S.Kennedy
International Vice-Captain
Well they have tried. The ECB ruled that a player must not have played for their nation for a year to gain Kolpak status; the ECB then abandoned this policy as unenforceable when Yorkshire signed Jacques Rudolph. They also used financially incentives to encourage home-grown players; clubs would get £1,000 plus ECB handouts for domestically qualified players over Kolpack players. They also dished out fines for Kolpacks It was however changes in EU Employment law in 2008 which curbed Kolpack players, demanding that they secure a four-year work visa (rather than the original holiday visa),...isn't the point of using the Kolpak Ruling as a loophole that the ECB can't clamp down on it?
BBC Sport - Cricket - ECB wins overseas player battle
This has been successful. Mid-late 2000s, there were around sixty Kolpack players employed by the eighteen counties. This has been reduced now to around fifteen.
(Ironically ''Kolpack'' is a bit of a misnomer. it is not the Kolpack thing which affects English cricket but the Cotonou Treaty; ''Cotonous'' has yet to catch on!).