England: Two divisions will result in 'harder edge' (4 December 1998)
COUNTY cricket took the plunge towards a more competitive game yesterday when it decided to go for two divisions in 2000 with promotion and relegation
04-Dec-1998
4 December 1998
England: Two divisions will result in 'harder edge'
By Peter Deeley
COUNTY cricket took the plunge towards a more competitive game
yesterday when it decided to go for two divisions in 2000 with
promotion and relegation.
At the end of a two-day England and Wales Cricket Board meeting
at Lord's, the 18 counties and MCC, who make up the First-class
Forum, decided by 15-1, with three abstentions, that after 109
years with the present system, the poor state of the game in this
country demanded radical changes.
Glamorgan voted against the proposal while Durham, Essex and MCC
abstained.
Lord MacLaurin, chairman of the ECB, said: "We can raise the
profile of the game and improve the quality of the players by
making this change." He was confident that England at
international level "will benefit from the introduction of a
harder-edged competition which has been missing in county
cricket". Tim Lamb, the board's chief executive, said the move
would help to reduce the "gap in standard" between the domestic
game and Test cricket.
Counties were assured by the board that they would not suffer
financially by being in the lower division and that efforts would
be made to prevent a football-style scenario with the best
players bought up by the most powerful clubs.
Next summer will see the last year of the present championship in
its one-division form. Teams will then be divided into two
leagues of nine based on the 1999 table and the following year
will see three teams promoted and three relegated.
Clubs will play the other eight sides in each division on a
home-and-away basis. Although many sides favour calling the new
divisions Premier and First, that decision has yet to be
finalised.
David Graveney, speaking as the chief executive of the
Professional Cricketers' Association, said he was confident that
most players would support the change.
With Britannic Assurance ending their sponsorship of the
championship this year, the board are looking for a new backer
and Lord MacLaurin believes the two-division format will be
financially attractive to business.
The alternative proposal for a regional competition to run in
tandem with an unchanged championship was strangled almost at
birth.
The only other possibility was to keep the structure in its
present form but Lord MacLaurin said: "No change was not an
option.
"Cricket is a business. You can't go on looking at marketing
information which gives you all the wrong signals and still say
'we will stay where we are'.
"We have been singularly unsuccessful for too many years and we
have to change things around - and that we have done.
"I don't think it is the sole answer to our failure at
international level, but it is a move forward. It isn't a magical
cure to all our ills. Other things have to happen but this is
part of the jigsaw we have put together for raising the standard.
"It is certainly going to be better for us than a system which
has failed us over the past dozen years or so.
"Over a period of time, we should certainly produce better
international cricketers. We have 400 in this country at the
moment and we really should have one of the best international
teams in the world."
A year ago, the counties voted down similar proposals and Lord
MacLaurin admitted it had then "all been done in a bit of a rush.
We weren't in a position to put financial safeguards to the
counties then.
"Maybe the two-division scheme is coming through a year later
than we would have liked but it has been well backed this time."
Some counties have expressed fears that lack of support because
of prolonged failure to get out of the lower division could lead
to their extinction.
Lamb admitted: "It has been a concern in the past. But now there
will be a fluidity - not only with the championship but the
two-division National League [one-day game] - which makes it
unlikely a side will languish at the bottom of both leagues for
any length of time."
To combat financial worries, counties have been reassured that
they will get the same share from central funds whichever
division they are in.
Some clubs also fear the possibility of the richest and most
successful counties cornering all the best available talent. Lamb
said there were no plans presently for any "substantive changes"
to the present registration system which seeks to prevent this
happening.
The New Look Two divisions, names presently undecided, but
Premier and First favoured. Teams will be allocated to their
division based on the final table of the 1999 season. Counties
will play each team in the same division on a home-and-away
basis, giving 16 four-day championship matches. At the end of
2000 the bottom three teams in the upper league will be relegated
and the top three in the lower league promoted. A sponsor has yet
to be found, but more prize-money will be earmarked for the top
division.
In 1999 Batsmen will have a free hit in the one-day National
League following any no-ball. Points for a championship win will
be reduced from 16 to 12 and increased for a draw from three to
four. The number of four-day Second XI matches will be increased
from two to six. Counties narrowly rejected proposal to play the
Second XI championship on uncovered pitches.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)