Eastern Eye (UK)

ECB REPORTS LOSSES AFTER PANDEMIC PAIN

-

THE England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) chief reported an annual loss of £16.1 million last week, with chief executive Tom Harrison warning the ongoing effects of the pandemic meant “we’re not out of the woods yet”.

English cricket’s governing body said the pandemic had whittled down its cash reserves to just £2.2m.

And while spectators are set to return later this season after a 2020 campaign of matches behind closed doors because of virus restrictio­ns, Harrison wrote in the ECB’s annual review that there could still be more financial pain to come.

“Over the past 12 months we have had to confront the biggest financial crisis the game has ever experience­d,” he said. “And despite the optimism around at the time of writing, it is clear we’re not out of the woods yet.

“Very significan­t challenges lie ahead. While we are hopeful and optimistic about the 2021 summer, we don’t yet know what the implicatio­ns are for the return of crowds or indeed on ‘bubbles’ for this season. Our ambition for the 2021 season sets a very high bar – we cannot lose another year of progress.”

In 2016, the ECB announced it had reserves of more than £70m. But the startup costs associated with the Hundred, the ECB’s new 100 balls-per-side competitio­n, helped reduce that figure to about £11m by 2019 – before the pandemic took hold.

The Hundred is due to make its debut in July after a year’s delay because of Covid-19.

The ECB said that revenue losses across English cricket as a whole, after a year of playing matches behind closed doors, had amounted to more than £100m.

But that is some way short of the worst-case scenario. The ECB feared it could lose £380m had the entire 2020 season been wiped out.

But a full internatio­nal programme went ahead in a biosecure bubble, with West Indies the first team to tour England during the pandemic, followed by Pakistan.

“This has been a challengin­g year,” said Scott Smith, chief financial officer at the ECB. “But by being able to stage internatio­nal cricket and by taking decisive action early in the pandemic, we have been able to support the network and avoid a far worse financial scenario.”

ECB revenues fell by £21m to £207m last year. The financial statement added that the delay to the Hundred and costs of staging bio-secure cricket had contribute­d to the decline in earnings.

 ??  ?? CAUTIOUS APP ACH: Tom Harrison (left) wi Englan player Chris Woakes in 01
CAUTIOUS APP ACH: Tom Harrison (left) wi Englan player Chris Woakes in 01

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom