Wednesday 6 August 1997
Plan for English cricket to rise from Ashes
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins, Cricket Correspondent
RECOGNISING that English cricket is "no longer a force in the
world", Lord MacLaurin, chairman of the England and Wales
Cricket Board, introduced radical changes to the structure of
professional cricket at Lord`s yesterday.
They include a three-group county championship with play-offs
for final placings, starting next year, and, from 1999, a
25-match 50-overs national league plus a knockout cup involving
all 38 counties.
Together with the recent shake-up of the game`s administration
and changes also proposed yesterday for the recreational
game, they amount to the most far-reaching reforms in domestic
cricket this century.
The aim, said Lord MacLaurin, was to create "a virtuous circle of
success" starting with maximum participation in schools and
leading seamlessly to financially viable county cricket, a successful Test side and reinvestment.
It is expected that the proposals will be ratified by the
First-Class Forum, the voice mainly of the 18 first-class
counties, on Sept 15 after yesterday`s presentation by Lord
MacLaurin and Tim Lamb, the board`s chief executive, was enthusiastically received.
Reforming the four-day county championship into three equal
groups of six counties each, with televised play-offs in September, was preferred to a two-division competition.
From 1998 there will be 14 first-class matches per county, a decrease of 12 days on the current programme. The national
league, which will replace the Benson and Hedges Cup and the Sunday league from 1999, will be played in midweek and some Sundays. It will increase the minimum of one-day matches from 19 to
27.
It is this questionable balance between 56 first-class and a
maximum of 30 one-day matches for successful counties each
season which shows the deal to be as much about making money for
cricket as raising the standard of the England team.
The NatWest trophy will be "cricket`s FA Cup" from 1999, with 60
teams competing, including all 38 counties from England and
Wales, plus Scotland, Ireland, Holland and Denmark. The 18
first-class counties will enter two teams each.
The second XI championship will be replaced by a divisional
"County Board" tournament in which first-class and minor counties
will compete under Australian grade cricket rules: two-day single innings matches with provision for outright two-innings victories.
The hardest part of the board`s job will be to disentangle longestablished leagues, especially in the North of England, but
parochialism is to be sacrificed if the seamless transition of
talented players from the school playground to the Test arena is
to be achieved.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)