GIMH
Norwood's on Fire
oh god won't somebody think of the childrenI'll try and finalise my suggestions over the next week, I'm only half done.
oh god won't somebody think of the childrenI'll try and finalise my suggestions over the next week, I'm only half done.
Don't know if you're referring to me with 90 overs or the current CC setup which is a minimum of 96 overs per day.Big yes to this. The half dozen games of County Cricket I've attended have always ended play before 6pm - even in bright sunshine. Scheduling 90 overs in a day has no logic if this rule doesn't have any flexibility to allow more overs in good conditions.
They could just turn it on its head and say counties have to play 8 or even 7 men qualified to play Test cricket for EnglandI too would like more overseas players, but the problem is with Kolpak if you have more, plus them it'll really become an all-forn League.
Would love up to 3, but all top quality. I never understood when two were taken away. Because, yeah it really hurt our bowlers having to bowl against Greenidge and Barry Richards.
Don't know how it can be policed though.
Lees?
It looks a strong XI until we consider how most of them have gotten on when exposed to test match opponents.
And I think you're pushing your luck with Colly at his present age.
I reckon we could both come up with stronger two-county XIs from our time watching the game.
Middlesex and Notts in the early 1980s spring immediately to mind. Or Surrey and Lancashire in the late 1990's maybe.
Of course, none of that changes the fact that Yorkshire are head & shoulders above anyone else domestically. But I wonder whether Yorks and Notts could provide an even better combined side.
noted student of manoj prabhakarI believe he was trained by the best aka Salim Malik...
The reason I've combined Yorkshire and Durham is because those two would actually join to form one franchise under my proposed system. So I'm using them as a really good example of how much stronger the domestic setup could be.EDIT
Make that Surrey and Yorkshire in the late 1990's/early 2000's. The latter's quicks plus Vaughan & McGrath combined with the former's batting lineup would have been a more than decent XI.
Nah think of the logistics of it all. Why would the IPL team owners bother with FC and OD? It just doesn't make sense. There's way too many teams which is diluting the current competition but that just isn't the solution.Dont RSA already have like the perfect FC set up? There is a regional competition that feeds into the franchise competition. I would rather see the same model happen in India where we can have the IPL franchises play all 3 formats (international players can play based on availability, maybe a window to ensure they are all there for the T20 phase alone from the ICC would help). Basically we have the zonal competitions like Duleep and Deodhar Trophies that can be instead played for by the IPL franchises. This way, the regional competition would be a feeder to the franchises and the franchises can then feed into the national team as this competition would be of a higher standard. If that is what you are essentially proposing for England too, then I think it will work out well for you guys.
Now I'm with you. Sorry, I lost track of what the thread was about.The reason I've combined Yorkshire and Durham is because those two would actually join to form one franchise under my proposed system. So I'm using them as a really good example of how much stronger the domestic setup could be.
Nah think of the logistics of it all. Why would the IPL team owners bother with FC and OD? It just doesn't make sense. There's way too many teams which is diluting the current competition but that just isn't the solution.
The Duleep trophy should definitely be longer though.
I'm not trying to be facetious, but how did the counties cope financially before the 2020 group stages became home and away? Especially as that would have been before Sky took over coverage of our test matches, with the massive cash injection that followed.Problem with cutting back the T20 is that that is where the counties make their money - could only do that with a much higher ECB subsidy and then that would negatively affect the bigger sides who get more people in for T20s.
This is actually what they did when creating the Hundred Teams. Only a couple of variants in terms of who the counties in brackets would be.1. A New Top Level
One of the fundamental problems with the English game is the sheer number of counties which dilutes the talent in the First Class game, and the sheer volume of cricket that gets played in the English First Class summer. On the one hand, the volume of cricket can be a good thing because of amount of experience a player can get - 5 seasons worth of County Cricket sees a player play 80 FC games in England as opposed to a maximum of 55 games in Shield Cricket down under - but IMO there's a happy medium that needs to be met.
And I think that happy medium is 8 First Class franchises. This does not mean abolishing the County game as it is altogether - I would move County Cricket to a 3 day format, and it would no longer be the top level of the game in much the same way that South African Provincial cricket functions - but simply that I would introduce a new level above County Cricket. And I would involve the counties themselves by making the counties the stakeholders in each of the FC franchises. Each Franchise would be based at one of the main 8 Test grounds, with at least one of the lesser FC counties also taking an equal stake in the new franchise. Based on Geography, this would leave the 8 Franchises being:
Yorkshire (Durham)
Lancashire (Derbyshire)
Nottinghamshire (Leicestershire)
Warwickshire (Worcestershire, Northamptonshire)
Middlesex (Essex)
Surrey (Kent)
Hampshire (Sussex)
Glamorgan (Gloucestershire, Somerset)
So that would be 8 teams in all 3 major competitions - First Class, List A and Twenty20. Each franchise would be allowed to sign one overseas player (subject to strict eligibility criteria), with more allowed for Twenty20 cricket. More on this later.
This would concentrate the talent within the English game, strengthening it at the top level.
Part 2: April and May.