New SuperSort format launched (20 April 1999)
JOHANNESBURG (South Africa) - In some quarters it is seen as a quick fix for the new millennium and needs time to settle before being condemned or approved
20-Apr-1999
20 April 1999
New SuperSort format launched
Trevor Chesterfield
JOHANNESBURG (South Africa) - In some quarters it is seen as a quick
fix for the new millennium and needs time to settle before being
condemned or approved. Yet the new first-class format for South Africa
also has a positive side.
While the 11 provinces get a chance to prove themselves in a pool
system, the Super Eight format for the SuperSoport series means the
strength versus strength problem has, for the moment, been solved.
Yet the fact remains, the United Cricket Board cannot go back to the
drawing board every four to five years and come up with a new scheme
to improve the levels of the game and increase skills if the pool of
players lacks depth.
Unlike South Africa, with its unusual, if unique set of circumstances,
the Australians have had no need to change their Sheffield Shield
format for more than 100 years. Even a form of bonus points, tried for
a couple of seasons, was thrown out as being a meaningless appendage
to the system. Why, asked Allan Border, change a successful formula
for one which is inferior. And he was referring to bonus points.
Down Under the only major changes have been the introduction of West
Australia, about 50 years ago and more recently, Tasmania.
To accommodate the aspirations of North West and Easterns the UCB
think tank has had to revamp the nine team league in a bid to achieve
the player growth ignored since unity in 1991/92. The argument is that
more players of colour should be fast tracked into the system than
infiltrated as has been the case.
So where does this leave Northerns? Seeded seven and ranked only
fourth in Pool A the lads from centurion are miffed at their lowly
status after finishing third on the log the last two seasons. What
pulled their seeding down was that amazing summer of 1996/97: Standard
Bank League winners but bottom of the A Section pile.
It was the sort of summer which had the coach Keith Medlycott
wondering when the ball was going to bounce the right way and Mark
Davis, in his first season as captain, battling to adjust from
limited-overs success to four-day trial and tribulation.
The bottom line, however, is that teams going into the Super Eight
play nine games and carry over their points from the pool system and
that means one game more than teams have played in the last four
seasons. The only way you get to play a 10th match is reaching the
final.
Just what sort of points system will be used is still to be decided,
but it might mean a new bonus points formula and extra points for a
win.
The limited-overs series format is far more equitable and a decided
improvement on this past summer's series where Northerns, the league
winners, were forced to wait in limbo for three weeks and it was a
critical factor which counted against them in the long term.
Source :: Trevor Chesterfield, Pretoria News