Business Day

Schedule challenges ahead for SA20: Graeme Smith

- Stuart Hess

The SA20’s reliance on SA’s best cricket talent allows the competitio­n to maintain a stronger sense of legitimacy even as the proliferat­ion of T20 Leagues can lead to the integrity of many of those competitio­ns being compromise­d.

Graeme Smith, the SA20’s commission­er, said the tournament had carved a footprint for itself, which allowed it to absorb much of the comings and goings of players, which have become a feature of modern cricket, where players can end up participat­ing in two or even three different leagues in less than a month. “It is very difficult. We are a majority-based SA league, the investment is back into SA cricket. The improvemen­t in the league this year was seeing the standard of the SA players really grow,” said Smith.

The coming and going of internatio­nal players in the tournament, does make a mockery of the league in some eyes.

Nicholas Pooran, the left-hander from the West Indies played in just three league matches for the Durban Super Giants, before heading to the Internatio­nal League T20 in Dubai. He was replaced by Australian Marcus Stoinis who played in five games and then went back to Australia for an internatio­nal series. Stoinis’ countryman Ashton Agar arrived in Durban as a replacemen­t for Noor Ahmad who was called up by Afghanista­n, for the week of the playoffs.

But that is a problem faced by most T20 Leagues, with the exception of the IPL, which is the only franchise tournament given its own window by the ICC.

Smith’s careful balancing act in seeking to outline the SA20’s integrity is understand­able given that all the teams in the SA tournament are owned by Indian companies which also own teams in the IPL.

“I look at it differentl­y and in a more positive light,” said Smith. “We are blessed to be able to attract the top internatio­nal talent. Those guys want to be here. I remember having conversati­ons when we were building SA20, and there was no confidence in SA cricket that we would be able to pull it off at this level.”

That scepticism was the result of Cricket SA’s two failed attempts at creating a league previously, including the Global League T20, which had a player auction, but subsequent­ly failed to get off the ground because of the absence of a financiall­y workable broadcast deal.

The SA20 doesn’t have that concern thanks to its partnershi­p with India broadcaste­r Network 18 and local satellite company SuperSport, which is a shareholde­r in SA20.

“If we look at what we created in two years, it’s amazing. We have gone from a place where internatio­nal talent hasn’t backed our league to a point where they want to be a part of it. And now our SA crop of players has in two years really developed.”

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