Gavaskar Launches International Team Of The Year Rankings (18 Dec 1996)
Sunil Gavaskar`s firm Professional Management Group has floated a scheme to select, each year, the best international cricket team of that period
18-Dec-1996
18 December 1996
Gavaskar launches International Team of the Year rankings
Sunil Gavaskar`s firm Professional Management Group has floated a
scheme to select, each year, the best international cricket team
of that period.
The scheme is effective retrospectively from May 1995.
The team picked as the best in each season will be named the Ceat
International Cricket Team of the Year, with a prize of Rs 10
million.
PMG director Sumedh Shah, announcing the scheme, said that performances in both formats of the game - Tests and one-dayers -
would be considered and a three-judge panel comprising Sunil
Gavaskar, Clive Lloyd and Ian Chappell will allot points after
each Test and one day international.
The judges will also take into account number of matches played,
percentage of wins, ratio of Tests to one dayers, quality of the
opposition and other factors.
A team winning a Test at home will get six points, and nine
points for an away win. The trio of judges indicated that this
system had been thought of because since 1970, out of 658 Tests
played thus far, home wins were 227 as compared to 149 away wins.
The winner of a one day international will get two points, and a
bonus point will be added if there are more than two participating countries. In other words, a win in a triangular will rate
three points, in a quadrangular tournament a win rates four
points, and so on.
No points will be awarded for a drawn Test or an abandoned onedayer, but a Test tie will be worth three points and a similar
result in a one-dayer will be worth one point.
Shah said the idea germinated during a casual discussion which
took place on the day the first Ceat International Cricketer of
the Year award was presented, to Brian Lara of the West Indies,
last September.
Circulars were sent to all cricket-playing countries, and the
answers were positive, Shah said, adding that a copy of the circular had been sent to the International Cricket Council for its
information.
Sumedh Shah added that if the scheme had been in vogue from the
1992-1993 season onwards, then the West Indies, Australia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka would have won the awards in the respective
years.
Source :: Rediff On The Net (https://www.rediff.co.in)