Hmm I don't know, didn't think so. Doesn't strike me as someone who'd keep playing in England and not for his beloved state.JL retired from WA, didn't he?
Interesting point. Just thinking of a hypothetical.Good idea for Ramprakash to get another ton, in case someone decides that one of those he made earlier isn't first-class after all. It happened to Gooch: about ten years after the event, the ICC decided that the matches played by 'rebel' teams in South Africa were no longer first-class (a ruling ignored by statisticians everywhere) leaving Gooch unsure when and where he made his 100th.
And now either being reversed or having someone lobby to have it reversed. And quite damn right too IMO.Good idea for Ramprakash to get another ton, in case someone decides that one of those he made earlier isn't first-class after all. It happened to Gooch: about ten years after the event, the ICC decided that the matches played by 'rebel' teams in South Africa were no longer first-class (a ruling ignored by statisticians everywhere) leaving Gooch unsure when and where he made his 100th.
Not that I necessarily disagree with you on this point, but I'm wondering why you think those matches should be included in FC records given the way you feel re WSC and the stats of those games?And now either being reversed or having someone lobby to have it reversed. And quite damn right too IMO.
Those games were First-Class cricket played by organisations who routinely organised First-Class cricket.Not that I necessarily disagree with you on this point, but I'm wondering why you think those matches should be included in FC records given the way you feel re WSC and the stats of those games?
What on Earth have UCCE games got to do with that? No, such games don't really deserve First-Class status either, but the angle there is a different one.Probably because the university floggers tend to be professionals who think of themselves, not the good of the game.
That's your opinion. And most likely WSC will never be granted FC status by the ICC and other such institutions, who have a vested interest in retaining control the game. There is no reason for cricket historians and statisticians not to adjudge them as such. I mean, look at the South African Tests 1961 to 1970. The ICC ruled that those matches were no official tests but that historians wouldn't have to change their records because the records have been established for so long. So if even the ICC acknowledges the difference between an administrative/political perspective and a historical perspective, why not acknowledge that from a historical point of view, there isn't any qualitative difference between WSC and similar matches that were granted FC status. Like the International Wanderers for example.Packer games have no case whatsoever for being First-Class