Since you seem to spend your time on here making bold proclamations about how much you disagree with people, maybe you're not the best person to tell everyone what 'English people' care about?English people like their historic regions for their sports, here their counties. We are not like Australians or Indians who do not give a toss about their state cricket and enthusiastically accepted plastic Macdonalds teams.
I think one of the points of the competition is to attract a different audience, to expand the number of cricket fans by offering something a little different, so it is not necessarily going to appeal to your devout county cricket follower as such.English people like their historic regions for their sports, here their counties. We are not like Australians or Indians who do not give a toss about their state cricket and enthusiastically accepted plastic Macdonalds teams.
Of course being a Durham fan at this moment in time it is difficult to look at anything the ECB do with a neutral eye so I do understand your grievances.The only people supporting this are ex-cricketer old knackers who work for BT and Sky like Vaughan, David (''did I mention I'm working class?') Lloyd and Hussein. The ECB also trotted out a poster boy mercenary in cowardly Eoin Morgan, a player who abandoned his nation for cash and **** his trews at the thought of traveling to Bangladesh.
Remember the last time the ECB organised a competition, Standford arriving by a helicopter with fake cash - the same Stanford who is currently serving a 110 year prison sentence?
The ECB are revolting band of corporate parasites who want to destroy our national game.
In my defense, there are enough reasons to hate the ECB irrespective of Durham - I did not like them before they buggered my county up the arse - but yes, the ECB are loathed Tyne & Wear way.Of course being a Durham fan at this moment in time it is difficult to look at anything the ECB do with a neutral eye so I do understand your grievances.
I think something needed to be done to attempt to bring us in line with the more enthralling T20 competitions around the world, now only time will tell as to whether people buy into this idea, and while I've expressed certain reservations about the structure of that season at least we are trying something in order to progress.
Exactly. The diehards will hate it. Most hate change by default because they're too short-sighted to see the bigger picture, they hated T20 when it first came out. The same happens in every game or sport.I think one of the points of the competition is to attract a different audience, to expand the number of cricket fans by offering something a little different, so it is not necessarily going to appeal to your devout county cricket follower as such.
They are not aiming the competition at the drunk fans apparently. They want ''families'' and ''ethnic minorities'' apparently.Exactly. The diehards will hate it. Most hate change by default because they're too short-sighted to see the bigger picture, they hated T20 when it first came out. The same happens in every game or sport.
Sorry but the more 'casual' fans or whatever you want to call them, along with the more rowdy fans associated with other sports as well as families will come. They already go to the T20s. There's more of them than the few hundred that attend 4-day games. International cricket and T20 prop up the 4-day games. T20 does not need long format cricket. Long format cricket does however need T20. The diehards seem to think their allowance of T20 against the backdrop of endless whinging and hatred is somehow a favour to the format.
Diehards have this strange idea that the thing they're so precious about can run on thin air, and anything that is populist is bad.
You're looking at the tournament in comparison to itself and other County competitions. If you look at it compared to the IPL, Caribbean T20, Big Bash etc. then it falls behind massively on the global market. The attendances are decent, but that's really a minor point. The estimated value of the TV rights for the new competition are £30m a year higher. Add on another good few million from marketing/sponsorship and the benefits of high quality, high profile matches being on terrestrial TV.They are not aiming the competition at the drunk fans apparently. They want ''families'' and ''ethnic minorities'' apparently.
What is wrong with the current Twenty20 then may I ask? Is that not populist? Chester-Le is usually packed with families and kids (and yes, drunks) at The Blast; that is why they have those silly red hats and gigantic foam fingers.
Attendances for The Blast have gone up 62%. Advanced ticket sales are at a high for this season apparently. The Blast is the seventh most popular sporting competition in England, beating the FA Cup. Venues such as The Oval, Taunton, Canterbury and Hove regularly sell out (how are you going to sell more tickets for the ''London Lions'' at The Oval than a Surrey fixture at The Oval that already sells out?). Smaller teams who struggle in the championship such as Northants have managed to be very successful in this competition, creating kudos for their team/fans not to mention the prize money to help the club. This will all be undermined with a new plastic competition created by a corporate executive.
You've obviously not been on here long enough if you think I give a toss what most people think, let alone the majority of a fraction. Preaching to the choir and all that.Some of the articles and blogs I agree with,
English cricket's new Twenty20 competition: a disaster if it succeeds, a disaster if it fails
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2017/mar/28/t20-tournament-england-world-cup-ecb (Vic Marks)
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2017/mar/26/ecb-ploughs-on-t20-extravaganza-counties (Vic Marks)
City-Based T20: A Needless Gamble - The Full Toss Cricket Blog
Any perusal of the comments sections will find (near) universal condemnation of the proposal.