PLANS TO ESTABLISH A NEW 100 BALLS A SIDE THE FORMAT STILL IN ENGLAND
Plans to establish a new 100
balls a side tournament in English county cricket remain in place despite a
review into the domestic set-up.
Wednesday saw the
England and Wales Cricket Board announce the creation of a "working group
giving fresh thought to refining the structure of men's county cricket that has
been agreed for 2020".
Last week the ECB
revealed its intention to establish an eight-team city-based 100 balls per side
tournament to start in 2020, despite it having been previously thought this
would be another Twenty20 event in addition to the existing 'Blast' featuring
all 18 first-class counties.
But given fewer than
half of England's professional players will be involved in an eight, as opposed
to 18, team event, doubts remain about the type of cricket those excluded from
the 100-ball format will play.
Gordon Hollins, the
ECB's chief operating officer, said the working group had been set up, in part,
to address that question.
"A number of
subjects and proposals have been raised in various forums over the last few
weeks and months, such as a new conference structure for the Specsavers County
Championship, and the question of what other cricket should be played during
the new ECB tournament later in the summer of 2020," Hollins said in a
statement.
He added: "In
striving to reach a new audience, we must not neglect county cricket, nor its
great tradition."
England captain Joe
Root said 100-balls-a-side -- which will be shorter even than Twenty20 (120
balls per side) -- could attract a new audience but David Gower, another
ex-England captain suggested Wednesday the new format was "going to be 12
years out of date before it starts".
Meanwhile England's
Professional Cricketers' Association issued a statement Wednesday voicing its
"major concern" around the "lack of information and clarity
regarding the new tournament".
Amid all the furore,
the ECB said it would set up a working group chaired by Leicestershire chief
executive Wasim Khan.
The group's members
will also include ECB England director of cricket Andrew Strauss, three county
directors of cricket, as well as PCA representatives, with a report to be
submitted later in the English season.
Strauss, himself a
former England captain, came under fire for saying in a radio interview last
week that the 100-ball tournament was aimed at "mums and kids", with
some female cricket followers resenting the implication that women do not
understand the game's existing formats.
The ECB also plans
to launch a women's 100-ball tournament to replace the existing Twenty20 Super
League.
Fears have been
expressed, however, that with Twenty20 now key to the women's game worldwide,
abandoning the Super League will leave England having to bridge an increasingly
large gap between its domestic and elite female cricket.
SOURCE: AFP
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