South Africa to ring the changes (9 December 1998)
SOUTH AFRICA are to experiment by combining first-class provinces into regional teams next winter to provide a stronger tour itinerary for England, where regional cricket has also been under discussion recently
09-Dec-1998
9 December 1998
South Africa to ring the changes
By Charles Randall
SOUTH AFRICA are to experiment by combining first-class provinces
into regional teams next winter to provide a stronger tour
itinerary for England, where regional cricket has also been under
discussion recently.
The England Cricket Board have considered the possibility of
combining county sides for incoming tours, but the suggestion
produced only lukewarm reaction at October's meeting of firstclass counties.
John Carr, an ECB official, said that the existing first-class
structure made setting up regional teams impractical. "It has
been discussed, but it is problematic to schedule. I don't
suppose it has been ruled out of court completely," he said.
The problem remains that, in England, touring countries have met
too much indifferent opposition for too long - it is almost
routine for counties to rest their overseas player and some
leading bowlers - and the English situation is causing concern
abroad and, privately, resentment. South Africa are to combine
provinces by region for England's visit.
For example, Free State and Griqualand West plan to merge against
England in the central area, Western Province and Boland in Cape
Town, Gauteng and Northerns in Johannesburg, with Border joining
Eastern Province.
The problems of organising the crowded English domestic programme
are well illustrated by the 1999 schedule, with the new
two-division national league and Super Cup, both unsponsored,
existing alongside the County Championship, while the World Cup
and its warm-up matches thunder through May and June.
The first-class season has never started earlier than next
summer's April 8, and the championship begins on April 13, four
days earlier than last summer. There is a new-look 50-overs
NatWest Trophy competition, involving all the county boards,
Wales minor county, Scotland and Ireland, and with Holland and
Denmark competing for the first time.
The professional counties do not enter the NatWest until the
third round, and the successful teams from the early rounds are
guaranteed a home tie. The draw this time has no potential for
pairing together the amateurs against the professionals of the
same county.
The final at Lord's is a Sunday fixture for the first time,
though the 1997 final was re-scheduled to a Sunday owing to
Princess Diana's funeral. The semi-finals have been split to
different days, another innovation.
Five provisional fixtures have been arranged for the New
Zealanders in June in case they fail to progress through the
final rounds of the World Cup.
The placings in the championship will determine the make-up of
the two-division set-up for 2000.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)