections, as well as loans from the UK and overseas, it is a landmark in the MCC Museum’s long-term strategy to diversify its Collections and displays.
Among the objects featured are the cricket clothing worn by Molly Beckenham, one of the first women professionals in the 1890s, scrapbooks from early overseas tours, kit worn by players in the 2017 ICC Women’s World Cup Final and the original Women’s World Cup trophy.
The late Baroness Heyhoe Flint helped initiate a project to collect items related to Women’s Cricket together with historian and author Isabelle Duncan which form some of the displays. Many former players shared memories as part of the Women’s Oral History Project and have kindly donated personal items.
This new exhibition explores the lives of Denis Compton and Bill Edrich, and why their achievements were of such significance that MCC named two stands after them.
The exhibition begins with the original G and H stands, and how the Ground was then developed with the building of the original Compton and Edrich stands to the opening of the new stands in 2021.
A timeline of Compton and Edrich’s lives highlights the glorious summer of 1947 and both men’s cricket and football achievements, wartime activity and off-field misdemeanours. Visitors can view archive photos and correspondence to, from and about the two cricketers, including an example of Compton’s modelling career as one of the original Brylcreem boys and letters of complaint from MCC Members relating to this commercial venture.
Also featured are original scorebooks, cigarette cards, postcards and the Wisden Cricketers’ Almanacks from 1939 and 1940 when Compton and Edrich were one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year. As well as the usual bats and pads there are commemorative ceramics and jigsaw puzzles. The Arsenal Museum have kindly loaned MCC a number of items relating to the football career of Denis Compton.
Architects’ models, time lapse video and photos show the development of the new stands.
In 2013, in a list compiled by the National Museum of Australia, Canberra, the Aboriginal Cricket Tour of 1868 was included as one of the 100 most defining moments in Australian history. The all-Aboriginal team was the first Australian cricket team to tour the UK and the first visit by indigenous Australians to gain widespread awareness in this country. The new displays at Lord’s this year explore the history of the cricket tour in general and this tour in particular, in the year of its 150th anniversary.
Aboriginal artefacts from The Royal Albert Memorial Museum, newly identified from the 1868 cricket tour to the UK, are reunited with the Aboriginal club (Leangle) from M.C.C.’s own collection for the first time since the original tour. The original Ashes urn, a memento from the 1882-3 English tour to Australia, will also feature.
This wide-ranging exhibition, was held in the Museum’s main upper gallery, covers ICC World Cups and Champions Trophies, the County Championship, the Indian Premier League, Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket, plus the worldwide growth of Twenty20 and the role Lord’s has played in some of cricket’s biggest occasions.
Among the objects to feature prominently will be the original Prudential Cup, used for the first three men’s Cricket World Cup tournaments, the finals of which were all held at Lord’s.
The exhibition brings together twentieth century cricket board, card and dice games with particular focus on unique hand-made games, prototypes, and early edition commercial games.
In its second phase from 2017, the show will include early computer games and other games from the early part of the century, such as pinball. The exhibition examines domestic play, consumer culture and how games can reflect real life by using player averages and statistics.
Highlights on display include The Cass Family Board Game on loan from the V&A Museum and popular board games such as Subbuteo Cricket. In addition to the games themselves are anecdotes and photographs from manufacturers such as Peter Adolph, the inventor of the Subbuteo table games.
The MCC Museum has unveiled a new exhibition documenting the development of the new Warner Stand at Lord’s, and paying tribute to Sir Pelham Warner himself.
The exhibition is the first in a series of displays which will document MCC’s redevelopment of Lord’s, which is due to continue over the next 20 years.
Work began on the new Warner Stand at the end of the 2015 season, and the new structure was fully opened at the England v Ireland ODI in May 2017.
It includes vastly improved sight lines for spectators, a new match control suite for officials and a state-of-the-art roof which ensures that spectators will benefit from both shade and natural light. Solar thermal and photovoltaic panels on the roof will also generate hot water and electricity.
The exhibition features models of the new stand as well as displays, photographs, plans and memorabilia relating to the original Warner Stand which was erected in 1958 and demolished in 2015.
It also pays tribute to the career of Sir Pelham Warner – the first person after whom a stand at Lord’s was named.
Warner captained MCC on its first overseas and later served the Club as a Committee Member, Deputy Secretary, Trustee, and President. He became its first Life Vice-President in 1961.
South African cricket has so often been affected by off-field troubles, such as the well-known D’Oliveira affair of 1968 and the long years of isolation that ended only with the fall of the National Party government and its apartheid policies.
But while racial politics have never been far below the surface in the country’s sporting history, this exhibition reflected how much more there is to explore, from the early cricket played by British soldiers stationed in the Cape following the Napoleonic Wars to the re-emergence of South Africa as a major force in international cricket in the 1990s and beyond.
Artefacts on display included several from the family of South African Test cricketer Russell Endean, an outstanding all-round sportsman who set the mould for outstanding fielding, later followed by his compatriots Colin Bland and Jonty Rhodes.
Prominent among these were the scrapbooks he kept during his tour of Australia with the South African team in 1952–53 and a stump which was split during the final Test of that tour in Melbourne.
Also featured were several items relating to Geoff Griffin’s remarkable, sole Test match at Lord’s, in which he became the first bowler to take a Test hat-trick at the ground, while also being no-balled so often due to his unusual action that he never played Test cricket again.
The exhibition explored 24 original colour illustrations from Ladybird’s vintage books, ‘The Story of Cricket’, published in 1964, as well as The Boys’ Book of Cricket (1949-1954) and The MCC Book for the Young Cricketer (1950-1953).
These books, filled with images of an Arcadian landscape in which fresh-faced boys played their cricket as though childhood would never end, are highly stylised, and quintessentially British.
The Story of Cricket romanticised the English cricket season where there is no mention of it ever raining, just of ‘fine summer day[s]’ and ‘women and girls wear[ing] pretty summer dresses’.
This exhibition was made possible by the generous loan of ‘The Story of Cricket’ (1964) artwork from Ladybird Ventures. The exhibition coincided with Ladybird’s century of publishing educational books for children (1915 – 2015).
Like the original book, the exhibition was aimed to engage a new generation of cricket lovers and inspire communities to engage in cricket. ‘HowZart’ - a Community Arts Educational Programme ran parallel to the exhibition.
Celebrating twenty years since the opening of the J.P. Morgan Media Centre, the exhibition held in the corner gallery of the Museum looked back at the origins of one of cricket’s most striking modern buildings.
Featuring architectural models and drawings, as well as images of its construction, the displays also tells the longer history of cricket reporting at Lord’s through objects related to journalists like Murray Hedgcock and Julian Guyer, as well as a fascinating developmental timeline.