Stabroek News Sunday

Nothing to do with cricket

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Patrons of the current T20 matches in the CPL, whether at the stadiums or via television, are witnessing a nonstop array of diversions – carnival outfits; steelband music; scantily clad dancers; one-handed catches by spectators; individual mask contests; etc – that mostly begin before the first ball has been bowled and often continue long after. It has been proclaimed, and often in anger, that these diversions simply have nothing to do with cricket per se, and that comment is essentiall­y true, but here’s what is missing from the assessment – that is precisely a major reason for the continuing rise in popularity of the shorter game. Apart from shortening it, the developers and promoters of T20 have actually done little to the game itself, but have instead cleverly turned their attention to providing additions that truly have nothing directly to do with cricket but which have significan­tly transforme­d the entertainm­ent quotient for the spectators of the sport.

Despite all the critique from the purists, the major difference on the field as an attraction between Test cricket and T20 is that the former takes 5 days or some 30 hours to complete, while the latter is often done in 3 hours. The grounds are the same; all the gear used is the same; the bowling is the same; you get out the same way; a boundary is still four or six runs; the umpires still run the games; etc. can no longer present a singer with a microphone in front of a group of static musicians; they must now have multiple dancers, elaborate lighting and pyrotechni­c effects; even hydraulic stages to make performers appear and disappear. Elaborate half-time shows, with bigname performers, are now part of many sports events, and costuming for athletes is now a multi-million dollar business. We live in an age of film and video effects that can create heart-stopping presentati­ons, and that effort to propel emotion or energies in audiences is with us in every arena. The T20 business people are simply playing to that trend in the society and the various behaviours the television broadcasts bring into our homes show the positive audience reactions. In a recent CPL match between Jamaica and Trinidad, the camera captured two buxom women in the stands, one Jamaican, one Trini, each waving their country’s banner and good-naturedly trying to get their flag captured by the camera. The sequence ended with the two of them hugging each other and collapsing with laughter.

I grew up with Test cricket, that’s all there was, so I am aware of the greater endurance required to play 5 days straight, and the more intricate techniques of building a long innings, and the artistry of a Brian Lara dissecting a field, etc, and certainly you will find those achievemen­ts in the 5-day game, but the essential point here is that the fans have some measure of all those things in T20. And indeed, if you ask them, they have cricket and more; that’s precisely why they’re in the stands; it’s more than cricket; it’s life today. Turn on the TV for the next CPL game and you’ll see for yourself.

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