ECB to set up ground meeting (2 February 1999)
THE power struggle between the England and Wales Cricket Board and the owners of Test match grounds came nearer to resolution yesterday when a spokesman for the ECB promised a meeting between the two sides
02-Feb-1999
2 February 1999
ECB to set up ground meeting
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE power struggle between the England and Wales Cricket Board
and the owners of Test match grounds came nearer to resolution
yesterday when a spokesman for the ECB promised a meeting between
the two sides. He was reacting to a strongly worded letter from
MCC secretary Roger Knight to Tim Lamb, chief executive of the
ECB, in Knight's capacity as secretary of the Test Match Grounds
Consortium.
The disagreement about how the profits from Tests should be
distributed was inevitable once the Test grounds got together, as
revealed in The Daily Telegraph last September, under the
chairmanship of Robert Griffiths, QC.
Until their demand that the board should negotiate joint terms
for the staging of big matches, a standard rate of 7.5 per cent
of the face value of Test tickets (and five per cent of tickets
to MCC for cup finals at Lord's) was all Test grounds received
back from the board. The overall profit from the rest of the gate
receipts and from television, sponsorship and perimeter
advertising has always been evenly distributed between the 18
first-class counties.
Threats have been made by the board and the consortium to stage
internationals on smaller county grounds but the issues at stake
are too important to both sides for a compromise not to be
agreed.
It is estimated the counties would lose 9 million pounds in an average
season if overall attendance were to be reduced by 80,000, as it
would be if matches were played instead at the next largest
county grounds.
ECB officials recognise the need to improve facilities for big
matches but say they also have a responsibility to less wealthy
counties.
But there is frustration on the part of the consortium that the
board have been dragging their heels on the question of how much
money should go back to the main Test stadiums.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)