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It's all too easy to lay the blame for all the game's ills at one door
June 29, 2012
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The interesting thing about Tony Greig's Colin Cowdrey lecture was not that he took off on India - he can be quite predictable that way - but that it took so long coming. It's a pity, because Greig, whose stature as a player, observer and thinker is not in question, has gone after the easy target. Increasingly India has become the decoy, diverting thoughts from deeper problems that affect the foundation of cricket and come without nationalities
Yes, many, including me, disagree with the BCCI's position on various issues, but those relate to domestic cricket, scheduling and preparation for international cricket, utilisation of funds by state bodies, aspects of corporate governance and so on. Those are problems of Indian cricket. If they make Indian cricket weaker, it shouldn't really matter to those looking in from the outside unless it is to express glee. The DRS and anti-doping issues are relatively minor.
There are bigger issues - for a start, due to demographic issues and changing lifestyles, Test cricket is gasping. In the home of Test cricket (and I say this with all respect and no sarcasm) a Test series between the world No. 1 and No. 2 will be played over three games and a cash rich five-match one-day series has been slotted in. Also in England, first-class cricket is increasingly being played in April and May to allow T20 to be played in the middle of summer. In Australia last year, home batsmen who were out of form had no four-day cricket to go back to because the Big Bash was on in the middle of the season. It is happening everywhere. The greater issue of concern, therefore, is whether the same changes that saw the death of inland letters and long-playing records, that are seeing dangerous shifts from living within your means to living off your debt, are now encircling Test cricket.
There again, India is the enemy. But India is one of ten countries that play Tests. Even if India is the big bad wolf, that still leaves 36 encounters not involving them. Surely those should be in the pink of health. They aren't. Looking at India is fast becoming the lazy solution; there is a far more critical global problem.
But didn't the BCCI scuttle the World Test Championship? Now that is an interesting, if inconvenient, one. The WTC was not part of the television rights deal and the rights holders, who have invested a lot of money, and are not in the business of losing it, suggested that they would recover more from the Champions Trophy than from the WTC. My information is that they asked the ICC if they could make the relevant deduction in rights payable, and if so, they would be happy to include the WTC. The ICC was unwilling to take that stance; in effect, they wanted their share of the rights but wanted someone else to take part of the losses. In business terms that is untenable. If the ICC, and member countries, were so deeply committed to the WTC, they could have put in the money.
As they can with countries that cannot afford the expensive equipment that is needed for the DRS. So on that count, we now have a situation, agreed to by all, where the richer countries have access to what most believe is better decision-making while the poorer nations have to make do with what they have. It was budgets that came in the way of DRS for Sri Lanka versus Pakistan. It is an old issue. The ICC wants television companies to pay for DRS equipment.
On the DRS itself, there is a deeper issue. If the objective is to ensure fairer decision-making, it should be allowed on every decision, not one or two. As it stands today, it doesn't eliminate the howler for No. 9 or 10 if the two reviews have been used up. The lesser batsmen effectively live in a non-DRS system. We have created a hierarchy - haves and have-nots.
| If India is indeed wrong, the rest of the world can come together and alienate India. But they don't. Because they want Indian money but not an Indian point of view | |||
And then there is the IPL, the plague and AIDS combined, Genghis Khan and Idi Amin reincarnated, the evil monster that raids countries and steals their players, and which has this stupid clause that requires players to get a no-objection certificate from their home boards. Again, if the IPL is so bad, unlike Packer's WSC, which was such a breath of fresh air and reinvigorated world cricket, surely the rest of the world can fence India out. The IPL needs overseas players and it will be substantially reduced in stature, might even die, if they don't play or are not allowed to play. Again, you need to act not just complain. And I presume asking the IPL to share its time and revenues with other countries was no more than a little aside - like the Premiership sharing its profits with Luxembourg, Belgium and Iceland, the NBA with Honduras, Costa Rica and Cuba.
The truth is, and Tony Greig is both intelligent and shrewd enough to know it, that independent of cultures, civilisations and people, organisations with power behave similarly. Forget the global political reality, even in our tiny little cricket world, Australia has behaved that way, England has, and South Africa has too. (India, for example, was wrong in supporting those who were then running Zimbabwe cricket, as were England and Australia in supporting cricket in apartheid South Africa.)
The accent that power speaks in is not Gujarati, Midlands or Afrikaans, it is universal. But across cultures and civilisations, people have stood up and fought what they perceive to be wrong. If India is indeed wrong, the rest of the world can come together and alienate India. But they don't. Because they want Indian money but not an Indian point of view. Are they guilty of complicity then?
