8 January 1997
Two-day game placed on the back burner
By Charles Randall
THE Yorkshire League have had to ease back on their push towards
100-overs cricket as a result of a meeting in Leeds on Monday
night.
Chris Hassell, the Yorkshire CCC chief executive and the main
proponent of restructuring, was hoping that a two-day premier
competition could be set up in 1998 as a nursery for the more ambitious players, but a hybrid version is to be proposed to the
league members instead.
Many people up and down the country believe that the base of the
England pyramid, club cricket, is due for an overhaul, but the
prospect of embracing Australian-style two-day leagues has become
a divisive issue.
A special meeting of the Yorkshire League on March 12 is to discuss setting up twin competitions - two-day and one-day - in 1999
after an experimental season of mixing the two styles in the 1998
fixtures.
The England Cricket Board see the 100-overs system as a
worthwhile bridge between club and county, giving a long first
innings prime importance in a two-day match, as in Australian
grade cricket.
The future of the best amateur players looks like being assigned
to super-clubs, those with sound track records and good facilities in a sensible geographical spread, though an altruistic
yearning to improve England`s Test team is not yet very high
among the priorities.
The minor counties have decided against picking up the 100-overs
baton in their championship. Last month, they rejected the recommendation made by their cricket committee, chaired by Alan Wilson, of Cumbria.
They have decided to stick with the existing two-day format,
which usually equates to two one-day club games in one match. It
is not an ideal system for improving standards, though some minor
counties have other factors to consider, such as spectator appeal.
So Yorkshire and the National Sporting Club in London have been
left to grapple with the two-day notion, and, for changes to be
made in time for 1998, resignations from existing competitions
and the restructuring of fixtures must be made by the end of this
month. This now looks unlikely.
It is doubtful that the league committees in Surrey, Middlesex,
Essex, Kent and Hertfordshire will all sanction the departure of
their best clubs.
Yorkshire League clubs such as Harrogate, Scarborough, Doncaster
and York, have made it clear they are eager to form a two-day
premier championship, which would involve Yorkshire`s county
academy.
Inviting clubs from outside, notably from the Bradford League, to
join is an obvious option, especially as Ray Illingworth,
Farsley`s president, is a supporter of the two-day form.
Yorkshire have offered to allocate, where requested, one staff
professional free of charge to each club for two-day competition.
In London, little progress has been made after December`s meeting
at the Caf Royal called by the Willis brothers - David, a director of the National Sporting Club, and Bob, the former England
captain.
The 11 clubs with the strongest playing records within the M25
perimeter expressed guarded approval at the NSC meeting.
They were Finchley, Teddington, Ealing (all Middlesex), Wimbledon, Esher, Cheam (Surrey), Bexley, Bromley (Kent), Gidea
Park & Romford, Wanstead (Essex) and Radlett (Hertfordshire).
David Willis emphasised the need to progress with full consultation because the proposed London league would cut across longestablished competitions in five counties.
He said: "The existing leagues are heading for 30 years of relatively settled existence, so clearly something like this could
produce a degree of rancour."
Aside from the political aspect, clubs embracing two-day leagues
have a price to pay. There is little fun in the 100-overs form
and it would have minimal appeal for the vast majority of weekend
players.
Professionalism might have to be introduced for the first time in
the south, where it has been an anathema for a century, and payments could even become quite widespread. However, with sponsorship and support from the ECB, finances should not become a problem.
The biggest obstacle to club restructuring is caution, based on
self-interest - which is exactly the accusation thrown at the
professional counties at a higher level.
For example, Lancashire, appalled by low club standards in the
county, have encountered vehement opposition in their attempt to
set up a premier league, and their plea for a two-day format has
been rejected - for the time being, at least.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)