24/08
So far during this year's H*ndred Competition, the TEN (as of 16/08) Nottinghamshire players signed to the variety of franchises have achieved:
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Player release from the H*ndred rules |
Freddie McCann and Liam Patterson-White given a pass to play for Notts Outlaws from Birmingham 13/08
07/08
ECB ditches controversial Hundred-branded balls
The balls used for this year's men's and women's competitions are from the same batch used in the T20 Blast
ECB admits no evidence Hundred has attracted new fans to other forms of cricket
- Richard Gould: ‘That’s work we need to do’
- ECB long boasted tournament attracts different audience
Simon Burnton, The Guardian
Thu 31 Jul 2025 13.34 BST
Richard Gould, the England and Wales Cricket Board’s chief executive, has admitted his organisation has no evidence that new fans attracted by the Hundred have gone on to attend other forms of the game. The ECB has long boasted that the tournament has attracted a different audience to existing formats.
“The Hundred is all about throwing cricket’s doors open – and it’s already delivering,” the ECB’s then chief executive, Tom Harrison, said after the first tournament in 2021. “We need to grow cricket, reach more people, and that’s exactly what the Hundred does.”
A report published last October found that 31% of tickets for the Hundred have been bought by women, 23% were bought for juniors and 41% of buyers attended in family groups. But on the day counties received their first down payment on the windfall generated by external investment into the eight Hundred franchises Gould said no work had been done into finding out if any of those new fans remain involved in the sport when the tournament is out of action.
“That’s probably a bit of work we need to do,” he said. “Just to check that when people do come in, where do they go? Because you might get some coming in to Test cricket [who] then go to the Hundred and Hundred into Test cricket. We haven’t done that work in any great detail.” That lack of work is surprising given cross-pollination between formats is one of the ECB’s primary goals.
“Fandom is really important for us, whether it’s England, Leicestershire or London Spirit,” Gould said. “That’s the key. We’ve got a really dedicated core audience, which is relatively small compared to other sports. Then we’ve got lots of people that are very interested in cricket, but perhaps don’t come to it as often as we want.
“We know the interest is there, we just need to get people to come more often for all formats, rather than just that ‘I’ve been to the Test once a year’ type of thing.”
This year’s Hundred, which starts at Lord’s on Tuesday, is likely to be the last before new owners start to push through significant changes, from team names and kits to the length of the format itself. “That’s the kind of conversation we’re starting to get into now,” said Vikram Banerjee, the tournament’s managing director. “It would be slightly odd to bring all these great people in and then just leave it as it is.”
Deals for the sale of part or full stakes in six of the eight Hundred franchises were finalised this week, with the final two expected imminently. The total investment has been put at £520m, of which an initial sum of “just north of £400,000” has been released to every county. Host counties can expect to receive a minimum of £18m and non-hosts around £25m.
The possibility of adding a ninth team has already been discussed, but non-hosts have been warned against spending their windfalls on unnecessary stadium upgrades. “When giving guidance as to what a future expansion team needs to look like in terms of facilities, we’re not going to be setting huge capacities,” Gould said.
“What we don’t want is a load of empty plastic seats around the place. We’re not looking to see investment going into creating white elephants.”
16/07
15/07
Wild card day for those eight franchises.
"Wild", Notts fans can be entitled to be livid as another player from our regular One Day Cup squad is signed-up by the Birmingham franchise.
The biggest name in the H*ndred mens* will be Liam Patterson-White, eighteen characters plus the hyphen.
As for those Notts cricket supporters that can stomach the August competition and still feel that they support the real Nottinghamshire club with integrity with no conflict, then perhaps rather than watch the Trent R*ckets they should splash out on tickets at Edgbaston as their franchise has the most Outlaws representing them: Duckett, Clarke, Freddie and now Liam, whereas the Trent Bridge franchise only has Calvin and Dillon in its squad. Not even Silver Fox could get his inform son drafted, now that he too has a snout in the R*ckets' feeding trough.
*One more character than Barrel, "Tilly Corteen-Coleman" in the women's
Freddie McCann is also at the Birmingham franchise - DH
ReplyDeleteIndeed, but as an injury replacement he is yet to appear on th BBC's squad lists, similarly Dillon isn't on their list of Rocketeers.
DeleteFour of the five young Lancashire cricketers signed up by Hundred clubs (Tom Hartley, Tom Aspinwall, Mitch Stanley and Rocky Flintoff) were not selected to play in the first round of the Hundred matches.
ReplyDeleteTheir chances of playing much cricket during August look slim, which hardly helps their development.
