Yorkshire Post

Yorkshire propose radical new championsh­ip

-

A PROPOSAL to split the County Championsh­ip into three conference­s of six teams apiece has been put forward to the England and Wales Cricket Board by two Yorkshire officials.

Mark Arthur and Martyn Moxon, respective­ly chief executive and director of cricket at Yorkshire, have submitted plans that would bring an end to the current two-division structure with promotion and relegation which has been in place since 2000.

Such a model has been criticised recently for a lack of incentives for teams who are not challengin­g at either end of the table, but the scheme under Arthur and Moxon, which would see each county play 15 matches a season, split into three periods of the summer, aims to eliminate that in a radical shake-up of the competitio­n.

Arthur believes the format could start in the summer of 2020 and sees no reason why it cannot co-exist with the city-based eightteam Twenty20 tournament that the ECB is due to launch in the same year.

He said: “We feel that it would keep everybody engaged in the game because there are certain counties that feel threatened – wrongly, in my opinion – by the new T20 city competitio­n. We believe in 18 first-class counties, and this would keep everybody together.”

Under the proposals, the teams would be split as fairly as possible – in the first instance depending on where they finished the previous season – and would play each other home and away.

After 10 games, the counties would be separated once more according to their position in the standings, playing each other only once, and the overall champion county would receive £1m in prize money.

Arthur explained: “We worked on the basis of how everything finished last season. One, two and three in the first division would go into Conference A, B and C (that would be Essex, Lancashire and Surrey). Then, four (Yorkshire) into A, five into B and six into C and so on.

“You have your three conference­s of six, you play five home and five away within that. Then you go into Conference­s D, E and F (for the final five games of the season). The first and second teams in A, B and C would go into D.”

 ??  ?? MARK ARTHUR: Believes new structure would keep interest alive for all 18 counties.
MARK ARTHUR: Believes new structure would keep interest alive for all 18 counties.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom