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Ironically about the Hundred

  • Thread starter Thread starter stephen cartwright
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What about this

Could the hundred be shared around the other grounds in future? With playing the t20 qf Lancashire at CLS, they may allow the northern franchise to have games at Headingley, old Trafford and CLS, so that potential new audience, could see the games live, without 200 mile round trips?

Don’t know where you are based or have kids, but if it’s north east, would you travel to Headingley, if after watching the game on tv, your kids were desperate to see a game live in person?

I'd say from my own experience that UK kids get inspired by TV way more than by attending at a ground. Yes, ideally there'd be close venues but I can see the impact of it being negligible.

None of my peer group really went to watch Durham, it was all about what was on BBC.
 

I'd say from my own experience that UK kids get inspired by TV way more than by attending at a ground. Yes, ideally there'd be close venues but I can see the impact of it being negligible.

None of my peer group really went to watch Durham, it was all about what was on BBC.
No doubt about that.
 
What about this

Could the hundred be shared around the other grounds in future? With playing the t20 qf Lancashire at CLS, they may allow the northern franchise to have games at Headingley, old Trafford and CLS, so that potential new audience, could see the games live, without 200 mile round trips?

Don’t know where you are based or have kids, but if it’s north east, would you travel to Headingley, if after watching the game on tv, your kids were desperate to see a game live in person?
There’s a team called the Manchester Originals based at Old Trafford.
 
Alternatively, bin off this Hundred shite and play the (massively successful) Blast at the end of the season after the CC/50 over comps and internationals are finished. There is enough time. Re-negotiate the contract with SKY and stick some games on BBC4.
 
I haven’t spoken at length about The Hundred on here.

I think that The Hundred will just compromise the County Championship - which needs more focus (just look at England’s Test batting) and the One-Day Cup is one just a Second XI competition. This baffles me as we are 50 Over world champions! Why aren’t we going to have our top players playing that format domestically. The T20 Blast has had record crowds this year and is clearly garnering interest around the country - so what is the need for this?
This will just pile money into the pockets of T20 globetrotters such as Chris Gayle who tour the world playing short-form cricket. This will cut a lot of the country off also. The ECB are clearly setting up this competition to get young people into cricket. What if a young lad living here watches a game on BBC Two or whatever and says “I want to go to a game.” Where’s the nearest ground that’s hosting this mockery of a competition? Headingley. That’s a massive trip. So cricket loses a supporter thanks to the ECB alienating supporters in “unprofitable” areas of the country.

To summarise: three things.
1) I hope this falls flat on its arse.
2) Anyone who cares about county cricket should boycott this.
3) FTECB.
 
Alternatively, bin off this Hundred shite and play the (massively successful) Blast at the end of the season after the CC/50 over comps and internationals are finished. There is enough time. Re-negotiate the contract with SKY and stick some games on BBC4.
Maybe not at the end of the season but definately a commited 5-6 week block from ealy June to mid July. Also reduce to the competition to 10-12 games per team.
 
I haven’t spoken at length about The Hundred on here.

I think that The Hundred will just compromise the County Championship - which needs more focus (just look at England’s Test batting) and the One-Day Cup is one just a Second XI competition. This baffles me as we are 50 Over world champions! Why aren’t we going to have our top players playing that format domestically. The T20 Blast has had record crowds this year and is clearly garnering interest around the country - so what is the need for this?
This will just pile money into the pockets of T20 globetrotters such as Chris Gayle who tour the world playing short-form cricket. This will cut a lot of the country off also. The ECB are clearly setting up this competition to get young people into cricket. What if a young lad living here watches a game on BBC Two or whatever and says “I want to go to a game.” Where’s the nearest ground that’s hosting this mockery of a competition? Headingley. That’s a massive trip. So cricket loses a supporter thanks to the ECB alienating supporters in “unprofitable” areas of the country.

To summarise: three things.
1) I hope this falls flat on its arse.
2) Anyone who cares about county cricket should boycott this.
3) FTECB.
It's also piling cash into Harrison's pocket, he's on a canny wedge.
 
Maybe not at the end of the season but definately a commited 5-6 week block from ealy June to mid July. Also reduce to the competition to 10-12 games per team.
My thinking was along the lines of having CC/50 over stuff at the same time as England play. This would allow players to get back into form and/or allow England to pick players who are in form. A block of 4-5 weeks of T20 in August/September would turn the Blast into another IPL with counties able to pick overseas players from a full available pool.
 
Why haven’t they just reduced the 50-over cup to straight knockout? That wouldn’t take too much time out of the schedule and give them time for the Hundred nonsense.
 
