I find it really sad that you think its all about money..... and you obviously agree with it aswell as you said "And why not?"silentstriker said:Unfortunatly, I was in the area for about a month, just last month. And, I can tell you, most people are much more interested in Basketball than cricket these days.
And why not? The top basketball stars can make $20-$30 million per year in salary alone, not counting endoresments. Even a backup player in the NBA can make as much as a Brian Lara.
Add to that, Basketball is more glamorous. Kids watch cricket stars toiling away for 8 hours a day, and on the other hand watch basketball stars hit slam dunks, drive expensive cars and singing rap songs in their free time. There is more money, more advertising, and more *** appeal in the NBA/NFL then there is in cricket. Basketball is about fun, cricket is about discipline.
When I went over there, I naturally asked people about cricket. About half of them barely knew the rules, and most of them couldn't name anyone besides Lara, but they could name all the starters and backups of their favorite NBA team.
From my limited experience, its a slowly but surely dying game in the Carribean. I predict that in fifteen to twenty years, there will be serious questions as to the feasability of West Indies being able to stay a Test nation.
Whether we like it or not, Cricket is a shrinking sport. The collapse is slow and though standing from within the heart of the subcontinent it may look impregnable, the edges are definatly rotting.
chekmeout said:And as for claims of cricket dying out world over.. Thats rubbish!
Cricket's here to stay.. and from a global perspective, growing from strength to strength..
Well there is currently only 1 NBA player from a cricketing playing country. Adonal Foyle from St. Vincent and Grenadines. A average NBA player who is at my fav. team the Golden State Warriors. The same number of players as NZ have.silentstriker said:And why not? The top basketball stars can make $20-$30 million per year in salary alone, not counting endoresments. Even a backup player in the NBA can make as much as a Brian Lara.
Add to that, Basketball is more glamorous. Kids watch cricket stars toiling away for 8 hours a day, and on the other hand watch basketball stars hit slam dunks, drive expensive cars and singing rap songs in their free time. There is more money, more advertising, and more *** appeal in the NBA/NFL then there is in cricket. Basketball is about fun, cricket is about discipline.
GoT_SpIn said:Probably been mentioned but this is an article talking about cricket in China
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2006/03/03/1141191849511.html
There was a synthetic one! Surely that counts!This might seem far-fetched for a country that does not have even one cricket pitch yet, where the game is not shown on TV and where cricket is the almost exclusive domain of expats in Beijing and Shanghai.
This supposedly monumental decision was forced upon him. Lance Gibbs had retired in early 1976 and the West Indies arrived in England with Padmore and Jumadeen. Neither were anything like Test quality and Padmore bowled about three overs at Old Trafford. Lloyd decided that there was no point in playing a spinner for the sake of it and just decided to pick their best four bowlers and use Richards and/or Fredericks to fill in. Had a bowler of Lance Gibbs quality been available he would have played, as it transpired only the very average Roger Harper emerged during that period and his 25 Tests over a ten year period was testament to the dearth of spin bowlers available to the West Indies. It would be easy to say in hindsight that no spinners appeared because all youngsters wanted to be fast bowlers, but this would conveniently overlook the fact that Lance Gibbs at that time was the leading wicket taker in Test Match history (having taken the record from Fred Trueman in Australia) yet no one it seems was inspired to successfully follow him.Goughy said:[*]Despite possessing quality players, the WI didn't become "Great" until Clive Lloyd made the decision to dispence with a spinner. This near revolutionary act put the West Indies at a competetive advantage and put them playing a futuristic style of cricket in the 1970s when the rest of the world were left with old traditional selectoral opinions.
Nothing you said really contradicts anything I said. However, the monumental decision was not born on the England tour but as a response to the embarrassment of the 5-1 defeat against Australia in 75/76.Lillian Thomson said:This supposedly monumental decision was forced upon him. Lance Gibbs had retired in early 1976 and the West Indies arrived in England with Padmore and Jumadeen. Neither were anything like Test quality and Padmore bowled about three overs at Old Trafford. Lloyd decided that there was no point in playing a spinner for the sake of it and just decided to pick their best four bowlers and use Richards and/or Fredericks to fill in. Had a bowler of Lance Gibbs quality been available he would have played, as it transpired only the very average Roger Harper emerged during that period and his 25 Tests over a ten year period was testament to the dearth of spin bowlers available to the West Indies. It would be easy to say in hindsight that no spinners appeared because all youngsters wanted to be fast bowlers, but this would conveniently overlook the fact that Lance Gibbs at that time was the leading wicket taker in Test Match history (having taken the record from Fred Trueman in Australia) yet no one it seems was inspired to successfully follow him.
If so, that's a very worrying and recent development.James said:He was also saying crowds at internationals and domestic games have been poor the past couple of years, and media coverage is lacking.
Sounds familiar...luckyeddie said:Let's hope that WC2007 stimulates some enthusiasm amongst the kids.
To suggest that no Test-quality spinners emerged would be simplistic.Lillian Thomson said:This supposedly monumental decision was forced upon him. Lance Gibbs had retired in early 1976 and the West Indies arrived in England with Padmore and Jumadeen. Neither were anything like Test quality and Padmore bowled about three overs at Old Trafford. Lloyd decided that there was no point in playing a spinner for the sake of it and just decided to pick their best four bowlers and use Richards and/or Fredericks to fill in. Had a bowler of Lance Gibbs quality been available he would have played, as it transpired only the very average Roger Harper emerged during that period and his 25 Tests over a ten year period was testament to the dearth of spin bowlers available to the West Indies. It would be easy to say in hindsight that no spinners appeared because all youngsters wanted to be fast bowlers, but this would conveniently overlook the fact that Lance Gibbs at that time was the leading wicket taker in Test Match history (having taken the record from Fred Trueman in Australia) yet no one it seems was inspired to successfully follow him.
Salisbury and Batty\Dawson\etc. are not remotely comparable.Goughy said:The rest of the world is still catching upto to Lloyds philosophy hence the career of Salisbury, Batty, and many other spinners who are not there because they are better than the fast bowling options but there as a spinner because the selectors beleive one must play.
We heard the same thing with England in 1998-1999 sort of time.silentstriker said:Unfortunatly, I was in the area for about a month, just last month. And, I can tell you, most people are much more interested in Basketball than cricket these days.
And why not? The top basketball stars can make $20-$30 million per year in salary alone, not counting endoresments. Even a backup player in the NBA can make as much as a Brian Lara.
Add to that, Basketball is more glamorous. Kids watch cricket stars toiling away for 8 hours a day, and on the other hand watch basketball stars hit slam dunks, drive expensive cars and singing rap songs in their free time. There is more money, more advertising, and more *** appeal in the NBA/NFL then there is in cricket. Basketball is about fun, cricket is about discipline.
When I went over there, I naturally asked people about cricket. About half of them barely knew the rules, and most of them couldn't name anyone besides Lara, but they could name all the starters and backups of their favorite NBA team.
From my limited experience, its a slowly but surely dying game in the Carribean. I predict that in fifteen to twenty years, there will be serious questions as to the feasability of West Indies being able to stay a Test nation.
Whether we like it or not, Cricket is a shrinking sport. The collapse is slow and though standing from within the heart of the subcontinent it may look impregnable, the edges are definatly rotting.
NZL has mostly been in this position since their entry in test cricket.Cynical as it may sound here goes
Zimbabwe and West Indies down, New Zealand barely hanging on, just 7 Test Class teams left .