England Enjoy Relative Comforts In World Cup (12 Jul 1996)
ENGLAND will have to get the better of at least two Test-playing countries if they are to qualify for the second round when the next World Cup is staged on county and Test grounds round England and Wales in May and June, 1999
12-Jul-1996
12 July 1996
England enjoy relative comforts in World Cup
Christopher Martin-Jenkins reports on yesterday`s ICC meeting at
Lord`s
ENGLAND will have to get the better of at least two Test-playing
countries if they are to qualify for the second round when the
next World Cup is staged on county and Test grounds round England
and Wales in May and June, 1999. Despite that, the home country
were given a relatively comfortable draw yesterday by Sir Clyde
Walcott, chairman of the International Cricket Council, pulling
out balls from the bag live on television from the MCC Writing
Room at Lord`s.
England were drawn with Sri Lanka, India, South Africa, Zimbabwe
and the runners-up of next year`s ICC competition in group A.
The top three teams will play the top three in group B for semifinal places. There will be 30 matches in the first round, with
each country playing the other five in their group, nine games in
the second round and 42 matches in all, with a final at Lord`s in
June.
Having postponed for a year the tricky and potentially explosive
question of who should succeed Walcott as chairman next year, the
ICC were, in effect, opening the bidding yesterday for the allimportant television money. The intrusion of Sky television cameras into one of the most private rooms in the pavilion was symbolic.
The World Cup is the ICC`s competition now and although games
will be played in daylight next time, the cricketers will be in
coloured clothes. That is shameless, spurious commercialism. It
will convert not one new young cricketer, but there will be
spin-off profits.
By being drawn in the same group as Sri Lanka, the top seeds,
England, who were seeded eighth as a result of their poor showing
in India and Pakistan last winter, have avoided the country who
would on present form be favourites, the second seeds, Australia.
That was one small consequence of the wider debate which formed
the backcloth to this year`s meeting: the expansion of the game
into new lands.
Recent form suggests that England are inferior to Sri Lanka and
South Africa but that they should have the measure of India, Zimbabwe and whichever one of 22 countries finish as runners-up in
the qualifying ICC tournament, which is being held in Malaysia
from March 23 to April 12 next year.
The competition`s sensibly revised format will avoid the plethora
of meaningless games which pleased only the organisers of the
last tournament on the sub-continent. Details of fixtures, venues
and points available in the first two rounds will be announced
after the televised ICC final in Kuala Lumpur. Nepal, who were
elected as the 23rd associate member country, were too late to
take part next time.
That was one small consequence of the wider debate which formed
the backcloth to this year`s meeting: the expansion of the game
into new lands. There was evident resentment felt by some Test
countries, English officials not excluded, that countries where
the game is a minority interest already have too much say in the
affairs of world cricket. The feeling amongst the associates,
represented by Joe Buzaglo, of Gibraltar, and championed by Jagmohan Dalmiya, of India, is that the big fish have not done
enough to help the small ones to grow.
Buzaglo will be a member of the development committee established
at the meeting under the chairmanship of Dr Ali Bacher, of South
Africa. The other members are Julian Hunte, of the West Indies,
Ehsan Mani, of Pakistan, Krish Mackerdhuj, of South Africa and
the chief executive, David Richards. They will make recommendations to the 1997 conference as to how each of the senior nations
might do more to encourage the game in countries within their
sphere of influence. Holland`s participation in the NatWest Trophy is one small example.
There is to be a "change of emphasis" towards the "better" umpires being appointed more often.
A MAJORITY of the associates voted for Dalmiya in the first ballot for ICC chairman when Walcott`s official three-year term ends
next July. Krish Mackherdhuj, of South Africa, withdrew when neither of these two, nor the third candidate, Malcolm Gray, of Australia, received the necessary two-thirds majority from the nine
Test-playing countries, but when neither Dalmiya nor Gray got the
necessary six senior votes, Walcott ordered a new election next
year.
Partly mindful of another possible stalemate next year, the Council agreed a small review committee under the chairmanship of the
New Zealand banker Sir John Anderson to review all the ules of
the ICC. These have already been changed in various ways as the
organisation has become more political.
The first meeting of Test captains before the World Cup in Calcutta last February was rather overshadowed by the Sri Lankan
security crisis, but it was deemed to be valuable nonetheless and
the captains will meet again in London next May. Before that, in
Bombay in November, there will be a conference for some 15 of the
regular referees of Test and international cricket.
There was general agreement that the standard of umpiring in
Tests has been very variable but the remedy now proposed is a
cautious one. There is to be a "change of emphasis" towards the
"better" umpires being appointed more often.
To this end a revised, simplified form of assessment will be used
by referees and captains when, as they always have, they review
the performances of umpires after each major match. The new forms
will be used from August and the ICC hope the same assessments
will be used in domestic cricket so that everyone is familiar
with a common system.
It will in future be standard practice everywhere for television
replays to be used when there is any doubt about whether a ball
has crossed the boundary. This apart, there are no plans to extend the use of replays to help umpires. Bowlers suspected
of throwing by any umpire will in future, however, be subject to
a review panel made up of former Test players.
TO deal more decisively with these and other contentious issues,
such as the bribery allegations over which the ICC previously
felt they had no power to act, a full members` executive committee has been established to provide greater support for the
chairman and chief executive. Its members are still to be decided
but each of the Test countries will have one delegate.
Geoff Boycott`s televised pitch inspection will not be outlawed
by a new playing condition introduced by the ICC. In future, only
the captain and coach will be allowed to walk on and inspect the
wicket, though commentators such as Boycott will still be allowed
to perform their morning ritual.
World Cup Draw
GROUP A
Sri Lanka, India, South Africa, England, Zimbabwe, runner-up of
ICC Trophy.
GROUP B
Australia, West Indies, Pakistan, New Zealand, ICC Trophy
winners, ICC Trophy third place.
Each team play five round-robin matches. Top three teams in each
group enter second stage group of six teams. Top three teams in
group A play top three teams in group B. These nine matches
determine final league positions.
Top four qualify for semi-finals - first against fourth, second
against third.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)