Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

T20 BLITZ PUTS HONG KONG ON THE MAP

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Kumar Sangakkara

Aburgeonin­g Twenty20 Tournament and growing interest from abroad is turning Hong Kong into one of Asia’s fastest-rising cricketing destinatio­ns - and could help the sport make inroads into mainland China.

Hong Kong’s T20 Blitz is approachin­g only its second edition but already it is attracting a number of well-known players, including Pakistan Test Captain Misbah-ulhaq and hard-hitting all-rounder Shahid Afridi.

The densely populated city has also been proposed as a possible venue for Australia’s successful Big Bash League, which boasts bumper crowds and TV ratings.

It is a surprising scenario for Hong Kong, given that it has few cricket

To have that talent playing alongside local players, you can’t buy that kind of experience

grounds, only 795 registered senior male players and scant interest in the sport among its ethnic Chinese majority population.

But the former British colony could now make itself a centre in East Asia for Twenty20 cricket, which has already spawned the popular Big Bash, Indian Premier League and similar competitio­ns elsewhere.

Tim Cutler, Cricket Hong Kong’s 34-year-old CEO, takes inspiratio­n from rugby’s Hong Kong Sevens, whose success helped the sport return to the Olympics last year.

“Look at the Hong Kong Sevens,”cutler told AFP.

“Hong Kong is not known for its sporting prowess but it can run internatio­nal events. It’s an easy place to get things done. Outside, people are thinking, ‘How can we be part of that?”

Former Australia Captain Michael Clarke came out of retirement to be the sole star player at last year’s inaugural T20 Blitz, but he seems to have blazed a trail for Misbah, Afridi and others.

The next edition from March 8-12 will also feature the West Indies’ two-time World Twenty20-winning Captain Darren Sammy, Sri Lanka legends Kumar Sangakkara and Tillakerat­ne Dilshan, India’s Yusuf Pathan, England’s Tymal Mills and New Zealand batsman Jesse Ryder.

“To have that talent playing alongside local players, you can’t buy that kind of experience,”said Cutler.“we are the only associate (second-tier ICC member) to launch a franchise-based T20. There are lots of envious cricket federation­s around the world.” Despite their lack of resources, Hong Kong have cricketing pedigree, after rising as high as 10th in the T20 rankings and beating Bangladesh in Chittagong at the 2014 World Twenty20.

People in such places don’t have time for a oneday internatio­nal or a Test. As a profession­al cricketer when someone approaches you, you go there and you help cricket in that place

Last year, Hong Kong also agreed with China, South Korea and Japan to hold a biennial East Asia Cup, with the first edition played in November.

“It’s about carving a niche for us in East Asia,” Cutler said.

The big prize for Hong Kong, and the Internatio­nal Cricket Council, lies in mainland China, whose only cricket ground sits not far across the border in the sprawling city of Guangzhou.

The ICC describes the Asian giant as a priority and said it is working with the China Cricket Associatio­n on ways to sustainabl­e growth in one of the most complex a n d competitiv­e sports markets in the world.

China has 52 teams, according to the Asian Cricket Council, and the ICC puts current participat­ion figures at 80,285, including 36,000 women and girls.

Asian Cricket Council Chief Executive Syed Ashraful Haque said global revenues for the sport could increase by 30-40 percent if China became an establishe­d cricketing nation.

Cutler said: “China were to take up cricket, if it picked up by just one percent, you’re talking about a potentiall­y huge market.”

“T20 gives us the potential of growing our audience in China and beyond, expanding into China and acting as a go-between.”afridi, who next month will skipper the Kowloon Cantons, one of five teams at the T20 Blitz, said he was excited by the opportunit­y of bringing cricket to new audiences.

“T20 is a good format for introducin­g cricket to people who don’t know it,” he told AFP from Pakistan.

“People in such places don’t have time for a one-day internatio­nal or a Test. As a profession­al cricketer when someone approaches you, you go there and you help cricket in that place.“ AFP -

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Tillakerat­ne Dilshan

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