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The success of Twenty20 begs the question: what effect will it end up having on the traditional formats? Ashok Malik looks for some answers
Ashok Malik
September 23, 2007
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With a cocktail of energy, adrenalin and high TRPs, the World Twenty20 is already a success. Commentators and cricket buffs are labelling it the future. There is a certitude here that was absent, for instance, when predictions for the one-day format were made at the 1975 Prudential Cup.
Yet, Twenty20 is not a standard innovation - if any innovation can be called standard in the first place - that will merely expand the market for cricket. In both its time of arrival and in the plans the ICC has for it, Twenty20 could be the monster that gobbles up the competition.
The first ODI was played in 1971 but the limited-overs game, with coloured clothing, white balls and the rest of the razzmatazz, came into its own in the 1980s. A century after the first Test, cricket was ready for a new format. Especially in the subcontinent, where the dull predictability of Test matches on dead wickets - does anybody remember a one-season wonder called Taslim Arif hitting 210 against Dennis Lillee in 1980? - made the shorter game seem exciting and endorsement-friendly.
One-day cricket didn't eat into Test cricket; it simply filled up vast empty spaces in the calendar. The number of Test matches played today as opposed to in, say, 1987, has not gone down. It's just that the time between Tests has been packed with a glut of 50-over matches.
Twenty20 is a different animal. If it is to become the third international - and the word is used literally, to mean matches between countries or full members of the ICC - version of cricket, it will inexorably end up cannibalising the senior formats. No year has 500 days. No year has enough time for a full complement of Test, ODI and Twenty20 matches.
In the 1980s Test cricket was seen as a sunset industry, and so ODIs were welcomed. In 2007 the situation is decidedly different. In important markets - the Indian subcontinent, Australia - ODI cricket is still a lucrative business. As such, officials are wary of Twenty20 and want to control its growth. To use an analogy, a cabal of VCD manufacturers has been given the job of developing a business plan for DVDs.
This dilemma is best exemplified at the BCCI. It has, expectedly, influenced the ICC as well. What, then, do the gnomes of cricket have in mind?
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The Premier League approach
The announcement of the Indian Premier League (IPL) has been interpreted as an answer to the rebel Indian Cricket League (ICL). The IPL model, which is going to be replicated in Pakistan a year later and slowly expand to all major ICC countries, is however more than just that. It is also an attempt to "bottle up" Twenty20, to release it in calibrated doses.
The ICC is keen to promote Twenty20 in domestic cricket, perhaps with new teams and franchises, rather than have it compete with Test matches and ODIs. There is, doubtless, a conundrum here. Given the response to the current World Twenty20, the format's future is assured. More importantly, given its scheduling advantage, Twenty20 is more likely to win acceptance into the Olympics or the Asian Games than cricket's marathon formats.
If one goes by the IPL system, the BCCI - or the cricket board in the individual country - will sell eight franchises, essentially allowing cricket entrepreneurs to set up eight "clubs". These clubs/franchises can then sign on any first-class cricketer playing in India or overseas.
With $3 million in prize money in its first year, and with corporate houses expected to bankroll the franchises, money should not be a problem for the IPL. Even so, how will teams/franchises develop themselves as brands and command fan loyalty? Are the eight franchises going to be artificial constructs or is there going to be a geographical basis?
Take an example. If a team called Kingfisher Tigers signs up Brian Lara, Glenn McGrath and Sachin Tendulkar, it will be a very strong cricket side and draw attention. Yet, in a sense, it will be an ersatz team, a revved-up Rest of India XI for an Irani Trophy game.
Now if Kingfisher Tigers was actually Kingfisher Bangalore Tigers, and if it were to include Lara, McGrath, Rahul Dravid and four other senior Karnataka players, it would begin with a captive supporter base. This constituency is important. If a franchise is to become a viable entity, it will need to survive arrivals and departures of specific players and stars; it will have to sell merchandise and memorabilia, feed fans at team-themed restaurants. From Manchester United to the Los Angeles Lakers, successful sports brands/clubs everywhere have been underpinned by specific population- or regional affiliations.
