I've changed my tune a bit. Before this tournament, I would have agreed with you but really, while I'm starting to grow tired of seeing it day after day, I'd still be for one Twenty20 international match per tour. I don't want to see it in tournaments, or taken extremely seriously, and I definitely don't want to see specialist Twenty20 squads. But as a warmup for a short ODI series using ODI squads, I think it has appeal as a one-off thing to the crowd. If we overdo it and play whole series of them or have tournaments like this one regularly, the dangers that many have predicted could well occur - not only will they become less "special" and just get boring, but they might start to seriously impact young cricketers who watch a Twenty20 series and then go and play Under 15s on Saturday.
I wouldn't care if I never saw a Twenty20 ever again to be honest, but I can see it having a non-serious place place at international level. Personally I think it is great at domestic level as it'll bring much-needed interest to that level of cricket as a whole, but I only like it as a one-per-tour type thing for international cricket. I do actually believe it has a place as that now though, where if you asked me a month ago, I'd have said no to international Twenty20 completely.
Frankly, I think Twenty 20 as a format is ideal for what's being done in things like the ICL and the Official Championship of BCCI and Australian Board. Club level games of a very shortduration to build a new 'clientele' used to supporting football clubs across national affiliations.
It can easily be managed on that scale due to the time frame of the matches. It will be fun without diluting the skill sets of international matches of the test level and the 50-50 format. The problem could be that the economics could overwhelm everything else. The amount of money being talked off for these 'club' games is so huge that players may gravitate towards the game in a way as to reduce the pool of skilled cricketers for the longer version.
It will have an impact on what is taught to young cricketers during coaching. One has already seen some impact of the 50-50 game on coaching all over the place. I have written about it before from first hand experience of visiting some of these coaching centres. The impact on account of Twnety 20 could be much greater. How are we going to ensure that young cricketers are taught (and are willing to be taught) the basic skills first.
For those who cant see what's happening in the longer version, I have nothing to say but to those who can understand it, just look at how even the international cricketers face upto the swinging delivery. Get one match where the ball deviates appreciably and you have captains of international sides talking negatively of the wicket.
Those of my age group who have played a decent level of cricket (not necessarily first class) will remember that it was so common to see the ball deviating appreciably in the nets in all good club sides and colleges and university sides. No one complained. But the coaches taught you how to play (or leave) the moving ball. In one generation (maybe almost two for a cricketer's active life span) we have seen how this skill is being lost.
This is a change that has taken place over time but that first and foremost because of a decline in bowling standards.
I have absolutely no doubt, for example, that but for limited over cricket and the stress it placed on run rate, a bowler like Harbhajan would not have changed his action (unconciously perhaps) to lose the flight and tantalising sudden drop he had in his early career. Having lost it, he isn't able to get it back. I am not sure he evcen wants to or understands how he was a better bowler before.
This may appear a bit off context but it really isnt. The demands of different formats are different and players will make adjustments to sit the newer formats. Some of the changes can be positive and will actually enhance the entire game including the longer version. The fielding, the better running between the wickets, the stress on fitness levels, the increased scoring rates and overall more positive attitudes of batsmen are some fabulous outcomes of the positive impacts that limited over game has had.
However, we have to be careful about the negatives too. Unfortunately these tend to be glossed over. And the reasons are commercial and not the long term vision of where the game is going.
Thas why even if Twenty 20 format was to become an integeral part of the game as a third format, its introduction should have been more gradual. This World Cup business and international Twenty20 matches may lead, one hopes not, to a stage where we may find it very difficult to do much about it later.
The fact that you dont find more top players talking in public about this isn't because they do not think so but because of more political considerations. Only the very blunt will go ahead and say what they feel.
Move around in top cricketing circles and hear what players say in private and you will realise its not an approval of the format by the players but a flow with the trend of the 'moolah'.