Champions to pocket £100,000
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE County Championship, much the most prized of British
cricket's domestic competitions but hitherto only narrowly its
most rewarding, is to have prize money commensurate with its
status. This year's Britannic Assurance Championship will be
worth £100,000 to the winners, £30,000 more than the amount,
itself a record, won last year by Glamorgan.
Second prize will be £45,000 and the clubs finishing third and
fourth will win £22,000 and £15,000 respectively. Counties
finishing from fifth to ninth will get no more than last year:
rewards drop from £10,000 for finishing fifth to £6,000 for
ninth. Divided among 11 or more players, that is only a small
bonus but from this season every win in the championship will
attract £2,000 compared with £1,000 last year.
The increased money will strengthen the case of those who argue
that four-day county cricket is genuinely competitive and that
no match is without incentive. Even bottom-of-the-table contests
late in the season will have prize money at stake.
Opponents of a two-division championship gained an influential
recruit yesterday when, in a foreword to the new Playfair
Cricket Annual (£4.99), the coach of South Africa, Bob Woolmer,
warns that it would be unlikely to produce stronger England
teams.
He writes: "I doubt that such a system will work because it will
lead to a transfer system where the rich become richer and the
poor poorer. This might lead to some counties going under."
Instead, Woolmer calls for fewer matches and says they should be
played on batsman-friendly pitches which teach bowlers the value
of line and length.
Nottinghamshire have already topped £1 million in ticket
receipts for this summer's fourth Test against South Africa and
the first of the one-day triangular tournament matches between
Sri Lanka and South Africa at Trent Bridge.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)