Herald on Sunday

Plunket Shield facing prune to eight rounds

- By Andrew Alderson

The Plunket Shield faces a prune when the next four-year Master Agreement is ratified and released by New Zealand Cricket and the New Zealand Cricket Players Associatio­n.

The Herald on Sunday understand­s the country’s first-class competitio­n will reduce from 10 to eight rounds for the coming season.

A change to the schedule has been under discussion for the best part of a year. The cost of NZC’s domestic competitio­ns have been estimated at $5 million and, with a minimal financial return on investment from the four-day component, it seems destined for a 20 per cent chop.

However, the benefits of the competitio­n for New Zealand at test level are harder to place a tangible value on. A significan­t number of players are still believed to want a full two rounds — 10 matches — and, depending on the scheduling, a chunk of days could be lost to rain during the likes of a La Nin˜ a summer. Is there insurance for that possibilit­y?

Comparison­s see England play 14 rounds of the County Championsh­ip across divisions of eight and 10 teams.

Australia play 10 rounds and a final of the Sheffield Shield.

India play six four-day rounds of the Ranji Trophy, followed by up to three five-day playoffs.

New Zealand expanded from a five-round competitio­n in 1999-2000 to 10 rounds from 2000-01 to 2002-03. That slimmed to eight rounds and a final from 2003-04 to 2008-09.

The tournament has been 10 rounds for the past nine seasons.

A compromise seems imminent. That could include:

1. Increasing the Ford Trophy 50-over competitio­n from eight to 10 rounds as a way to further prepare players for next year’s World Cup.

2. Expanding the New Zealand A programme so the Plunket Shield’s elite players get more experience on the internatio­nal stage’s second tier.

Test purists might be justified in being sceptical. If a competitio­n drops to eight rounds, could it be trimmed further? At what point would false economy kick in to dilute players’ mental toughness and consequent­ly New Zealand’s test clout? How will it affect first-class specialist­s such as Jeet Raval, Neil Wagner and BJ Watling?

The players are touted to earn a fixed NZC revenue share of 26.5 per cent under the proposed new agreement — a 1.5 per cent increase on the 2010-18 deal. However, white-ball aficionado­s might be smiling more than their red-ball comrades.

 ??  ?? Neil Wagner
Neil Wagner

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