Friday, September 18, 2009

On and on and on and on and on...

As the ODI series between England and Australia drags interminably on into the latter half of September, I started thinking about the Test series in South Africa. However, I then looked at the calendar for England and realised we have 358 ODIs to play before the Test series starts. OK, so I exaggerate, but there is a lot of ODI stuff to get through before we get to the Tests, with Champions Trophy and then the ODI series versus South Africa.

Thing is, why am I not very excited about this? The Champions Trophy is like a mini world cup, this should be great. Why do I really not care? Well, partly it’s because England are terrible at this format of the game. I won’t go into all the whys and wherefores as there are many, but I cite 3 examples. 1) Jonathan Trott is the top limited- over run-scorer in the country, just got called up to the Test side and doesn’t play ODIs. 2) Adil Rashid played really well in the 1st ODI vs Australia, and then we dropped him supposedly to bolster the batting. The batter was Eoin Morgan. 3) The ECB is about to drop the last 50 over form of the game from the domestic calendar. Seriously, what on earth are they playing at?

However, one of the main reasons is that the 50 over has got a little bit, well, dull. The last world cup featured far too many meaningless matches. The middle overs drag, there’s countless tinkering around the margins of the game trying to inject some whiz-bang into a format that seems tired. So, what is to be done to the 50 over game?

What I’d go for is 50 overs of Test-style cricket. No fielding restrictions, no bowling restrictions. Essentially it would a short form Test match.

If you’ve got an on-fire bowler then you can use him as much as you want, and batters can’t try and ‘see out’ his allocation of overs. There’d be no need for the standard medium pacers coming on to bowl 5-6 overs just because someone needs to fill a 5-6 over slot, they’d be on because they’re the best option for conditions and circumstances. Captains would have far more flexibility over selection and bowling changes.

It would also remove the nonsense that is fielding restrictions. At the moment the opening bowling powerplays essentially mean you have fielding restrictions for the first 15 overs as it is extremely rare that captains hold back a powerplay for a different time. And the batting powerplay seems like a monumentally worthless addition to the game, I don’t think any captain has worked out when it’s best to play it (BTW, it’s when you’ve got 2 established batters on 30ish who are just about to start playing more expansive shots, it’s not for the last 5 overs when your 8 and 9 are in).

It would bring a nice tactical edge that reflects ‘proper’ cricket a bit more. It would also alleviate some of the formulaic nature of the 50 over format. Because there’s so much variation available in Test cricket then there is less chance of innings progressing in the standardised form that often occurs right now.

This would leave Twenty20 as the arena for all the tinkering with powerplays, bowling restrictions etc etc. Which feels like the natural place for all that jazz.

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8 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

What has this got to do with giraffes? Nothing. A waste of my time

1:42 pm, September 18, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I fully agree with the above comment. I want more giraffes

2:00 pm, September 18, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bollocks to the giraffes I want ostriches

2:42 pm, September 18, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

What would Jesus do?

6:03 pm, September 18, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

He would turn you into a leper you heathen. Anyway what is of greater concern is could a giraffe deep throat an 18 inch cock

7:44 pm, September 18, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I reckon it would do it no problems. We just need to reanimate the corpse of John Holmes and get s giraffe to find out

12:44 pm, September 19, 2009  
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