Arjun
Cricketer Of The Year
There were better players in India not playing the ODI series, who could have made the KFC event. The Champions' League is viewed by teams from other countries as a platform to land IPL contracts, suggesting the IPL is above the CLT20. If a weak team like Diamond Eagles or an inexperienced Trinidad & Tobago can go the distance, why can't a full-strength Mumbai or Delhi?There were no Indians in playing in Australia because they were all playing meaningless ODIs in the subcontinent. Putting state sides in the Champions League would immediately drain it (and possibly the IPL) of all the money it's built on. The state sides, full of no-name medium pacers, would just get smashed.
Like it or not, the best ODI cricketers will just dominate low-level interstate Twenty20. They won't learn anything from it because by and large the opposition would be so poor. Tendulkar would just bat aggressively for 20 overs, and that would be enough. So trying to raise Twenty20 players from the bottom up isn't the answer. Enough (a small number, but the elite of the non-internationals) get a game in the IPL - far better preparation for international cricket, not that it really matters now the IPL is around.
There's a vibe going around IPL franchises (particularly those owned by actors) that Indian players are not good enough to make the side except on reservations, and that they need more internationals. That will have to change, and for that, the Indian base needs to improve. While the SMAT may be a walk in the park for someone like Tendulkar or Zaheer, the domestic players facing them will have to step up so that they become competitive (the likes of Sreesanth, Chawla and Vinay Kumar have profited from this), and are taken more seriously by IPL team owners. A full season of IPL will help add more options for the Indian T20 team.