Cricket Diary (21 August 1999)
English Test cricket is on the up
21-Aug-1999
21 August 1999
Cricket Diary
Charles Randall
English Test cricket is on the up. According to recent market
research, a significant number of people feel that "Test cricket is
getting more popular".
Public perception might be like a batting helmet without a grille -
comforting until something hits you in the teeth - but it is
something marketing folk use as serious currency. Channel 4's poll in
July suggested that 24 per cent of the 16 to 34 age bracket thought
cricket popular, twice as many as in May.
The television company naturally assume their coverage has fostered
this perception, and it is hard to disagree after the mediocre day
suffered by Nasser Hussain's team at the Oval yesterday.
Opinions could yet persuade Cornhill Insurance to extend their
financial support for England's Test cricket when their current
contract runs out next year.
The number of viewers who rang Channel 4 to complain about Thursday's
interrupted coverage was not high. "We do not disclose that sort of
information," said a spokesman, "but the number was in tens not
hundreds."
There were two breaks in playing time for racing from York's big Ebor
meeting. Today there will be an hour's absence from the Oval
mid-afternoon for races at Sandown and Chester, plus another
10-minute gap.
Michael Henderson, The Telegraph cricket correspondent, will be
discussing English cricket on Channel 4 during the Oval lunch
interval today alongside Christopher Martin-Jenkins, his predecessor.
It is fair to say that these two figures do not agree how deep the
scalpel should be applied to England's set-up or how many transplant
operations are necessary. It promises to make for interesting viewing.
The New Zealanders have been accused of racial abuse by the touring
Sri Lanka A party, stemming from their one-day match at Milton Keynes
on July 7.
Stan Jayasinghe, the tour manager perhaps better known as a former
Leicestershire player, has asked his board in his tour report to seek
clarification from the New Zealand authorities about remarks made
during play.
John Gray, the New Zealand manager, said no complaints were received
at the time.
Yorkshire have set a date for the testimonial match for Colin
Chapman, their popular reserve wicketkeeper, who has had to retire
because of epilepsy. The afternoon match at Brighouse on Sept 6 is
bound to be well supported.
Medical advice convinced Chapman, 28, that long hours of
concentration in sunshine, irregular meal times and frequent car
journeys would aggravate his condition.
Some cricketers such as Tony Greig and Jonty Rhodes, less severe
epileptics, have forged international careers, but before modern
treatments the risk was higher. For example Johnny Briggs, the
England and Lancashire left-arm spinner, suffered an early death at
the age of 39 in 1902.
It was to a wicketkeeper Briggs addressed his laconic remark: "I
suppose I'm out then" when a delivery from Charles Kortright knocked
his leg-stump 18 yards back in a Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's.
Motorbike was the way Matthew Maynard eased the infamous 4.5-hour
journey to the championship venue of Colwyn Bay from South Wales this
week.
Glamorgan's captain, who passed his motorcycle test this year,
borrowed a Honda to slice well over an hour off the travel time.
Mike Fatkin, Glamorgan's secretary, said: "Matthew has been hankering
to do this for quite a while, but it's not something we would
encourage." No sponsored bikes, then.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)