CMJ: ICC postpone plans for Test championship (17 June1998)
THE already congested international programme has persuaded the International Cricket Council to postpone plans for a World Test Championship , writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins
17-Jun-1998
17 June 1998
ICC postpone plans for Test championship
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE already congested international programme has persuaded the
International Cricket Council to postpone plans for a World Test
Championship, writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
A quadrennial tournament, fitted between existing Test series and the
one-day World Cup, had been recommended by an ICC sub-committee to
delegates from the world's cricketing countries meeting at Lord's last
week.
The ICC president, Jagmohan Dalmiya, said yesterday that the
committee, who started work a year ago to strengthen the standing of
Test cricket in parts of the world where it has not yet taken hold or
has become almost secondary to limited-overs internationals, would
continue to evaluate proposals for six months before reaching a
decision. Issues of timing and the need to "avoid commercial conflict
with member countries" require resolution.
David Richards, the ICC's chief executive, said that a world
championship might be run in conjunction with an ongoing 'league' of
Test nations, but that if such a ladder is to have complete integrity,
it would need an equitable programme of Test tours between all
countries. Each country, he added, would have to play all the others
in at least one three-match series, at home and away, over a
three-year period.
The prospect of Bangladesh becoming the 10th Test nation was also
postponed while three ICC appointees evaluate the strength of a new
first-class domestic tournament. Dalmiya said that there had been
progress "in all aspects of Bangladeshi cricket".
There was encouragement also for the West Indies after a home series
against England spoiled by the expensive abandonment of the Kingston
Test. No further Tests will be staged at Sabina Park until an ICC
official has watched a first-class match there on a satisfactory
pitch. But to offset the adverse influence of televised American
sport, especially basketball, the West Indies Board can now plan for a
World Cup in 2007. Matches will be played in familiar Caribbean
cricket centres and also in Bermuda, Canada and the US. The UK stages
the World Cup next season and South Africa hosts it in 2003.
The meeting awarded the next ICC Trophy, the World Cup's qualifying
tournament for non-Test nations, to Canada, in preference to Ireland
and the US. Turf pitches are to be installed at five grounds in
Toronto this year.
Under-19 World Cups will be held every two years so that each
generation of cricketers can play but the next major world event was
confirmed as being the ICC Knockout, involving all nine Test
countries, in Bangladesh from Oct 24 to Nov 4 this year. From the
proceeds, expected to be sufficient to give the ICC money for their
plans to develop cricket in countries where it has merely scratched
the surface of public attention, the ICC are planning to pay a
substantial salary to a new development manager.
The position will be based at Lord's and the successful candidate will
oversee development officers in five world regions. A playing
background will be desirable but drive, vision and management skills
are essential.
World development - and consolidation where the game is strong - is
increasingly the raison d'?tre of the ICC and is one reason why, in
Richards's words, they are keen to "build a culture for Test cricket".
Development officers have already started work - John Shepherd in the
Americas, Nigel Lawton in Europe, Nasim-ul-Ghani in Asia and Hussain
Ayob in Africa - with a fifth soon to take responsibility for East
Asia and the Pacific.
France and Uganda were promoted to associate membership status at the
meeting and Kuwait, Luxembourg and Malta have been admitted as
affiliate members. The recent agreement to form a unified body in the
US has renewed hopes of a purpose-built cricket stadium at the Disney
centre in Orlando and there are to be trials at Kuala Lumpar, Hong
Kong and Perth of the Australasian game, Super Max Cricket. If
successful, the ICC will give their endorsement and hope thereby to
attract new audiences and new players.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)