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[Cricket] Sky bids £40m for rights to city-based domestic Twenty20 tournament



Braggfan

In the beginning there was nothing, which exploded
May 12, 2014
1,864
The plan is to smash up county cricket.

Sadly I think you're right. It will probably be followed up with T20 joining the Olympics money spinning machine and affirming itself as "cricket". Test cricket will dwindle away to the odd match here and there :(
 






beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,414
i dont really understand why changing names to cities rather than counties would be of any benefit. there more identity in counties, not just confined to cricket, aside a few exceptions. or is this to create new clubs outside the existing structure so bypassing alot of the establishment?
 


surrey jim

Not in Surrey
Aug 2, 2005
18,110
Bevendean
Would this then follow in a 'premier league' and division structure for other cities / towns who want to enter?
 






Hotchilidog

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2009
8,805
It is a short sighted idea that exists only to make a load of cash for a small number of teams. Proper cricket is being eaten up by the T20 monster. If this deal goes ahead the games will still only be on Sky so the audience will not grow for the game, just the coffers of a few people willing sacrifice the integrity of the game as a whole.
 


Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,418
Uffern
or is this to create new clubs outside the existing structure so bypassing alot of the establishment?

Yes, that's the proposal. As someone says, it's to smash up the counties. The trouble is, the counties hold the bulk of the voting rights so there'd have to be big money heading their way for this to be a goer. £40m sounds a lot but a good part of that has to filter back to cricket as a whole (or no-one will vote for it) and if the teams have to be funded out of it, there's not much left over.

I suspect that the aim is to create franchises sponsored by companies but that's going to be a bold move to back something so new
 










loz

Well-known member
Apr 27, 2009
2,279
W.Sussex
I get the impression that T20 is on the wain, 5 years ago all the grounds were full, but now when I turn it on the grounds look half empty. At my Cricket club a few years ago it was all T20 talk and whens the next match and whose going, now not a murmur, a few still pop down to Hove but as likely to watch 50 over cricket as T20

I cant stand the 20 over version of Cricket myself. And even as a palace fan, Sussex is my county and who I support, to support Southampton saints or whatever would never cross my mind.
 




Bwian

Kiss my (_!_)
Jul 14, 2003
15,898




Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
30,741
I don't see how a city-based Premier T20 tournament can ever co-exist with the county structure. It's basically the first step in the creation of a Premier League of test-ground counties that will no doubt be applied to all formats of the game in time.

Although the county system IS old it does work in a number of ways. In crude terms a population of c. 55 million in England and Wales gives each county a catchment of 3 million people, which is similar to Australia, so the demographics are viable for player development and fan numbers.

I think the big missed opportunity was when the county championship was simply split into 2 divisions - I think a different structure - possible regionalised into 3 divisions of 7 sides could have brought into play the likes of Devon and Cornwall, East Anglia and the ECB might have widened their pool of players as a result. All the 2-tier structure has done is to render the likes of Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Kent and Gloucestershire as obsolete in terms of producing test players for England and competing in the 4-day format.
 






Simster

"the man's an arse"
Jul 7, 2003
54,320
Surrey
I'd rather the guardians of the game came up with competitions and structures that keep it healthy, not TV companies looking for cheap summer time nonsense to fill their schedules with something other than end of football season reviews featuring various banal interviews.

The trouble is, the guardians of the game aren't really very good at it. At least, not in this country. If they were, they'd have thought of a proper strategy designed to:
a) safeguard 4 day county cricket and
b) generate money to i) ensure talented players are interested in a career in the game
and ii) provide more grass roots help to reverse the decline in playing numbers

All I know is that a city franchise system sounds like a properly shithouse idea.
 




Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
30,741
I'd rather the guardians of the game came up with competitions and structures that keep it healthy, not TV companies looking for cheap summer time nonsense to fill their schedules with something other than end of football season reviews featuring various banal interviews.

The trouble is, the guardians of the game aren't really very good at it. At least, not in this country. If they were, they'd have thought of a proper strategy designed to:
a) safeguard 4 day county cricket and
b) generate money to i) ensure talented players are interested in a career in the game
and ii) provide more grass roots help to reverse the decline in playing numbers

All I know is that a city franchise system sounds like a properly shithouse idea.

In the last 94 years there has been the addition of ONE new county in first-class cricket - Durham. There are 20 minor counties all doing their own thing and getting zero coverage while the likes of Derbyshire and Leicestershire exchange the Div 2 wooden spoon with regularity. Big counties like Surrey and Lancs are complacent giants, with large memberships and test match status guaranteeing a level of income their performances don't merit.

English cricket needs far more of a shake-up than a simple T20 city bash, but where IS the vision?
 




Gazwag

5 millionth post poster
Mar 4, 2004
30,241
Bexhill-on-Sea
I get the impression that T20 is on the wain, 5 years ago all the grounds were full, but now when I turn it on the grounds look half empty. At my Cricket club a few years ago it was all T20 talk and whens the next match and whose going, now not a murmur, a few still pop down to Hove but as likely to watch 50 over cricket as T20

I cant stand the 20 over version of Cricket myself. And even as a palace fan, Sussex is my county and who I support, to support Southampton saints or whatever would never cross my mind.

Quite, football=support your local team, cricket=support your birth county
 


mikeyjh

Well-known member
Dec 17, 2008
4,531
Llanymawddwy
In the last 94 years there has been the addition of ONE new county in first-class cricket - Durham. There are 20 minor counties all doing their own thing and getting zero coverage while the likes of Derbyshire and Leicestershire exchange the Div 2 wooden spoon with regularity. Big counties like Surrey and Lancs are complacent giants, with large memberships and test match status guaranteeing a level of income their performances don't merit.

English cricket needs far more of a shake-up than a simple T20 city bash, but where IS the vision?

While not wanting to bite, or deny that we're generally a bit crap, we have only achieved that particular highlight once in 10 seasons!
 


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