Tuesday 21 March 2023

Baseball's Summer Rival - England Players Unavailable

 



ECB to block England players from US league


US T20 league


Harry Brook




Leeds Mercury 13 April 1906









10/02

Pravda Spin

How do the claims in this article fit with the article below?





Alex Hales will miss England tour of Bangladesh as Pakistan Super League pays more

Tim Wigmore 31/01

Hales returned to the England side for the first time since 2019, when he failed a recreational drugs test and was dropped for the ODI World Cup, to play a crucial role in the T20 World Cup win in Australia in November. He hit 186 runs in England’s last four games, including 86 not out during the 10-wicket semi-final victory over India.

But Hales is now set to miss the tour of Bangladesh, England’s first T20 action since the T20 World Cup. Instead, he will remain committed to his contract with Islamabad United in the PSL. Hales was signed as a platinum pick, and stands to earn upwards of £145,000 ($180,000) for the competition.

To leave a portion of the PSL and represent England in Bangladesh, Hales would lose a significant sum of money, with England match fees for players without national contracts - in the region of £5,000 and £2,500 for ODIs and T20Is - worth considerably less than franchise payments.

England play three T20 internationals and three ODIs in Bangladesh, with the series being played from March 1-14, and although Hales remains firmly in the national team’s plans going forward he has chosen to stick with his franchise commitments over national team duty.

England are highly understanding of the situation and have not put pressure on Hales. Indeed, the national team have become increasingly aware that the franchise circuit now pays more, with a series of cricketers who would have been picked for the Lions - the national second-string - this winter not selected so that they could play in franchise leagues instead.

Rob Key and Mo Bobat, England’s managing director and performance director, have taken a pragmatic, flexible approach to overseas leagues. They recognise that it is unfair to demand that players without the certainty of national contracts lose money to represent their country and that players going back on previously agreed franchise deals could jeopardise their future appeal to sides too.

For all the challenges it can present, overseas franchise cricket is also valued for giving players access to high-quality cricket that will improve their games.

The circumstances are particularly unusual in the case of Hales, who looked unlikely to play for England again until an injury to Jonny Bairstow granted him a recall to the T20 World Cup squad, which he had not previously been selected in. He had already planned his winter schedule, and how to balance T20 leagues with time at home and with his girlfriend. Aged 34, Hales is also trying to secure his long-term financial future in preparation for his eventual retirement from the game.

England are still open to Hales appearing in the ODI World Cup in India. Hales has not played any format of the game longer than 20 overs since 2019 - because of a combination of his first-class retirement and the Hundred clashing with the domestic 50-over game. But he has a fine ODI record for England - averaging 37.79 with a strike rate of 96 - and his T20 World Cup campaign showcased his qualities against leading international sides.

After the last ODI against South Africa on Wednesday and the three ODIs in Bangladesh, England only have seven more ODIs - four against New Zealand, and three against Ireland, all at home in September - scheduled before their ODI World Cup defence in India in October.

Hales would need to appear in the summer ODIs if he was to be a viable pick for the World Cup. He is among a series of options - along with Jason Roy, Dawid Malan, Phil Salt, Will Jacks and James Vince - to open with Jonny Bairstow in England’s World Cup side.

The next T20 World Cup is in West Indies and USA in June 2024. Despite his absence in Bangladesh, Hales remains central to England’s plans for that competition.

Hales has been in outstanding form in the ongoing International League T20 in the UAE, topping the tournament run-scoring charts with 434 runs at 86.80 apiece and a strike rate of 158.





Counties hold meeting over fears T20 leagues will trigger player exodus

Tim Wigmore

County chief executives have discussed the growing threat that overseas T20 leagues pose to the English domestic game amid fears of an exodus of English players.

The rise of overseas T20 leagues has created new and lucrative opportunities for English players abroad. This month, for the first time ever, four major T20 leagues - Australia’s Big Bash, the Bangladesh Premier League, the SA20 in South Africa and the International League T20 in UAE - are being played in tandem.

In July, Major League Cricket will launch in the USA, and has significant financial backing, including from owners of Indian Premier League teams. Major League Cricket are poised to sign some England white-ball specialists, including T20 World Cup winner Alex Hales.

Neil Snowball, the England & Wales Cricket Board’s Managing Director of County Cricket, addressed county chief executives over their regular monthly meeting on Wednesday, making a presentation to counties on the growing threat posed by T20 leagues.

One chief executive said that clubs were concerned about the possibility of losing players from the English game. The launch of Major League Cricket will mean that T20 players now have alternative options to the English domestic game during the Northern hemisphere option.

This year, leading players in Major League Cricket stand to be able to earn in excess of £100,000 during the three-week tournament. English players could play in both Major League Cricket and the Caribbean Premier League, which was played in August and September last year, severely limiting their availability for the county game.

“That is a worry,” said one county chief executive who attended the meetings. “Is that what market forces are going to? Who knows? These are the things we need to be thinking about collectively.
“County cricket can’t bury its head in the sand.”

At the meeting, two notable parallels were made. First, with basketball, where leading international players are often recruited by the National Basketball Association at such a young age that they never play in their own domestic league at all.