Yet there is a twist here as well. Can Tendulkar play in the Ranji Trophy for Mumbai and two weeks later in the IPL for Kingfisher Bangalore Tigers? Where would his loyalty lie? How would Mumbai and Bangalore cricket fans perceive him? Which set would have a sense of ownership?
One or the other
The traditional domestic game - Ranji Trophy, Duleep Trophy and so on - is going to have to compete with the IPL for talent, money, crowds and television deals. It is obvious which format is going to win. Twenty20 is the money-spinner in England, not four-day county matches played on cold, windswept mornings. There is no reason why the Indian cricket market will not follow the same logic.
First-class cricket will still be played, of course, but it will become even more of an obscure phenomenon than the Ranji Trophy currently is. Sooner or later this will require the young cricketer to exercise a choice. Over the past 20 years it has been possible for top cricketers to excel at both Test and ODI cricket. To expect them to straddle three formats - ranging from Twenty20 to classical Test cricket - is to perhaps expect too much.
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Michel Platini and Zinedine Zidane were probably the greatest footballers to play for France. Eric Cantona doesn't figure in the calculation; he holds a French passport but won fame and fortune at Manchester United. Is Twenty20 going to create cricket's Cantonas?
The paradox at the top
Any sport needs a food chain. Age-group tournaments, college and university
championships and local club leagues throw up talent for national teams. Cricket
could soon end up with a strange paradox. As the IPL and its sisters make Twenty20 the
format of choice at the domestic level, can the ICC continue to insist on Test and
ODI cricket as mainstay formats at the international level?
If the prototypical young cricketer is happy signing up for clubs/franchises in the IPL and in other leagues, and making his money there, is he going to bother playing five-day cricket? Today the India cap has no competition. When a plethora of clubs is ready to sign you on, pay you well and build your profile, is it worth it trying to catch the eye of the BCCI's zonal selector?
What will this do to cricket's food chain? A batsman brought up on Twenty20 at home cannot suddenly be asked to bat out 50 overs and save a Test on the fifth afternoon. Will this contradiction inevitably force the ICC to institutionalise Twenty20 as the leading international version of the game? What will it do to Test and ODI cricket? I don't know the answer, but the question scares me.
Ashok Malik is a writer based in New Delhi
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Do you agree that Twenty20 could pose a threat to Tests and ODIs?
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I think 20/20 would be a great opputunity to spread the game beyond the traditional cricket playing nations and it may help to increase the number of teams particitipating in top level in cricket. Also there is a real threat to 50 over game but not for the test cricket from 20/20 as i see it. But it may harm the growing talent by making them to play to get 10-15 runs in overs and usually without much teqchnique.
Posted by Crick_Connoisseur on (September 25 2007, 15:27 PM GMT)I'd like to pen down my thoughts in form of a poem. It's called "The Purist's Plea" Here it goes : Four days of perseverance Culminate in fifth day of fruition. Doggedness is a virtue Defence a potent weapon. Process may win over outcome, Journey over destination; Fourteen sessions of dominance A draw in the final session. 'This' is cricket, folks, The Englishman's ultimate creation ! Alas ! They see no beauty in patience Who seek instant gratification. Craving for cheap amusement They mistake for passion. 'Four days of perseverance' Is an unintelligible notion When pauper to prince Is an hour long transition ! We don't need you, folks To savour the Englishman's ultimate creation ! Yours Truly, Crick_Connoisseur
Posted by Orion on (September 25 2007, 14:48 PM GMT)Test matches are unique. I agree that they are the pure form of cricket, the all-in-one. Over the five days they provide everything, and are the ultimate test of skill, consistency, concentration, the lot. They're not consumer-friendly, and though consumerism is immediately associated with the USA and bad evil terrible people there are good aspects to it too which we all enjoy and too many neglect when it suits them. I think the alternative is fantastic. Some of us have all the attention-span in the world but who has the time? It's great to be able to get all the great aspects of cricket crammed into practical hours. And the crowds also balloon, it's much easier to attend for 3/4 hours than 8/9, or 8/9 for 5 days. People saying it's not cricket need to open their minds a little. It is cricket, it's definitely the best way forward for the sport.
