A scenic cricket club in North Wales has had a helping hand with cash seized from criminals after vandals wrecked its all-weather pitch.

Youths holding an under-age drinking party in March last year lit a barbecue on the artificial wicket at Caernarfon Cricket Club’s Aber Foreshore ground, which looks out across the Menai Straits.

It ruined the surface and was a bitter blow to the enthusiastic members of the club, who have worked hard to improve their facilities including laying new natural grass pitches.

North Wales Chronicle: Damage caused.Damage caused.

But now the club, only formed in 2015 and just promoted after winning the North Wales League Division Four in 2019, have received £2,500 from the North Wales Police Commissioner’s Your Community, Your Choice fund.

The initiative, also supported by the North Wales Police and Community Trust (PACT) and North Wales Police, is in its eighth year.

Much of more than £370,000 handed out to deserving causes in that time has been recovered through the Proceeds of Crime Act, using cash seized from offenders with the rest coming from the Police and Crime Commissioner.

Caernarfon’s players, currently lying second in Division Two, were practising at the ground when Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin paid a visit, and even bowled a few balls at batsman Llyr Erddyn Davies on the restored practice wicket.

Mr Dunbobbin said: “I’m really pleased that the Police and Crime Commissioner’s Office has been able to help the club out at this brilliant open space they have here in Caernarfon.

“It’s important to provide an opportunity for young people to be involved in activities like sport, and for us to provide facilities within the community that can divert them away from getting into trouble.”

North Wales Chronicle: PCC DunbobbinPCC Dunbobbin

Club treasurer and founding member, Gwyn Williams, has been the prime mover behind the club’s application for funds.

He said: “We applied for the funding with the help of the local Neighbourhood Policing Team.

“I thought it was an ideal opportunity to use the proceeds of crime to compensate us for what was a criminal act.

“We’ve had tremendous support from the local community and since winning the league and getting promotion, we have to play on a grass pitch, but we use the artificial pitch for practice and for our Twenty20 games on Wednesdays.

“It takes a lot of work getting everything ready for cricket – our chairman spent three days at the beginning of the season just rolling the outfield.”

Grant Peisley, an Australian exile living in North Wales, said: “We felt we were really getting somewhere with winning promotion and then came the vandalism.

“We’ve kept positive and kept playing, and the results have come and we’re having another really good season.

“The money has been vital for us, though, and if we hadn’t been able to access this funding, then we might have had to pack up.

“Now we can carry on, and we even have plans to build a new pavilion with sweeping views across to Anglesey.”

PACT project manager Dave Evans added: “Your Community, Your Choice, run in conjunction with the Police and Crime Commissioner and North Wales Police, asks the public to vote for the good causes to be funded.

“This year, we had the largest pot of funding ever at £60,000 and a record number of votes cast, 32,000 across North Wales, including for Caernarfon Cricket Club, and that underlines the level of positive community engagement PACT is achieving.”

Police sergeant Non Edwards, who heads the Caernarfon policing team, said: “Lots of people use this area and it means a lot to the community, so we’re really pleased to have been able to help the cricket club.

“They’re a good bunch of guys, and it’s great to support them after this episode of criminality robbed them of their pitch.”