If you had bothered to talk to the men who prepare the wickets, chase up teams, and make the teas you would know that they do it because they loved
their clubs and they don't give a tinkers cuss whether some kid from another club made the county side. It is these people who were the life blood of clubs who are in decline. You say I am in the minority - the attendances and clubs folding suggests the contrary.
I know plenty of people like that, in cricket and football, I talk to them regularly - what's your point?
The reason clubs are folding isn't exclusively the league system you tool. How can you explain the decline in participation in counties without a First Class side? Or moreover, what of the counties who've had First Class sides for hundreds of years - such as Lancashire and Yorkshire? Their club cricket was amongst the best in the world but they're facing the same decline in numbers as our region.
You can't be reasoned with unfortunately, because your bitterness has you so blinkered that it won't allow you to see a different view.
Answer me this, if it's the League system that is to blame, how come Senior League crowds were massively greater in the 60's and 70's than the 90's? Because the NEPL didnt exist then.
The point been for me is that it should not be semi pro because local cricket clubs can not afford it to be that way.
Where they supposed to get the money from it’s not like people are going to cricket clubs and putting money behind the bar like they did in the past.
What has happened is that a handful of clubs in the north east are of a very good standard and the rest are not.
So is the standard of north east club cricket good overall,I would say no!!
Trying to make it semi pro when some clubs are struggling to even turn teams out just makes it a closed shop for the top few teams and does not improve the quality overall.
Professionalism does not make sense when you don’t have the players or the money to make it that way!
I'd argue that most of the sides in NEPL are already operating with such professionalism. The money is there, for some, through means other than bar takings - which is another sign of a different era. There are other revenue streams for clubs now than the old whip-round for the pro.
The standard overall of local cricket is up for debate. I probably haven't been around long enough to judge, but to be honest I don't care - all I care about is supporting England and Durham and playing cricket to whatever standard I am capable of playing it at. That standard is available to me within the new regime, just as it was in the old.
Which really is all I see Club cricket as being about. The same as football. Play it and go as high as your ability will take you but most importantly - enjoy it. If that means dropping down through the pyramid or playing Second Team rather than First, do it.
So in that regard, I don't understand what your issue with it all is. If clubs are ambitious, they can make the grade and become as good as they want to be. If they just want to exist as a competitive social side, there's leagues and competitions for that also.
Nobody is forcing any club to apply for the NEPL or to run as semi-pro.
Spot on and this is also the reason why many local football clubs have folded or are struggling.
Can you explain why many local football clubs have folded or are struggling based around what VOFP said?
Because I'd argue NE non-league football is in the best nick it has been in for about 20 years.
Yep rightly or wrongly participation in sport at a local club level is dwindling so now is the time to support local clubs not tell them what they must have.
Except that isn't happening. Only clubs who wish to be ambitious are being told what they must have.