Posted by Orion on (September 25 2007, 14:43 PM GMT)I'm back again, after my string of four comments a few posts down. I wonder if anyone read all that? I think it's largely relative. What seems ridiculous now won't be soon. Jayasuria seemed ridiculous to start with, now he's marvelled. I don't think 20/20 will produce poor cricketers. If you watch ANY kids play the game, they start off swinging for victory. That's a child's natural instinct. Technique needs to be taught - in varying degrees to different people - but everyone needs some sort of coaching. The proper techniques to play cricket will still need to be taught, as they are the best ways to win in ANY form of the game. Bangladesh slogged their way to one lucky win over a lacklustre West Indies, but they went on to be humiliated by all opposition. Experienced players generally shone the most, which again speaks volumes for how deceptively similar 20/20 is to the original game.
Posted by DavidB on (September 25 2007, 12:45 PM GMT)Imagine a kid who is 4 or 5 years old, just starting to watch cricket. They'll be excited by 20 20 - and that's what they'll be copying. Backing away, poor footwork, not respecting good balls, taking ridiculous runs hoping the fieldsman will miss with a throw. It's hard to see where a generation of class batsmen are going to come from with that sort of precedent guiding the way. For those of us few poor 'old market' souls, we might want to watch the quality batsmen going around the world cricket at the moment - there is a reasonable chance there won't be many more left to come.
Posted by CricketPissek on (September 25 2007, 10:34 AM GMT)As a non-Indian, maybe my view will be unique in this discussion. The most intriguing point of this article to me is, the possibility of an Indian representing 2 different regional teams. This will be the main difference between NBA/European Football teams and IPL. I think once a team is signed to a regional club they will have to play all tournaments for that club! You won't see Wayne Rooney playing for Man U for the Carling Cup, but for say... Liverpool (where he was born) in the UEFA Champions League or the FA cup?! The Indian Ranji/Duleep trophies may have to get a revamp to have only *one* set of clubs for ALL BCCI tournaments.
Posted by Hiresavi on (September 25 2007, 09:00 AM GMT)1. Tests will continue to flourish - it's too close to the heart of cricket to be replaced or reduced. It also has too much of a following among fans who understand its philosophies: not every match has a result, battles (innings, Tests) can be won/lost/drawn to serve a higher purpose (Tests, series), etc. 2. F50s were essentially for those who wanted (a) More chances of a definitive result (b) Limited, more "manageable" durations (c) Increased pace in the game (how many dive to save a single run in Tests?) 3. T20s provide the above in an exponential manner: (a) Results are more certain, esp. with lesser exposure to weather, ability to complete a match at some point during a day, bowl-outs,etc (b) Can't get better than this for pub-goers: Just 3 hours vs. 7-8 hours per F50; ends up attracting more spectators too (c) T20s are more frenetic - any one who disagrees?. Add to this: T20 is more likely to make it as an Olympic discipline. Conclusion: T20 will replace F50 & not tests
Posted by yugi on (September 25 2007, 08:55 AM GMT)Will 20/20 wreck cricket? Duh...Of course it will!<p>I think it is time people stop fooling themselves by thinking it wont. And I can honestly say that those who prefer this form of the game has no idea what test cricket is about. Sorry, but its true. Cricket is unique, why want to change it to suit people who want everything to be fast and quick? I wonder what people will say when they decide to change a game like golf to be only one round played instead of 4....Or 9 holes instead of 18...Or make ALL the holes 3 par and scrap the 4 and 5 par holes.<p> Yes, the circus of 20/20 is here to stay. But teams should not play more than 1 game per tour.
Posted by rj71191 on (September 25 2007, 04:03 AM GMT)I believe that twenty20s will go on to be the main format of the ICC. I feel if this form is made the main format of the league, it will awaken the north american contienent to see how cricket is not some boring old sport thats dying. They'll see it as a entertaining money maker which would be all that they need to know to make cricket a dominant sport in north america.
Posted by sambo_the_spinner on (September 25 2007, 03:11 AM GMT)I'm from australia and all junior cricketers i know that dream of playing cricket for australia want to play tests. Although during the recent popularity rise of 20/20 cricket has made more players play the game. ODI and Test cricket will still be around, Tests will still be there for the purists and people like me who crave cricket and the popularity will stay the same. OdI's will still be around but will take a backseat to 20/20. Don't forget that there still are the world cup and champions trophy so they wont go away altogether.