The present Lord's Pavilion was opened in 1890 by MCC President,
Lord Willoughby de Eresby, having been built at a cost of
£21,000 after the previous pavilion had been destroyed by fire. Only one
batter,
Albert Trott in 1889, has ever hit a
ball over the top of Lord's Pavilion. The now-defunct magazine
Cricket Lore offered a prize of £10,000 for several seasons to anyone repeating the feat, but the prize went unclaimed. In 2010,
Somerset County Cricket Club captain
Marcus Trescothick was reportedly offered £1 million to hit a
six over the Pavilion. Until 1999 ladies – with the exception of Club Patron
Queen Elizabeth II – were not permitted to enter the Pavilion during play, due to MCC's longstanding gender-based membership policy.
Diana Edulji, who captained
India's 1986 tour of England, was refused entry to Lord's Pavilion quipping that MCC should change its name to MCP ("
male chauvinist pigs"). MCC's 1998 decision to admit female members represented a historic modernisation for Lord's Pavilion and similar
clubs. Closed for major refurbishment in 2004, costing £8.2 million, the Pavilion's seating was upgraded throughout, including the upper tiers, as well as the redecorating of its iconic historic areas, such as the
Long Room. On
Day 5 of the
Second 2023 Ashes Test,
Jonny Bairstow's stumping by
Alex Carey prompted some to accuse the Australians of failing to uphold the
Spirit of Cricket. An altercation ensued in the
Long Room with
Usman Khawaja and
David Warner exchanging heated words with some MCC members, before being ushered away by Lord's stewards. The MCC issued an “unreservedly apology” to the
Australian team, expelling one member and suspending two others following an investigation. == Regulations ==