• Consuming Cricket From T20 Cricket: Hadlee


    WELLINGTON: Sir Richard Hadlee, one of cricket’s greatest allrounders, is making another strong appeal to the decision makers: don’t betray our game.
    Cricket is in danger of being consumed by Twenty20, Hadlee says, while its guardians are distracted by the new income and booming popularity of the shortest form of the international game.
    Hadlee, who has legendary status in his native New Zealand, said the exponential growth of T20, particularly the Indian Premier League, had the potential to destroy the more traditional forms of cricket and — when its popularity eventually waned — the sport itself.
    “The IPL is franchise cricket, it’s club cricket, it is not international cricket,” Hadlee told New Zealand’s domestic news agency NZPA on Tuesday. “We are two years into it and you can see potentially that there will be more and more of it. It will consume the game. Once it has gone too far and people have grown bored with it, it will have destroyed test cricket and probably 50-over cricket.”
    Hadlee said the International Cricket Council had to act to deal with increasing problems of congested match schedules caused by the emergence of T20. The possibility the IPL might increase from 56 to 90 games and its playing window from six to eight weeks would only make the situation more difficult, he said.
    “We are in grave danger of having the decision makers betraying the game of cricket,” he said. “Everything evolves and things keep changing but this is a revolution within the game.”
    “It’s new, marketable, successful and brings in huge money. The danger is overkill, that you have too much of it and it swamps other forms of the game and compromises them.”
    “If one format of the game like Twenty20 consumes the game as much as it is doing now — and potentially in the future — it is destroying the game of cricket as a total concept.”
    Hadlee, 58, was signed in April as an executive consultant to the nascent American Premier League, a six-team Twenty20 tournament planned for New York in October. The league is unlikely to get off the ground and Hadlee said he remained a cricket traditionalist.
    “I think test cricket needs to be protected, because it remains the ultimate game and I think a lot of players today would say they enjoy test cricket more than anything else,” Hadlee said. “The point is they are also faced with the other forms of the game where for less effort the rewards are 10 times greater.”
    Hadlee said he feared the power wielded by India within the international game would prevent the ICC making decisions which would benefit cricket as a whole.”
    “We all know now that Asia, and more particularly India, have a more powerful say because they generate that much more … revenue, which other countries benefit from,” he said. “So, who protects the game? The decision makers on the ICC have to try and control it so that all the games can coexist and live together.”
    Hadlee said the sport’s governing body must have the power and the right to control and manage the game, much as the International Olympic Committee rules over the Olympics.
    “That’s important for the game’s existence, its survival and its future,” he said. “It can’t be undermined by a country, or other countries.”
    “Once country interests are being protected it becomes a destructive element and you have anarchy.”

0 comments:

Leave a Reply

Bookmark Us

Others Resources

Popular Links

Recent Posts

Featured Links

Links with Us