Waikato Times

T20s are white-ball junk food

- IAN ANDERSON

OPINION: Ideologica­lly, I should be in camp with Trevor Bayliss.

It might only require a pup tent to accommodat­e both of us, but the England coach’s desire to get rid of

Twenty20 internatio­nals tugged enticingly at my heartstrin­gs.

Prior to attending both the recent T20 clash between New Zealand and England at Seddon Park and Sunday’s ODI – as part of my job – I had far deeper interest in the longer form of white-ball cricket. I knew on Sunday I was going to witness a deeper array of skills, a more intriguing contest.

But I’m acutely aware I’m part of the minority, weaned in the

1970s on an almost exclusive diet of test cricket.

In the ‘80s, I acquired a taste for the pyjama game – 50 overs per side, played under lights in coloured clothing, with the allure of coke and hamburgers.

When Twenty20 cricket emerged, I wasn’t seeking fast food.

Internatio­nal T20 cricket has, however, grown into a a complex beast.

Australia’s triumphant triseries side featured only David Warner from the test squad that had headed to South Africa to play four tests. The selection of the

team that starred in NZ was partly dictated by domestic T20 form, partly by what encounters are deemed more important.

How paramount the T20 triseries was in the world cricketing arena could be judged by the trophy Warner received following Australia’s dominant victory.

Seven-year-old footballer­s have received more impressive man-ofthe-match awards than that. A McDonald’s happy meal voucher would have been less shameful.

Bayliss wouldn’t have had a trophy, or a series.

‘‘I wouldn’t play T20 internatio­nals,’’ he said recently.

‘‘I’d just let the franchises play. If we continue putting on so many games there’ll be a certain amount of blowout, not just players but coaches as well.

‘‘If you want to play a World Cup every four years or whatever it is, maybe six months before you get the internatio­nal teams and let them play some T20 internatio­nals.’’

His frustratio­ns likely spring from recent developmen­ts where batsman Alex Hales and legspinnin­g allrounder Adil Rashid have quit red-ball cricket, making themselves unavailabl­e from country four-day matches and tests.

Those decisions can spring from dual reasons. The increase in T20 internatio­nals makes for a taxing year-round programme for the players, but they, and the worldwide domestic leagues spearheade­d by the IPL, make the cricketers an awful lot richer.

New Zealand coach Mike Hesson proposes a commonsens­e riposte, focusing on the ‘‘revenue generation issue’’.

‘‘In some countries that’s not as big a deal but for New Zealand Cricket, to get 35,000 people to Eden Park or whatever it was the other day, is huge for us, huge for the game and huge for the promotion of the game.’’

Embarrassi­ng trophy aside, Hesson feels T20 internatio­nals had plenty riding on them.

‘‘Too right. Every internatio­nal you play is incredibly meaningful,’’ he said. ‘‘You’ve got guys that only play T20 and that’s their chance to play internatio­nal cricket, so I think absolutely it’s meaningful.’’

I see them more as moneyspinn­ers than meaningful, but they’ll continue to be a ready-made meal internatio­nally.

 ??  ?? England head coach Trevor Bayliss, left, isn’t a fan of internatio­nal Twenty20 cricket but plenty of others are, including New Zealand coach Mike Hesson, right.
England head coach Trevor Bayliss, left, isn’t a fan of internatio­nal Twenty20 cricket but plenty of others are, including New Zealand coach Mike Hesson, right.
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