it doesn't work like thatWhat would an IPL team look like? Since it's official, we'd expect the best of current internationals in action. We see a few Aussies - possibly two per team - in these teams, and also players from SA, NZ and possibly Eng/WI. Will there be lpace for domestic players from India in these teams? We don't know, and even Indian reserve players will have a hard time breaking in- exactly the opposite of the ongoing ICL 50's, where just about anyone can make a team.
I would say its certainly more of cricket than ODI ever will be.
ha ha terrible article.
ha ha terrible article.
Kids playing on streets with shaped wooden planks and taped over rubber balls think they're playing cricket. And doubt if any one will think they're not.
So true.The turnaround of the players' unions has been swifter than that by the men in the middle. For years the Australian Cricketers' Association (ACA) and the Federation of International Cricketers' Associations (FICA) have had one major platform, screaming about burnout and overload. The noise has been so loud and regular, it has become as numbing as shopping-centre background music.
In 2006 Tim May, the FICA chief executive, was worried players might turn to drugs to cope with the punishing schedules, but now he and his ACA counterpart, Paul Marsh, are fighting for a quick fix. They want a six-week window free of Tests and one-day internationals so their members can switch between board and IPL demands. Of course the idea wins support from the players and their managers
$$ always changes things.Amazing how thing$ change!
Nailed it.http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/current/story/336816.html
So true.
Its really hard to take a cricketer talking about burnout seriously anymore.
Its all well and good if they want to sign up to the IPL and earn a bucketload of cash. Who are we to say they shouldn't? But then don't come out in the media and have a whinge about how you guys travel so much and play so much cricket. You're living people's dreams. Cop it, or quit.
The way that the Australian players have jumped through hoops just to be able to sign for the IPL shows that the BCCI, and the money they have, really do run cricket. Not that we didn't know that already, but I find it hilarious that the Australian players had a cry about BCCI power during the Harbhajan controversy, and now they're on hands and knees begging for their contracts.
Yup. No one minds when you're benefiting from that power.http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/current/story/336816.html
So true.
Its really hard to take a cricketer talking about burnout seriously anymore.
Its all well and good if they want to sign up to the IPL and earn a bucketload of cash. Who are we to say they shouldn't? But then don't come out in the media and have a whinge about how you guys travel so much and play so much cricket. You're living people's dreams. Cop it, or quit.
The way that the Australian players have jumped through hoops just to be able to sign for the IPL shows that the BCCI, and the money they have, really do run cricket. Not that we didn't know that already, but I find it hilarious that the Australian players had a cry about BCCI power during the Harbhajan controversy, and now they're on hands and knees begging for their contracts.
Good on CA for standing up for themselves. Guys like Ponting, Gilchrist, Lee etc earn over $1 million a year just from their CA retainer and match payments. When you're paying an employee that sort of money, you're entitled to insist that the players honour the clauses in their contracts.
I just think its CA standing up for their rights. Why should they roll over for domestic Twenty20 competition that hardly anyone in Australia will care for?But it is not going to effect the Pointing, Lee Gilchrist etc. This ruling is going to effect the Noffke, Bollinger, Katich and co, who don't earn that much compared to the main players. Just means the clubs will get in those big name players and other guys that earn less wont get a chance to play in IPL and get some extra money.
This is basically CA just saying you might have money, but we got the players. They are just becoming as bad as BCCI in this power battle.
What about the rights of domestic players in Australia to earn more money. It not about them rolling over for IPL, it about giving players the options they deserve. I think people forget that most domestic players might earn decent money, but a fair bit below your average football player in Australia.I just think its CA standing up for their rights. Why should they roll over for domestic Twenty20 competition that hardly anyone in Australia will care for?
They've mis-judged the popularity in Australia of generic, cobbled together sides featuring Indian domestic players, many of whom most people would never had heard of.If no one is Australia cares about this tournment then why do you think Channel Ten bought the rights to this comp, over domestic cricket rights in Australia.
There wont be too many Indian domestic players in the 1st XI that cricket fans haven't heard of. If you had a look a players signed already, most of the 1st XI sides will be made up of known International players. With the rest first team Indian players and top line fringe players. Most of your average Indian domestic cricket will struggle to make the squads as squad fillers. I doubt there will be too many Indian players in the squad that aren't currently in Australia or playing in representative Zonal competition. A lot of guys in Zonal comp won't even make the final squads.They've mis-judged the popularity in Australia of generic, cobbled together sides featuring Indian domestic players, many of whom most people would never had heard of.
You don't support this IPL, do you? I'm death-riding it big time. Generic teams are just so meaningless (which Twenty20 is anyway). We saw how meaningless the World XI games were.There wont be too many Indian domestic players in the 1st XI that cricket fans haven't heard of. If you had a look a players signed already, most of the 1st XI sides will be made up of known International players. With the rest first team Indian players and top line fringe players. Most of your average Indian domestic cricket will struggle to make the squads as squad fillers. I doubt there will be too many Indian players in the squad that aren't currently in Australia or playing in representative Zonal competition.