6 January 1998
ICC tournament a moveable feast
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE one-day tournament originally planned for DisneyWorld in
Florida and moved to Sharjah last month for legal reasons has
run into sponsorship problems and will now be staged in
Bangladesh.
The International Cricket Council knockout tournament, with a
sponsor's name to be added shortly, will be played in Dhaka
between Oct 26 and Nov 4. England will take part, along with all
the Test countries, on their way to Australia.
It was Jagmohan Dalmiya, president of the ICC, who announced the
switch to Bangladesh in a press statement yesterday. The change
comes only three weeks after a meeting of the ICC's Management
Committee in Calcutta which decided to abandon the unequal
struggle to play the tournament in Florida and to hold it in
Sharjah instead.
A master in the art of squeezing maximum profits from one-day
tournaments, Dalmiya said: "This special event is being run for
one purpose only - to raise a large sum to fund the introduction
of the ICC development programme. It is important that we aim to
maximise the return for cricket. There are some restrictions on
sponsorship in Sharjah which will significantly reduce the
income and for this reason countries have adjusted their
programmes to permit the ICC knockout tournament to be scheduled
in Dhaka."
Dalmiya added that the ICC wished to record "deep appreciation"
to various boards for altering plans: Pakistan have adjusted
dates for Australia's visit in October; England agreed to divert
to Bangladesh; Zimbabwe to postpone a visit from the West
Indies; and India to make a compensatory visit to Zimbabwe in
October.
The sponsorship difficulties in Sharjah are undoubtedly related
to the fact that an Islamic state would not countenance
patronage from alcohol or tobacco companies. Television and
sponsorship contracts are still to be finalised but the ICC hope
to make a profit of well over £1 million from an event geared
specifically to raising money for development of the game in
parts of Asia, North America and Africa. David Richards, the
chief executive, said it was "not set in stone" that this would
be the only tournament of its kind, although some of the World
Cup profits will also go to the development fund in future.
The fact that England can make the tournament part of their
outward journey to Australia is convenient in one respect, in
that it will save them from making a separate journey in what is
already the busiest single year of international cricket in
which they have ever been involved. The England Cricket Board
will, however, have to make a difficult decision on whether to
treat this as part of the preparation and acclimatization for
Australia or to consider it another tournament for which one-day
specialists are required.
Simon Pack, the international tours director, said yesterday
that a draft of Australia's proposed tour programme is due
imminently. The first Test, usually at Brisbane, is expected at
the end of November and England will want to concentrate on two
innings cricket in the relatively short warm-up period before a
game which often dictates the course of the Ashes series.
The Board will be anxious to avoid pitfalls previously
encountered in Australia such as a match in the chilly
temperatures of Hobart immediately before a Test in sub-tropical
Queensland, but there will probably be no avoiding the need to
cater, in their selection, both for the Tests and the now
customary triangular one-day tournament in mid-tour.
RAJESH CHAUHAN, the off-spinner dropped by India because of
fears that he would be called for throwing, is not the only
player who has been 'warned off' by the International Cricket
Council.
Another off-spinner, Kumara Dharmasena of Sri Lanka, is also the
subject of doubts by the special committee on suspect actions.
Two other Sri Lankan spinners, Muttiah Muralitharan and
Kelaniyage Silva, were reported to the panel by the former
Australian captain and coach Bobby Simpson, referee in the India
v Sri Lanka Tests before Christmas.
Muralitharan has been passed by the panel but the ICC have
recommended that Chauhan and Dharmasena not be selected until
'remedial action' has been taken.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)