I am writing this because I am disappointed by the ingratitude of world cricket towards the Indian fan who spends hard-earned money, braves difficult times, and whose enthusiasm for cricket survives many ordeals. He, and indeed she, plays a big role in keeping global cricket alive. If Namibia and Bermuda, and Japan and Italy, receive assistance, the Indian fan contributes to it. A little occasional thank you from brethren across the world might be gracious.
I hope Tony Greig, and some others blessed with equal experience and insight, use their skills to enrich the game as they have in the past. They waste it now by taking the lazy option attacking someone they believe is an opponent. We are too small a game to be caught up and driven astray by an us-and-them attitude.
Harsha Bhogle commentates on the IPL and other cricket, and is a television presenter and writer. His Twitter feed is here
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Harsha Bhogle is one of the world's leading cricket commentators. Starting off as a chemical engineer and going on to work in advertising before moving into television, he is also a writer, quiz host, television presenter and talk-show host, and a corporate motivational speaker. He was voted Cricinfo readers' "favourite cricket commentator" in a poll in 2008, and one of his proudest possessions is a photograph of a group of spectators in Pakistan holding a banner that said "Harsha Bhogle Fan Club". He has commentated on nearly 100 Tests and more than 400 ODIs.
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Harsha, India seems to be neglecting Test cricket as never before. Why can't India go in balance with all formats? Of course world cricket completely depends on India. It's not a hidden thing. What if fans get fatigue about T20 like ODIs which were not started not too long before? We should believe that only Test cricket has survived since its inception. It's too early to say about T20. It's still a infant. We are already feeling bored about T20 if it gets too much. India should learn to cooperate with others without being arrogant as they have hell lot of Cricket's money!
Posted by kesri1234 on (July 2, 2012, 20:53 GMT)Sounds too parochial for sure. This lecture seems to support only India and paints others as bad. As usual this is written by an Indian fan who is not happy when others have shown the bitter truth
Posted by salim on (July 2, 2012, 13:43 GMT)Excellent point, well made. Couldn't have said it any better. Thanks for covering a perspective that I (and I'm sure a lot of people) have thought about but struggled to put it into words. Secondly, thanks for reiterating a different view on the now-labored point about DRS and why it shouldn't be perceived to be the savior of cricket and everything wrong within it. Finally, thanks for clarifying what truly conspired in quashing of the WTC. Insightful and erudite, Harsha!
Posted by cric_follower on (July 2, 2012, 12:58 GMT)Master Stroke Harsha!! Brilliant dissertation of issues.
Posted byHarsha, as usual, has supported cricket..nothing more, nothing less. I fail to see that why is it so that a person who has not played cricket understands and actually is more concerned about cricket than a person who took up the game and played it as a professional. Tony Greig was always a good cricketer and a good thinker of the game. What I don't understand is that even after so much experience, why can't such learned people stop playing the blame-game and actually start contributing to the game which has made him what he is.
Blaming people or game is certainly not going to help the cause. If you think that something is going wrong, try to justify your thoughts to yourself, and then put a point across to the ICC, which I'm sure that they won't ignore the words of a good cricketer.
Posted by nuru76 on (July 1, 2012, 0:00 GMT)HB u have nicely and correctly taken words from our hearts . As for Mr grieg , he did wonderful and special things for cricket globally yes , but now his absence and alienation from shift of balance of power and a somewhat revolution in world ckt due to IPL has seemingly contributed significantly to brash irrate tweets and "lectures" by him , infact expect more .
Posted bySomeone shoudl inform Grieg that IPL does not stand for Asian Premier League - maybe he should start one if he wants one
Posted by Rohit42 on (June 30, 2012, 18:18 GMT)Finally somebody said it
Posted bygood piont harsha, ipl helps local players get good money everybody earns money it is cricket for us entertainment not heart surgery that it is so important.
Posted byThe UDRS debate should be framed as "what package of technologies and rules allows us to have the fewest howlers at a cost all boards can afford and without resulting in undue stoppages that irritate fans?". Looked at this way the call to make hotspot and hawkeye mandatory while limiting teams to just two challenges (to avoid undue delays and undermining umpires) appears daft. Surely a combination of third umpires reviewing all decisions on slowmo replays plus a pitch map would eliminate most howlers at little additional cost and delays. Make this mandatory and let those boards that want to pay for hawkeye and hotspot to do so.