Instead of reducing cricket to address concerns about overworked players due to the county championship being compressed into the fringes of the season, the ECB and county bosses need to come up with practical solutions to a problem that is solely of their own making.
So agree, "too much cricket" is totally untrue, it is terrible scheduling. Re article above, 7/8 for Notts players in franchise thing, it really is "Blankety Blank". While 2 kids do great stuff for Notts in Metro Bank.
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ReplyDeleteSeems a pretty meagre return for nine Notts players employed by the 100 bosses
A total of 121 runs
And 8 wickets
Money for old rope for some of the chosen few ??!!
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ReplyDeleteRef todays Rockets match . Can a rejuvenated Tom Moores work his magic ?
So was the farce at Trent Bridge today begun with a minute's silence for the great Bobby Simpson ?
ReplyDeleteI suspect not, they have no feel nor love for OUR game.
They will not know that Bobby started his successful period as Australian Ashes captain at Trent Bridge. That here, in that match, he took a superb catch to dismiss Geoff Boycott for 49, to end GB's first Test innings. They have zero respect for cricket history, locally, or of anywhere. They are parasites, sucking everything out of it to make their money.
48 !
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DeleteRICH - its now a different world to the time you watched all the matches at TB
Today Rocket attendance at TB was near capacity 14,256
Thats probably DOUBLE the best BLAST TB attendance this season . Those crowd numbers cannit be ignored . The Rockets and 7 other “Teams” are selling a product that people want to see .
Us “proper”cricket fans may not like it but the goalposts in cricket have moved ( daft thing to day) .
We have to accept
that a fair part of the “ cricket” fanbase has changed .
We dont like change as we get older . But let the new young generation have their day in the sun
We have had ours.
We cannot turn the clock back - lets just accept the new situation and accept the vast amount of “ new money “ that will help keep some Counties solvent .
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DeleteNot being at Trent Bridge yesterday, with my only indication of the crowd being the images of the Tom Moores' sixes shown in clips on SM - all I can say is that for a near sell out crowd, there were an awful lot of empty seats in the Smith Cooper Fridge - check them pictures out yourself.
DeleteFair points, but ir is fair to say that The Blast was pulling 11,000 at Trent Bridge, sometimes more, before the competition was downgraded and moved, time wise, with all the promotion going to the new "kid" on the block. I do also feel that cricket has lost it's soul, and many of it's skills. Saw club match yesterday, plenty of young lads playing, and it was still the game we love.
DeleteThanks Dave.
Delete82 NOT OUT
ReplyDeleteThe 14,000 plus crowd yesterday was the official one and not an estimate .
Ref the TB T20 glory days . I went down one Friday night after the match had started. I couldnt find s seat - so I came back home .
Personally I like a bit of space so a crowd of 7/8,000 suits me fine .
I wonder how many of the 14,000 TB crowd yesterday no longer attend Blast matches ?
Also , why do they prefer the 100 ball format ? Does thr 100 Comp appeal more to families with younger children and has a friendlier atmosphere.?
Some boozy Blast Friday nights can seem a bit threatening because the focus for Notts ccc is selling overpriced alcohol and the cricket is secondary !?
What do others think?
I'm not quibbling about the 14K number, as capacity is 17K, there will be spaces. It's a little odd that the family stand would be where I saw some of those spaces - perhaps the kids were engrossed in other activities laid on at that time under the stand. When Outlaws were getting 11, 12, 13, 14 thousands attendances, the Blast was played during July and August. Warm evenings etc etc - marketting emphasis is no longer on the Blast - the ticket office has been laminated / shrouded in TR colours for weeks (and was probably during the Blast). The average TR ticket purchaser travels over 100 miles matchdays. The average Outlaws ticket purchaser lives in or around NG2. Hype draws people in and the hype for the H*ndred has been in your face for months up and down the country - a new audience but not a local audience necessarily.
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ReplyDeleteDAVE - you quote an amazing stat in your last post .
The average Rockets TB customer travels a return distance of 100 miles . I assumed ( incorrectly) that the 14,000 crowd yesterday would mainly consist of locals .
So the 100 ball net is cast far and wide
The somebody somethings are playing a similar mercenary outfit at Trent Bridge today, women then men. Seemed to be lot of people going towards the ground, and public area used for car parking pretty full. But put the TV on during first innings of the whole thing, and a lot of empty seats. Always difficult to estimate crowds, but I would be surprised if it is above 40% full. Be interesting to see what it is like during men's event, refuse to call it a match. Standard of play terrible, just mindless,, ineffective slogging. People there very quiet.
ReplyDeleteSadly, as I see it, it looks pretty full now.
