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The Antiguans have embraced the new format alright
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Early last week, with Antigua revelling in an exciting new world of
Stanford 20/20, and England in a frenzy over one of the highpoints of their
domestic season, India took a reluctant step. More than three years
have elapsed since English marketing expert Stuart Robertson devised a
method to refuel interest in county cricket, but finally the Indian
board (BCCI) has decided to incorporate Twenty20 into their
first-class calendar, that too owing to pressure.
Inevitably the move has been criticised from a cricketing point of
view. Some feel that it will affect batting techniques, others feel it will
trigger burn-out, and Navjot Sidhu brushed it aside as "Underwear
cricket". That's probably the best way to look at it: something to be
laughed at but something that can indeed make a difference. Robertson
had no qualms in spelling out that it was a means to an end, not an
end in itself. The key was not to view it as a sport, but as a marketing
method with a slice of pizzazz.
It's worked alright. All 6500 tickets for Essex's game against
Yorkshire at Chelmsford were snapped up within four hours of going on
sale and there was hardly any leg-room. Despite the initial stages of
the Stanford 20/20 not being that high on quality, what with
43-year-old amateurs playing from tiny islands, the response hasn't
been that different. Lahore and Karachi had an overwhelming response
in Pakistan's first two editions. Same with cities around South Africa
and Australia - the WACA was sold out for the first time since 1981.
Forget domestic games, where grounds are jam-packed with eerieness,
India have recently found it tough to fill Test grounds.
Arguments that sprung up three years ago about it being a
one-dimensional game were perhaps exaggerated. Or maybe the best way
to look at it is to see it as a game that needs a different set of
skills. Bowlers don't just target the blockhole but have developed
ingenious ways to thrive in the system (Hylton Ackerman recently spoke
of a strategy by which bowlers sometimes don't mind conceding a single
so that the good batsmen get off strike). Harbhajan Singh thought it
would lead to the massacre of the spinners but the stats show he's way
off the mark. It encourages innovative fields and improvised
strokeplay and there's a certain thrill in ball-by-ball risk
management. The spectacular success in Pakistan and West Indies comes
as no surprise; Twenty20 contains all the attributes that tape-ball
cricket and beach cricket foster.
But can it actually make a difference in India? It's most definitely
worth a try. Social priorities, in big cities, no longer allow for
anyone to spare a whole day in a first-class game; malls, cinema
theatres and theme parks are a bigger temptation. Twenty20 only takes
slightly more time than a football match and, if scheduled during
prime-time, will invariably get urban viewers. The popularity of the
English Premier League - and you just need to walk into college
canteens, coffee bars or pubs to realise its impact - has much to do
with slick TV coverage and it's imperative that the BCCI realise its
importance.
For smaller towns, starved of star-studded international cricket, it
provides a perfect window. Few years back, an India-West Indies
women's one-dayer at Dhanbad had several people watching it from the
treetops because the stands were overflowing (there's a theory that
they came to see ladies but the more plausible explanation is that
they came to see cricket, since they normally get none). You can
imagine the atmosphere if Mahendra Singh Dhoni is placed in the
centre, with a licence to loot. And, if it works at all, first-class
cricketers will actually get a feel of playing in front of packed
houses before they enter the international cauldron.

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Twenty20 encourages the carnival atmosphere
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Like any other novelty, its success will largely depend how it's
executed. It's a game that allows for tremendous crowd involvement -
through prizes, mascots, memorabilia, music, and peppy announcements.
At Chelmsford the crowd couldn't get enough of banter with Eddie the
Eagle, the Essex mascot, and were thrilled when spectators' birthdays
were announced and songs dedicated. Not that these techniques would
work in India - the decibel levels, especially in large grounds, may
overshadow announcements of any sort - but it's important to find some
means of public involvement.
Allen Stanford's cash-splash has worked wonders - Garfield Armstrong,
a 41-year-old allrounder from Bahamas, pocketed US$10,000 for a
stunning catch, Darren Sammy, another allrounder from St Lucia, won
US$25,000 as a Man-of-the-Match award. Lalit Modi and friends must
pick up the baton, keeping in mind that the majority of domestic
cricketers in India struggle to find jobs and very few of them can
actually afford a lifestyle like their counterparts in England and
Australia.
Twenty20 will no doubt present a new challenge for the BCCI. They
would need to nail the right format, one that allows to pack in
national stars (unlike in England there would be no overseas pros to
draw in crowds) and they would need to fit it into a hectic schedule.
It's a format with limitations - the next Rahul Dravid isn't going to
come out of there - but it's also one with immense potential.
Underwear isn't entirely without use.
Siddhartha Vaidyanathan is staff writer of Cricinfo