By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE Test and County Cricket Board gave a dinner last night in the
Long Room at Lord`s to honour their recently retired chief executive, Alan Smith.
Having battled with an unwieldy system for running first-class
cricket in England and worked with dedication for a better
one, the man known throughout the game by his initials A. C.
will have been delighted at the outcome of a meeting held before
the dinner to approve the articles of association for the new
First Class Forum.
With only minor alterations the articles laid down in the report
of the David Morgan working party were unanimously approved
under the guidance of Lord MacLaurin, whose first official
gathering this was as chairman of the board.
Board members were impressed by the speed with which the
chairman of Tesco dealt with the business in hand. The procedures for electing the main committees on the new England and
Wales Board, which replaces the TCCB next January, were reportedly agreed with barely a murmur of dissent.
Richard Little, the TCCB spokesman, said afterwards: "The
committees on the new board will be smaller and therefore
more likely to agree a consensus more quickly. I am especially
pleased that the cricket advisory committee, which currently
has 24 members, will in future have only 13 under David
Acfield`s continued chairmanship, yet every facet of cricket
will be represented on the committee."
The unanimity yesterday suggests that Warwickshire have decided
for the time being to swim with the tide. Their committee
remains unhappy that the FCF will have the right to approve
all matters of cricketing and financial importance before the
ECB`s management committee can make decisions, in effect as an
agency controlling the game from outside.
They object also to the proposal of simple majority for FCF decisions, believing that the 13 counties without Test grounds will
continue to feed undeservedly on the fruits provided by the
board.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)