The Guardian (USA)

Labour MP urges government to review ECB plans to sell stake in Hundred

- Barney Ronay

A Labour MP has called on the government to review any future decision by the England and Wales Cricket Board to sell its stake in the eight Hundred franchises to private investors.

The ECB has given the 18 counties plus the MCC until this Friday to give consent to this new “direction of travel”for the sport’s showpiece domestic competitio­n. Under one current ECB proposal the Hundred teams will be offered for sale to private investors, with the ECB relinquish­ing all control over the teams.

John Spellar, MP for Warley in the West Midlands, believes Friday’s vote needs greater scrutiny given the significan­ce of the sale, and the ECB’s position as keepers of the national summer game.

“The government should intervene,”

Spellar told the Guardian. “This is not just a matter for the ECB. This is one of our national games, and it’s a matter for the public and for the government to have a voice as well.

“If you’re getting public funding, even at one remove, then there should also be full public accountabi­lity. The sports minister, Lucy Frazer, needs to intervene to give a government view. If they can intervene on the Daily Telegraph they can intervene on this.” Currently the ECB receives around £2.5m of public money annually from Sport England.

The plan to sell off the franchises was first floated in February. Originally the ECB had intended to retain 19% of its proposed 49% share in each team. A week ago this proposal was altered to selling its entire stake, with counties given a deadline of 10 May to see if consensus – understood to mean 75% of them – can be reached on the proposal.

“There is no objection to counties getting into a relationsh­ip with corporate enterprise and clearly Eng

lish cricket can generate much larger crowds and revenues from the Hundred,” Spellar said. “That may be the best way of sustaining the game. But whatever you might say about the Premier League in football, for example, they have not handed over the intellectu­al property, they have not handed over control of the game. This looks like a short-term sugar rush as opposed to long-term building.”

The ECB is not currently proposing the sale of the entire Hundred competitio­n, just part-ownership of the teams taking part in it. The most likely buyers are a combinatio­n of Indian Premier League owners and other private equity investors. Under the current plan the host counties of each Hundred franchise will retain a 51% stake (as will the

MCC as owners of Lord’s).

There is, though, the possibilit­y the cash-strapped counties among themwill then sell a portion of this alongside the ECB’s share to offer a majority stake to buyers and thereby maximise value.

In return for agreeing to this arrangemen­t, all 18 counties would retain theirannua­l stipend of more than £1m per year. Despite some concern over the status of non-host counties under this arrangemen­t, the parlous state of county finances will demand the ECB proposals are given very serious considerat­ion.

Should the sale go through, counties outside the eight host venues will find themselves entirely excluded from the Hundred’s operations. Some county members have also suggested selling the teams is a first step towards selling the entire Hundred operation, thereby effectivel­y “privatisin­g” English domestic cricket in the month of August.

Some estimates have suggested any subsequent sale could raise up to £500m to be split across the domestic game. Currently the ECB receives £220m a year from its Sky Sports broadcast deal, which has been renewed with a small increase until the end of 2028 andremains English cricket’s chief source of income.

 ?? Photograph: Adam Davy/PA ?? The Hundred teams will be offered for sale to private investors as part of the proposal.
Photograph: Adam Davy/PA The Hundred teams will be offered for sale to private investors as part of the proposal.
 ?? Ben Whitley/PA ?? The ECB is not proposing the sale of the entire Hundred competitio­n. Photograph:
Ben Whitley/PA The ECB is not proposing the sale of the entire Hundred competitio­n. Photograph:

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