I haven’t spoken at length about The Hundred on here.

I think that The Hundred will just compromise the County Championship - which needs more focus (just look at England’s Test batting) and the One-Day Cup is one just a Second XI competition. This baffles me as we are 50 Over world champions! Why aren’t we going to have our top players playing that format domestically. The T20 Blast has had record crowds this year and is clearly garnering interest around the country - so what is the need for this?
This will just pile money into the pockets of T20 globetrotters such as Chris Gayle who tour the world playing short-form cricket. This will cut a lot of the country off also. The ECB are clearly setting up this competition to get young people into cricket. What if a young lad living here watches a game on BBC Two or whatever and says “I want to go to a game.” Where’s the nearest ground that’s hosting this mockery of a competition? Headingley. That’s a massive trip. So cricket loses a supporter thanks to the ECB alienating supporters in “unprofitable” areas of the country.

To summarise: three things.
1) I hope this falls flat on its arse.
2) Anyone who cares about county cricket should boycott this.
3) FTECB.

Fantastic post.

The worrying thing, no, the infuriating thing about what you posted - in terms of the questions, is that the vast majority of cricket supporters in this country are asking exactly the same questions. They also have exactly the same concerns. Yet, FTECB have absolutely no answers whatsoever to those questions and concerns.
 
Fantastic post.

The worrying thing, no, the infuriating thing about what you posted - in terms of the questions, is that the vast majority of cricket supporters in this country are asking exactly the same questions. They also have exactly the same concerns. Yet, FTECB have absolutely no answers whatsoever to those questions and concerns.
They don’t care what supporters want. Either that or they’re oblivious to the problems that this abomination has.
 
From today's Telegraph - I feel sick. This is bliddy shoite.

Every franchise in cricket’s new Hundred competition, which launches next summer, will be guaranteed at least one England Test player.

Telegraph Sport can reveal complete details of the inaugural player draft for the new competition, which will be held on the evening of Oct 20 ahead of the first season next summer. Player registration for the draft will open in the middle of next week. Hundreds of players – both from England and overseas – are expected to enter the draft.

By early October, shortly after England’s new central contracts are finalised, all eight teams will have chosen their England Test players, as well as up to two local players a team, in advance of the draft. At the same time, the draft order will be finalised after lots are drawn. Players in the draft will be chosen through a “snake” draft system, meaning a team with first pick in the first round would have last pick in the second round.

Cricketers who enter the Hundred draft will be obliged to go to whichever franchise selects them. Players are free to enter for a minimum draft price, meaning they are only eligible to be signed for at least this amount.

On draft night, each team will have 100 seconds to make their pick on an electronic tablet. Teams will have three representatives on their table in the draft room, with the draft – similar to the model used in US sports and the Indian Premier League auction – shown live on Sky Sports. A number of England players are expected to attend, with the draft held the day before England fly to New Zealand.

The women’s Hundred competition will use a different system. Instead of the draft, England-contracted players will be distributed to franchises, with that process expected to be completed by the end of September. Non-England contracted players will then negotiate with teams, rather than entering a draft, so they will have a say in where they end up.

The men’s tournament will clash with the England-Pakistan Test series next summer, so the availability of England’s Test players will be compromised. Players are still expected to be available for the first three games and the final stages.

Competition organisers have agreed to the method by which England Test players are distributed. The team representing each region – so the franchise based at The Oval represents both Surrey and Kent, for instance – will be entitled to pick up one England Test player from their catchment area.

After they have done so, all other England Test players are put back into a pot, with teams who did not have a local Test player to choose from (or opted not to select one) getting the first right to select them.

This means that if the Leeds franchise opted to pick Ben Stokes – who, as a Durham player, would count as a local player – then Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root would go into the pot, and could be selected to play by other teams.

Because of their limited availability, England Test players will not count towards the 15-man squads at each franchise. Each team will, in practice, have either 16 or 17 players, depending on whether they get one or two England Test cricketers.

Some England red-ball specialists may choose not to enter the draft.

Before the draft, each team will also be allowed to pick an extra two players within their catchment area. Their wages will depend on negotiations between the player and the team. Such players will effectively fill a berth in the draft – so if, say, the Lord’s franchise chose Eoin Morgan as a local player in one of the £125,000 slots, he would fulfil this position and the team would not be able to sign someone else in this position during the draft.