ReplyDeleteSadly we may be seeing the beginning of the end for county cricket. Well on a Serious and general public way.
ReplyDeleteI fear for it like never before. The Blast is sliding out of the public interest.
This Hundred will prob go T20 and expand with more money and further public support. Counties with wither and the T20 become another one day cup.
Championship games playing in April and may but only 10 games.
The new franchise teams will own July and August.
Think we can all see this coming.
That’s cheered me up 🆙 no end Steve !!!
DeleteYes Rich, I tuned into BBC2 after I got back from a meal 🥘 out with the good lady, and had a massage laugh 😂 that yet another game in the 16.4 was a complete and utter non-event with the first innings side mustering a paltry score. What awful 😢 non-entertainment yet again for I guess a 70% full home 🏡 of cricket 🏏 and I feel sorry for anyone who parted with their hard earnt watching that complete and utter tripe. Couldn’t switch over to BBC4 to watch the Good Life quick enough - Margot was on fine form…….
ReplyDeletePerhaps even a massive laugh 😂- certainly no massage 💆♀️- blame predictive text for that one !!!!
ReplyDeleteI must apologise for the negative tone.
ReplyDeleteHope I didn't spoil what sounds a fine evening.
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ReplyDeleteTHE TIDE IS COMING IN ! We can’t hold the 100 comp back . The biggish crowds show there is a demand for the type of slog slog slog cricket played . Everyone involved in the game of cricket has to acknowledge the new reality. We may not like it but the ECB and powerful money men have decided it’s the right way to go forward - financially at any rate . At least we are getting some live free to air “ cricket” to watch and seeing top class players from all over the world . I watched the Trent Rocket match last night ( first 100 match for me this season) . The standard of fielding was exceptional - that in itself is worth watching . Some on here are in for a miserable few years ahead if they refuse to give the 100 a bit of thought and attention .
Sometimes it’s best to accept things as they are now and not as we would like them to be. I would like to bet that all those who post on here and rubbish the 100 in every way are of a certain age - 50 plus .
At aged 82 I can well remember Sobers batting for Notts at TB and the fantastic years of Rice and Hadlee . Those times are gone . They ain’t coming back . Top players now don’t have to retire and run a newsagents or pub . The various franchise competitions give them a much more lucrative future and retirement . Who can blame them for taking the big money offered ? What would YOU do in similar circumstances? You are never going to get rich just slogging away in 4 day County cricket . A fast bowler only playing white ball cricket will probably have a much longer career and suffer far less injury . The 100 is here - and here to stay - but night will still follow day and the world will keep on turning .
Can' t object to anything written above, good stuff, though we all have our varying views. Hundred seems to attract people but it, and even more so IPL etc, have put cricket in a terrible mess. Much of that is well documented here and elsewhere. For me, I have been to Trent Bridge once this season; have not seen a Notts First Tram match at all. Apart from the terrible, in many many ways, Covid Summer, that is the first time that has happened since 1964. Do go to see West Bridgford Legion,. The question for me, if something now makes me unhappy why do it, why follow it ?
ReplyDeleteThe point I was trying to make earlier about the horrid 16.4 tripe of a competition is in reality is it not the complete opposite of a product that was the objective to be created ?
DeleteAn awful lot of low scores, meaning fewer boundaries and to the masses less entertainment than most Blast 💥 games from what I can gather from only glancing at the scores each day
A competition played in August on a lot of used, tired 🥱 surfaces with bowlers massively on top can hardly be described as a 6 after 6 after 6 slogfest of a tournament
If matches were made to be played with short boundaries on good batting decks where boundaries reigned galore - like our t20 home 🏡 glory days- and with the very best players from around the globe 🌎 I could have understood a so-called new audience latching onto this adrenaline experience
Even worse to me, however, is that a relatively poor product in terms of overall entertainment has been thrust upon us which from 2026 will start to impinge on the domestic structure and has already reduced our fixtures even before the red ball situation is finalised for next season
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ReplyDeleteI reckon that when the much missed John Player 40 Over Sunday afternoon first started there were those who thought the world would end quite quickly . Many Counties at the time were in dire straits financially but the new format proved a success and generated much needed income plus weekly television exposure . I well remember those pretty informal cricket chats with presenter Peter Walker and cricket personalities shown during the gap between innings . Not forgetting the lovely dulcet tones of maestro bowler Jim Laker .
If the introduction of the John Player league helped save the County scene back then , is it not possible the 100 may turn out to be a “ master” stroke in producing revenue streams to help keep all 18 Counties solvent and in business?