Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

England told to take risks with brave cricket

- Agencies sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com n

England’s cricketers have been told to spice up their playing style to attract a new generation of players and fans, even if it reduces the chances of winning. Encouragin­g the national teams to take more risks and produce exciting cricket is a central pillar of the England and Wales Cricket Board’s new strategy to attract youngsters into the game.

The ECB leadership wants to shed the image of a sport that can seem like a “privileged pastime” and inaccessib­le to the masses - a message that has been delivered to the England players.

“The England teams are very clear that part of their responsibi­lity is playing bold and brave cricket,” ECB chief executive Tom Harrison said on Monday. “(Test captain) Joe Root and (oneday captain) Eoin Morgan understand their responsibi­lity to be playing exciting cricket for future generation­s to connect with and for fans of the game to get behind us. “It’s a very deliberate strategy. It doesn’t work every time you go out on the park. But we understand that it’s more likely you’re going to be forgiven for having a bad day if you’re doing everything to try to win a game, as opposed to not trying to lose it, which is a very key difference in positionin­g.” Asked if boosting the health of the game with exciting games was more important than winning a one-off test match playing boring cricket, Harrison responded: “One hundred percent correct.” “We’re in a competitiv­e world now,” he added. “The reason why Twenty 20 cricket blows other ratings out of the park on television and attendance­s - and this is not just in the U.K., this is around the world - is because people want to watch. ”

In a bid to swell participat­ion numbers, the ECB is trying to get more five to eight-year-olds playing cricket and reposition the sport as a game for all. “This is the working class man’s game of the north - cricket is not a privileged pastime in this country ,” Harrison said.The ECB is preparing to emulate India and Australia by launching a new domestic Twenty20 tournament in 2020 to attract the world’s best players based around eight city-based teams rather than the traditiona­l county teams.

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