Green light for evening thrash (1 April 1999)
Another county competition of 25 overs a side, packed into 3.5 hours on summer evenings, is likely to give exciting, quickfire competition to new audiences but simultaneously militate against the development of potential Test cricketers from next
01-Apr-1999
1 April 1999
Green light for evening thrash
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
Another county competition of 25 overs a side, packed into 3.5 hours
on summer evenings, is likely to give exciting, quickfire competition
to new audiences but simultaneously militate against the development
of potential Test cricketers from next season.
The constant battle between what is good for the production of a
worthy Test side and what is commercially viable for county clubs was
never more evident than in yesterday's spring meeting of the First
Class Forum at Lord's, which also rejected the idea of visiting
captains having an automatic right to bat or field first in
championship matches.
As the wave of innovation continues to surge over English cricket,
much of it admittedly for the good, the things which matter most,
like a balanced programme and decent pitches, are being swiftly
eroded. Everyone was agreed that too many pitches were unsatisfactory
last season and that too many four-day games ended early. But given
the chance to dispense with the toss to avoid the preparation of
pitches favouring the home side, the counties voted instead to keep
the status quo, citing the fact that with the points for a win
reduced from 16 to 12 next year, the 25-point penalty for any county
found guilty of producing a seriously underprepared pitch becomes
more draconian.
The new tournament for all 18 first-class counties would probably be
played in mid-season between 5pm and 8.30 to attract home-going
workers and families. It would be added to the NatWest, the CGU
National League, the County Championship and to a revamped Benson and
Hedges SuperCup. The counties must choose by May 13 between reverting
to the original Benson and Hedges format or retaining the
eight-county SuperCup and introducing the evening league. There was a
feeling, said Tim Lamb, the England and Wales Cricket Board chief
executive, that with five fewer days of cricket next season in the
two main leagues, "the one-day programme is a few days light".
As expected there was no resolution of the financial debate between
the ECB and the Consortium of Test Match Grounds over staging
agreements for international matches, but representatives of both
sides were agreed that yesterday's meeting had enhanced the prospects
of a satisfactory compromise.
Lamb could report no consensus, however, on the final mix of county
matches from next season onwards. What is certain is that while the
England team will be cacooned from the effects of too much cricket by
the new England contracts which will finally be agreed on May 13, the
younger players hoping to take their places are going to be even more
stretched in future by the perceived need to find new and younger
audiences for county cricket.
"County cricket is a UKP 30 million business in its own right," argued
Lamb yesterday in an attempt to explain why the ECB set out last year
to reduce the amount of cricket played by professionals and will end
up two seasons later with considerably more, especially when the
expanded international programme is taken into account.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)