Alan Harper's Tash
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- Joined
- 12 Dec 2010
- Messages
- 51,381
Maybe so, but T20 is already a fan winner, there is no need to halve it again and have fans texting in which ball the batsman can’t get out on.I'm afraid I disagree.
Being open to change and new ideas is probably crickets biggest strength. T20 is the most successful "other" format in any sport - 5 a side football, rugby 7s, tennis doubles, XFL....every other sport would kill for something as successful as T20. Formula 1 is trying to do something similar with sprint races, LIV is trying to do the same with golf. Cricket is 20+ years ahead of them.
TMS had a guy on in the last test during lunch who said 50% of world cricket revenue comes from T20 now, and 20 years ago there'd never been an international game.
Formats like The Hundred of 6ixty might not be successes in the long term, but it's really good for the game that people have the ability to try things out and some ideas might be awful in practice, some might turn out to be great. All of world cricket is now adopting The Hundred's idea that the new batsman is always on strike, no more crossing when the ball is in the air etc.
This West Indies T10 tournament is 45 minutes an innings, which brings it right down to football/rugby time frames, it's a 4 day festival. Some of the ideas are a bit out there (extra powerplay if you hit enough 6s in the first), but some could find their way into other formats (losing a fielder for not bowling overs on time could easily turn into only being allowed 4 men outside the circle in T20 for example)
At what point does it no longer be cricket?
T5 is next with bowlers bowling underarm. They could call it a home run derby.
If they hit certain targets, they can double their score too.
Also, if you attend, you haven’t got time to go to the bar, you miss 75% of the game.