The salary bands for the draft have also been confirmed. Salaries will have a top band of £125,000 followed by £100,000, £75,000, £60,000, £50,000, £40,000 or £30,000. There will be two players in each category. Each franchise is allowed three overseas players – as in the women’s Hundred – though they will be able to replace any overseas players who have to leave. There will be no limits on the number of players teams can sign from any county or country.

All teams will spend an identical amount on players – the payment for England Test players come from a central pot – in the hope of creating competitive balance.

Many county players will expect to earn double their annual salaries, with average county wages currently £45,000.

The organising committee has ruled that only players who have been with counties for at least a year will be eligible to be signed as local players. This is designed to prevent counties using the lure of a Hundred contract to boost their own recruitment.

After the draft, each team will retain one vacancy in their core 15-man squad. This will be reserved for a wild-card pick – selected approximately two weeks before the start of the Hundred on the basis of their form in the T20 Blast – who will earn a salary of £30,000.
 
Still won’t work, no matter what they fling at it. Anyone know what happens for rain delays with bbc schedules?

Caribbean premier league at the same time, will Gayle etc be flitting between the two?

Will the new audience make up the 93% of current audience who want nowt to do with this?

Why are totally unsuccessful T20 counties rewarded with franchises?

Why could the FTECB not use the gift of it being the year 2020, to just upgrade the increasingly popular T20 blast which when viewed is full of the alleged new audience types they want to attract?

Why as a long standing lover of cricket on tv and live, as a resident of the north east, I’m deemed unwelcome to view a new format, live and in the ground, unless I endure a 180 mile round trip?
 
From today's Telegraph - I feel sick. This is bliddy shoite.

Every franchise in cricket’s new Hundred competition, which launches next summer, will be guaranteed at least one England Test player.

Telegraph Sport can reveal complete details of the inaugural player draft for the new competition, which will be held on the evening of Oct 20 ahead of the first season next summer. Player registration for the draft will open in the middle of next week. Hundreds of players – both from England and overseas – are expected to enter the draft.

By early October, shortly after England’s new central contracts are finalised, all eight teams will have chosen their England Test players, as well as up to two local players a team, in advance of the draft. At the same time, the draft order will be finalised after lots are drawn. Players in the draft will be chosen through a “snake” draft system, meaning a team with first pick in the first round would have last pick in the second round.

Cricketers who enter the Hundred draft will be obliged to go to whichever franchise selects them. Players are free to enter for a minimum draft price, meaning they are only eligible to be signed for at least this amount.

On draft night, each team will have 100 seconds to make their pick on an electronic tablet. Teams will have three representatives on their table in the draft room, with the draft – similar to the model used in US sports and the Indian Premier League auction – shown live on Sky Sports. A number of England players are expected to attend, with the draft held the day before England fly to New Zealand.

The women’s Hundred competition will use a different system. Instead of the draft, England-contracted players will be distributed to franchises, with that process expected to be completed by the end of September. Non-England contracted players will then negotiate with teams, rather than entering a draft, so they will have a say in where they end up.

The men’s tournament will clash with the England-Pakistan Test series next summer, so the availability of England’s Test players will be compromised. Players are still expected to be available for the first three games and the final stages.

Competition organisers have agreed to the method by which England Test players are distributed. The team representing each region – so the franchise based at The Oval represents both Surrey and Kent, for instance – will be entitled to pick up one England Test player from their catchment area.

After they have done so, all other England Test players are put back into a pot, with teams who did not have a local Test player to choose from (or opted not to select one) getting the first right to select them.

This means that if the Leeds franchise opted to pick Ben Stokes – who, as a Durham player, would count as a local player – then Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root would go into the pot, and could be selected to play by other teams.

Because of their limited availability, England Test players will not count towards the 15-man squads at each franchise. Each team will, in practice, have either 16 or 17 players, depending on whether they get one or two England Test cricketers.

Some England red-ball specialists may choose
What a f***ing mess.
 
I'm no lefty. I have no problem with Directors of companies earning big salaries. If shareholders are happy then I don't think it has anything to do with me.

But this I think is very wrong.
The ECB's accounts for 2018-19 show that the governing body remunerated Harrison, its highest paid director, a total of £719,175 - up £114,301 from the previous year.
 
I'm no lefty. I have no problem with Directors of companies earning big salaries. If shareholders are happy then I don't think it has anything to do with me.

But this I think is very wrong.
The ECB's accounts for 2018-19 show that the governing body remunerated Harrison, its highest paid director, a total of £719,175 - up £114,301 from the previous year.
I’m a rabid leftie but don’t care what people earn, however I do have a problem when those same people vote and influence government to ensure the dregs get £60 odd a week or less for their pains
 
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