Not really buying into that being the only cause.. I mean they charge an unlimited amount for the ashes, and that always sells out, for some reason..Half-empty ground for tomorrow. No surprise considering the cheapest ticket is around 30 quid.
Makes you understand why Gayle says he wouldn't mourn the demise of Test cricket in favour of 20/20 cricket....Half-empty ground for tomorrow. No surprise considering the cheapest ticket is around 30 quid.
Pure supply and demand. If the SACB could charge R1000 for a day's play and still sell 10,000 tickets they'd be onto it like a shot.Not really buying into that being the only cause.. I mean they charge an unlimited amount for the ashes, and that always sells out, for some reason..
Food for thought though, I can watch a test match here against the Aussies, for fewer Rands (25) than it costs in Pounds to watch them in England.. There is something like 13 Rand to the pound
Given there was not even County cricket in Durham barely 15 years ago, it is hard to stomach turning your nose up at the WI.£30 for the cheapest seat is a complete joke. ECB are getting what they deserve for being money grabbing tossers. On Thursday and Friday people are at work, so who exactly is going to fork out that much to see yet another low quality one-sided match when we should have had an Ashes Test?
They gave an Ashes Test to a ground which spends 364 days a year being rained on, a ground where most of the so-called facilities and stands were on paper only, that completely ****ed up staging an ODI last year with terrible drainage and pathetic ground staff, that hadn't hosted a single so-called Test let alone 3 of them against the worst teams on the planet. And even after Sophia Gardens is completed it STILL only holds 15,500 - less than any other venue and doesn't even have good wickets and a beautiful backdrop to compensate. Along with all that Durham supplies England players - two who will play on their home ground. Glamorgan merely supplies Division 2 with ****fest draws and an armada of mediocrity.Given there was not even County cricket in Durham barely 15 years ago, it is hard to stomach turning your nose up at the WI.
It is a new-ish ground in a new-ish cricketing county. Earn an Ashes test by selling out the WI (which should happen). You cant just demand or expect. There are plenty of other more established Counties that have paid their dues.
Is that the best you can come up with?Quote removed by James, against forum rules.
Best you deserve after your childish and petulant demand for an Ashes Test and turning your nose up at a West Indies Test. (EDIT- TBH, the previous comment of mine was more tongue in cheek and was not meant to be offensive).Is that the best you can come up with?
Cardiff does not deserve an Ashes test, let alone the first one, and practically the entire forum would back you up in that. But it doesn't follow that Durham does.They gave an Ashes Test to a ground which spends 364 days a year being rained on, a ground where most of the so-called facilities and stands were on paper only, that completely ****ed up staging an ODI last year with terrible drainage and pathetic ground staff, that hadn't hosted a single so-called Test let alone 3 of them against the worst teams on the planet. And even after Sophia Gardens is completed it STILL only holds 15,500 - less than any other venue and doesn't even have good wickets and a beautiful backdrop to compensate. Along with all that Durham supplies England players - two who will play on their home ground. Glamorgan merely supplies Division 2 with ****fest draws and an armada of mediocrity.
Want to have another try without talking complete bollocks?
I can think of lots of good reasons why Cardiff should have a Test match. The one valid reason, IMO, to question and worry is that it is a huge risk not to have played a Test match in advance of the 'big one'.Cardiff does not deserve an Ashes test, let alone the first one, and practically the entire forum would back you up in that.
They gave an Ashes Test to a ground which spends 364 days a year being rained on, a ground where most of the so-called facilities and stands were on paper only, that completely ****ed up staging an ODI last year with terrible drainage and pathetic ground staff, that hadn't hosted a single so-called Test let alone 3 of them against the worst teams on the planet. And even after Sophia Gardens is completed it STILL only holds 15,500 - less than any other venue and doesn't even have good wickets and a beautiful backdrop to compensate. Along with all that Durham supplies England players - two who will play on their home ground. Glamorgan merely supplies Division 2 with ****fest draws and an armada of mediocrity.
Want to have another try without talking complete bollocks?
Nobody forced the Windies to come.51 all out...
Anyway, seriously, think Rose has a point here tbh. The Wisden Trophy's not the Ashes, admittedly, but the boards should at least try to have a proper competition for it. With the 2010 series potentially being replaced with a more lucrative opponent, England could end up holding the Wisden Trophy for four years comparing to WI's one month, after roughly similar achievements.
Money and the WICB.Nobody forced the Windies to come.
agree with that. Should just have a 7-test Ashes IMOTwo-Test series should abolished full stop, regardless of what trophy is at stake.