The Shanghai Cricket Club is a cricket club based in Shanghai, China. The club dates back to 1858 when the first recorded cricket match was played between a team of British naval officers and a Shanghai 11. Following a 45-year dormancy after the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the club was re-established in 1994 by expatriates living in the city and has since grown to over 300 members.
The first recorded cricket match in Shanghai was played somewhere in Hongkou on April 22, 1858 between a team of officers from HMS Highflyer and a Shanghai 11 in 1858. Since then cricket has had a home in Shanghai.
In 1863, the first true cricket ground was bought by the Shanghai Recreation Fund from the Race Club. The ground was located inside the Shanghai Race Club racecourse, located in present-day People’s Square and People’s Park on the corner of Nanjing Road and Jiangxi Road.
Interport matches with the Hong Kong Cricket Club and the Singapore Cricket Club began in 1866 as a series of home and away fixtures which continued up until 1948, just prior to the PLA takeover of Shanghai. It was after the conclusion of one of these series that the Hong Kong team, returning from Shanghai was struck by tragedy as the SS Bokhara, the ship that was transporting them back to Hong Kong, sank on October 10, 1892 off the coast of Formosa. Of the 13 Hong Kong cricketers on board, only two survived. The clubs continued to play Interport matches and today, the winner of a series is given the Bokhara Bell Memorial Trophy.
The Shanghai Cricket Club was reestablished in 1994, and in 2004, an inter-club league was established by the four SCC member clubs: Bashers CC, DPR Hot Dogs, Maharajas (now Daredevils) and Pudong CC. The club hosted the Shanghai International Sixes from 1997 through 2009. During this time, a women's side (currently defunct) also existed called the Pearls.