HeathDavisSpeed
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Has the restriction on playing for your country been tested in EU law? Seems bizarre that such a restraint of trade would be allowable.
If they qualify for England (which Taylor will need to wait another 7 years to do) then I think so.can kolpaks play for england? because taylor walks into that team
Still, it's something that Giles Clarke would do. What a **** he is.Kolpak rules have nothing to do with the ECB.
Zimbabweans playing county cricket instead of for Zimbabwe doesn't really "shrink" cricket though. It makes international matches less competitive, sure, but that's not the same thing. The fact that the pathways are still strong enough to give Zimbabweans cricketing career options overseas is good for the spread of the game even if it's not good for the health of international competitions.Sigh. Just 29. We need ways to see cricket expands, not shrinks.
just a small nit pick and hardly related to the post in question but it was ECB lobbying that led to the "must have played recent international cricket" criteria being introduced by the government in relation to kolpak players/overseas playersKolpak rules have nothing to do with the ECB.
That is kids already in cricket who are able to come information on County opportunities. I doubt it would be conducive to attract kids into cricket itself. But having good players playing for the national team help do that not them going off to overseas and losing domestic access.Talented kids in Zimbabwe may be tempted to train hard in order to earn those CC contracts though. They're probably aware of where the players like Taylor are going and how much their lives will improve because of it, they're not dumb and think it's just 'weird non-TV cricket'.
Subjective though, and we're probably not in the best position to know what the impact will be.
Has the restriction on playing for your country been tested in EU law? Seems bizarre that such a restraint of trade would be allowable.
Speaking of which, isn't the lack of cricket on FTA one of the main reasons for the decline of junior cricket in england?I somewhat agree with Pratters here. If you're a young Zimbabwean kid and you see your team getting destroyed every game and your best players ****ing off to play weird non-TV cricket in a different country, then it's probably not conducive to growing support for the game.
It may not reduce the 'spread' of the game per se, but it may very well reduce participation rates in Zimbabwe.
I think, as increasingly happens when I read his posts, I took more issue more in the slightly odd way he worded his post than what he actually thought he before he posted it.I somewhat agree with Pratters here. If you're a young Zimbabwean kid and you see your team getting destroyed every game and your best players ****ing off to play weird non-TV cricket in a different country, then it's probably not conducive to growing support for the game.
It may not reduce the 'spread' of the game per se, but it may very well reduce participation rates in Zimbabwe.
No, it's is the ECBs self serving distortion of the Kolpak rule to their own advantage.Kolpak rules have nothing to do with the ECB.
This does seem to be the sticking point. There may well have been a good reason for it in the past but it seems very harsh now.Has the restriction on playing for your country been tested in EU law? Seems bizarre that such a restraint of trade would be allowable.