Sri Lanka to try Twenty20 cricket
Sri Lanka are the latest country to announce that they will be jumping on the Twenty20 bandwagon and introducing a new domestic tournament later this year in an effort to rejuvenate spectator interest in domestic cricket
Charlie Austin
02-Jul-2004
Sri Lanka are the latest country to announce that they will be jumping on
the Twenty20 bandwagon and introducing a new domestic tournament later this
year in an effort to rejuvenate spectator interest in domestic cricket.
Twenty20 cricket, an action-packed 20-over slogfest, may scare the five-day
purists but it proved an unprecedented success in England last year, filling
up the deckchairs on the county grounds as an average of 5000 spectators
attended each match.
South Africa followed suit immediately, introducing their Pro20 Series last
summer, and Pakistan announced last month that they would be playing their first Twenty20 competition in October.
"Domestic cricket lacks spectator interest in Sri Lanka," said Jayantha Kudahetty, Sri Lanka Cricket's marketing director, "and we believe this
will be the ideal vehicle to revitalise enthusiasm among Sri Lanka's
cricket-loving public."
The inaugural tournament will be held on three separate days from
late August to early September. The schedule has been planned to ensure the
participation of Sri Lanka's top players.
Taj Television, the Dubai-based broadcaster that has held Sri Lanka's
cricket rights since 2001, has agreed to televise the 16-club knockout, the
final rounds of which will be played under floodlights. The board is now
searching for a sponsor.
Bid documents are available at www.srilankacricket.lk