New format is worth a try
A good game is a quick game
OPINION:
All the headlines and focus will be on 100-ball innings and wildcard overs, but actually the new tournament will stand or fall by whether or not it attracts the best players and coaches.
The format is not very different to existing Twenty20. Just 20 balls fewer. That is it really.
It will still be a highly skilled, intense, pressurised game of cricket. We will see great performances, stars born and drama unfold, but that would happen if it was played over 20 overs too. The Twenty20 game is brilliant and does not need changing.
I am at the IPL at the moment and this tournament is successful because it involves the best players, the best coaches and has showbusiness razzmatazz. You need celebrity around the teams to give it a profile that reaches out to non-cricket fans. Those aspects are more important than the number of balls in an innings.
I can imagine this new competition being more popular with the broadcasters. The BBC will be much happier with a game that is played over three hours and between 6.30 and 9.30pm. It fits nicely into their schedules and Twenty20 matches are starting to drag on, an inevitable consequence of the money and pressure the players are under these days.
I always support innovative ideas and love to see the game change. But we tinker with oneday cricket all the time and still we do not touch the one form of the game that has been declining for the past 15 years - test cricket.
We have done nothing to help that. Why do we have new ideas and innovation for white-ball cricket but not tests? It is a shame we do not see the same kind of energy put in to market test cricket. I am sure we will see huge digital campaigns around the new The England Cricket Bpard is seeking to introduce a new format of cricket in England and Wales, a
‘100 balls’ format that could consist of 15 six-ball overs and a final 10-ball over.
A new eight-team, city-based competition is being launched in England, featuring teams in London, Southampton, Birmingham, Leeds, Cardiff, Manchester and Nottingham.
Twenty20 cricket was introduced in England in 2003 and soon went international.
The format has changed the game of cricket, for better or worse, with batsmen developing new, inventive cricket shots, and bowlers developing skills like slower balls, bouncers and doosras which hadn’t been seen before.
The BBC reported that the new men’s and women’s competitions would run each summer, initially from 2020 until 2024.
competition, which will mean test cricket is further ignored. Do we now just have to accept test cricket stays the same and dies very slowly? What a shame.
The ECB will be laughed at by some for this idea. New concepts are always scoffed at. There is a chance they have made a simple format more complicated. Everyone understands 20 six-ball overs. But 15 six-ball overs and a 10-ball wildcard strategic over? That may be harder to understand.
But it will be a point of difference, a novel and fun idea that could work. Why not give it a go?