Liverpool Competition vote for Premier status (24 February 1999)
THE MERRY-GO-ROUND of debates and negotiations about the future of recreational cricket in Lancashire continues to turn
24-Feb-1999
24 February 1999
Liverpool Competition vote for Premier status
by Paul Edwards
THE MERRY-GO-ROUND of debates and negotiations about the future
of recreational cricket in Lancashire continues to turn. After a
series of meetings and some tough discussions the officials at
Old Trafford received their first major boost in more than two
years on January 25th when the clubs in the Penketh's Liverpool
Competition voted 23-0, with one abstention, to accept the offer
of the Lancashire Cricket Board to become one of their Premier
Leagues. Cricket in the new structure should begin in 2000.
But perhaps the dominant mood at last month's EGM was the
solidarity felt by the 24 clubs in the competition and a
determination that all of them must be part of the Premier League
set-up, not merely the 12 who will make up the top division.
Thus, Fleetwood Hesketh, Maghull and Orrell, who play their first
matches in the competition in April having voted to leave the
Southport and District League last summer, will also be part of
the new structure, although unless they gain promotion at the
first attempt they will be in a First Division of 12 clubs, one
or more of whom will be promoted each year.
It is the firm intention of the LCB that a Pyramid structure
involving other local leagues be established within two years,
although the details of this will need to be hammered out in
future meetings. And the Competition's Management Committee was
left in no doubt that their negotiations with the LCB would be
subjected to the closest scrutiny. The acceptance of Premier
League status should emphatically not be seen as the clubs
surrendering their sovereignty over the Liverpool Competition,
and the Chairman Eric Hadfield reflected the prevailing mood: "I
feel confident that we have taken the right decision but a lot of
negotiating remains to be done and we are looking forward to
talking to the LCB."
The effects of the proposed change in the short term would be
mainly limited to an even higher profile for a league which can
justifiably claim to be one of the best in the country and the
possibility of a lucrative sponsorship deal. The LCB has accepted
the Competition's insistence on playing the timed game rather
than the limited overs variety, although the English Cricket
Board has insisted that sufficient time be allowed for games to
be at least 120 overs long, so a 12:30 start appears likely with
a requirement that overs be bowled at a rate of 17 an hour. In
the context of the recent history of Premier League negotiations
the current situation is partly the result of a major change of
tactics by the LCB, who, after gauging the opposition from
leagues in East Lancashire, decided not to try to recruit clubs
from all over the county but concentrate on identifying the
strongest leagues who might be suitable candidates for
Premiership status. Thus, the Vaux Northern League has been made
the same offer as that put to the Competition, although we
understand that objections to the longer game and other
misgivings, about feeder leagues for example, are well-entrenched
among V.N.L. clubs who want to hold further discussions with both
the LCB and ECB. Their Secretary Ken Tattersall pointed to other
leagues in the country who are playing matches of 110 overs or
less and asked: "What is so sacrosanct about 120 overs?" He felt
that matches of this length would make too many demands upon
family lives and work commitments of players who are, after all,
recreational cricketers.
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