Immenso
International Vice-Captain
The rules of cricket aren't complicated though. It is a very easy sport to explain to a child (except the outside leg LBW rule). Maybe the intricacies and tactics are hard to explain (of the long form) but not the rules.
Where as 'yoof friendly' sports like skateboarding, halfpipe etc. Full of jargon and **** too quick for the eye to pick up unless you are prepared to put in the time to learn it because you find it interesting.
The problem for cricket has been that a large % of the population have(had) thought it is either/or:
- boring (too long, whites)
- un-cool (whites, funny jargon)
- maybe un-relatable (e.g. counties/ districts rather than cities and clubs, and in UK scene engaging ethnic minorities)
Therefore those not engaged are not prepared to learn the jargon and intricacies. No different to me not understanding the 'contact' part of basketball, I don't care enough to learn it. But if I do watch b-ball it's not a deal breaker for my interest.
The Hundred will probably address those issues. but so would any T20 tournament (if it included cities, that is an area where cricket has fallen behind in England, county identity is no longer a big deal for a big % of population).
Where as 'yoof friendly' sports like skateboarding, halfpipe etc. Full of jargon and **** too quick for the eye to pick up unless you are prepared to put in the time to learn it because you find it interesting.
The problem for cricket has been that a large % of the population have(had) thought it is either/or:
- boring (too long, whites)
- un-cool (whites, funny jargon)
- maybe un-relatable (e.g. counties/ districts rather than cities and clubs, and in UK scene engaging ethnic minorities)
Therefore those not engaged are not prepared to learn the jargon and intricacies. No different to me not understanding the 'contact' part of basketball, I don't care enough to learn it. But if I do watch b-ball it's not a deal breaker for my interest.
The Hundred will probably address those issues. but so would any T20 tournament (if it included cities, that is an area where cricket has fallen behind in England, county identity is no longer a big deal for a big % of population).