andruid
Cricketer Of The Year
I am thinking a 16 team tournament. 2 groups of 8, with the top four from each group going to a straight knockout quarterfinals, semifinals then finals. Fairly simple, everybody gets a decent amount of exposure and the best teams win out, through a reasonable balance of consistency and game day alertness.
Generally I feel like the reason the ICC changes formats so much with the 50 over world cup is the obsession with trying to gerrymander high profit match ups at every WC, and occasionally failing at it. They don't seem willing to establish a simple purely meritocratic format and let that settle in and become standard because they are too tempted to try force a high stakes India v. Pakistan,or Australia v. England to guarantee a profitable tournament.
Consider that in 2003, they used this rule where teams would carry the points they won against fellow qualifying teams in the first group stage to the super six stage. No doubt the intended design was that if an associate snuck through by beating up the other minnows and NRR, (as twas the most likely scenario for an unfashionable associate team getting into the super sixes) they would be hamstrung by having lost points to the bigger nations they snuck through with. Lo and behold Kenya get into the super sixes carrying 8 points from New Zealand's boycott and the shock upset of Sri Lanka in Nairobi and ride those points, plus a win over a demoralized Zimbabwe all the way to a semifinal meeting against India. great fairy tale, bad for the pocket book.
Come 2007, and they set up a 4 teams per group, group stage in the hope that the cream would rise to the top and the weaklings get shunted aside ASAP, before the serious business of super 8 with lots of epic battles among the proper cricketing nations. Then India and Pakistan choked and and the world got to see Ireland v Bangladesh in a match slot the ICC though they would be India v. Pakistan. back to the drawing board. Numbers at the Cricket World Cup have been going down ever since, I suspect to reduce the risk of the wrong team (for various reasons) showing up at the business end of the tournament.
Generally I feel like the reason the ICC changes formats so much with the 50 over world cup is the obsession with trying to gerrymander high profit match ups at every WC, and occasionally failing at it. They don't seem willing to establish a simple purely meritocratic format and let that settle in and become standard because they are too tempted to try force a high stakes India v. Pakistan,or Australia v. England to guarantee a profitable tournament.
Consider that in 2003, they used this rule where teams would carry the points they won against fellow qualifying teams in the first group stage to the super six stage. No doubt the intended design was that if an associate snuck through by beating up the other minnows and NRR, (as twas the most likely scenario for an unfashionable associate team getting into the super sixes) they would be hamstrung by having lost points to the bigger nations they snuck through with. Lo and behold Kenya get into the super sixes carrying 8 points from New Zealand's boycott and the shock upset of Sri Lanka in Nairobi and ride those points, plus a win over a demoralized Zimbabwe all the way to a semifinal meeting against India. great fairy tale, bad for the pocket book.
Come 2007, and they set up a 4 teams per group, group stage in the hope that the cream would rise to the top and the weaklings get shunted aside ASAP, before the serious business of super 8 with lots of epic battles among the proper cricketing nations. Then India and Pakistan choked and and the world got to see Ireland v Bangladesh in a match slot the ICC though they would be India v. Pakistan. back to the drawing board. Numbers at the Cricket World Cup have been going down ever since, I suspect to reduce the risk of the wrong team (for various reasons) showing up at the business end of the tournament.