Second, with other cricket nations, which are increasingly concerned about losing the best talent from their own domestic system.

For instance, South Africa Dewald Brevis was signed by Mumbai Indians aged 18 and is now playing T20 around the world - but has never played a first-class game, and has a schedule so packed it is not clear when he will be able to make his red-ball debut.

“It’s happening in other parts of the world isn’t it,” said the chief executive. “It’s about making sure we protect ourselves.”

The meeting raised the threat posed to the English domestic game but did not outline solutions that counties should take at this stage. Indeed, the ECB’s emphasis was to facilitate dialogue among counties, rather than be prescriptive about what steps they should take.

In practice, counties are likely to discuss how their schedule can be as attractive as possible to players, to minimise the risks of cricketers not playing in England’s domestic competitions. Counties might also be flexible in allowing some players to become white-ball specialists. An exodus of players from first-class cricket, to pursue short-format opportunities around the world, would lower standards in the County Championship.

There is already a small but growing trends of county cricketers, such as Hales, signing white-ball only contracts and not playing in first-class cricket.

Last year, aged 21, rising star Will Smeed signed a white-ball only deal with Somerset - effectively, retiring from first-class cricket before making his debut. “I want to become the best white-ball player I can, and the sacrifice is playing red-ball cricket,” Smeed told Telegraph Sport at the time.

The threat from Major League Cricket will grow in the years ahead. This year the tournament is scheduled to run from July 13-30 - in the window between the T20 Blast and the Hundred - but it is expected to expand, potentially from as early as next year, putting greater pressure on the English game, especially the T20 Blast.

There are fears that, in the future, some English players will seek to play in Major League Cricket instead of the T20 Blast.

This year, the schedule makes it possible for English players who do not play first-class cricket to play all three of the T20 Blast, Major League Cricket and the Hundred. Hales, who played his final red-ball game in 2017, is in advanced talks to sign with Major League Cricket.

The meeting of county chief executives follows the fears about franchise leagues which were outlined in the High Performance Review, published last September.

“England is increasingly competing with franchise leagues for talent,” the High Performance Review said. “Global cricket appears to be at a tipping point. With the proliferation of franchise T20 tournaments around the world (13 major tournaments expected in 2023) the opportunities for talented young cricketers are significant.”

23 comments:

  1. Are we in the end game ? Or the end of the sport as we know it. Lord Botham recently said we could be. What can we supporters/members do, if anything ?

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  2. I said don’t trust them , they would be back and they are .don't trust them. Foxy

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  3. 75 NOT OUT
    ASK YOURSELF THIS SIMPLE QUESTION !
    What is the best option
    1- A decent County Cricket contract allowing red and white ball matches right Through April - Sept- 6 months work for a salary if £100,000( for capped players)
    2- A three week stint in the USA playing T20 cricket - your reward ? £100,000+!
    Option two also leaves plenty of spare time to play elsewhere for even further renumeration.
    Good one day players are going to exit the red ball game - in pretty substantial numbers I would imagjne .

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  4. As Andy Pick said at a recent cricket lovers meeting and he quoted Ben Duckett as an example but it applies equally to others in this category) is no longer a Nottinghamshire player. He is a player who plays for 4/5 teams, plus England now, Nottinghamshire being one of those teams.
    It’s a disturbing time for sure and the players can’t really lose as they are now in a position to call the shots, especially the better players ?

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  5. ORAC. Thanks for your post and Andy's candour.
    For 2 reasons, I have decided not to rejoin.
    First, the first half of the season is thin on the kind of cricket I enjoy; while the second half is an insult.
    Second, it is clear players are no longer committed to Test and County Cricket, so I feel I am no longer committed to them.
    May pay to watch some days. But Cricket really is a very sick sport, I think, and barely causing a ripple outside the cosy franchise charade.

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  6. Take a look if u can at an article by will macpherson in today’s sunday telegraph, talking about an idea of a national membership for all of the county championship . It’s got it’s merits. Foxy

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  7. Think most would agree with you Rich on that one. The ‘best days’ as we would call them are gone and not likely to return, unfortunately.
    This is why I have little interest in franchise cricket, apart from glancing at the scores. The players come and go each franchise, there’s very little continuity so you can never really build a rapport with ‘your’ chosen franchise team like you can with your County. The Rocketmen are trying to build this by cramming their squad half full of Notts players but there’s still no connection whatsoever apart from wanting the Notts lads to do well for whatever franchise they’re turning out for each season.
    But if we were a decent t20 performer in todays market who wouldn’t want to join the money spinning circus and jump onboard completely irrelevant to what we may really think of these ‘joke’ tournaments.
    As sometimes frustrating as it is, you can’t blame the players. It’s just their good fortune that their professional cricket era is now and not 15+ years ago when things were so much different then.

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  8. The much missed
    Cilla would not need to say
    "Surprise, Surprise' to that.

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  9. Enjoy county cricket while you can! Otherwise it will become a distant memory.

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  10. 75 NOT OUT
    Many other good cricketers will be carefully watching the lucrative playing path chosen by Alex Hales . He will earn £145,000+ for a few weeks work in Pakistan . He is proving there is a cracking living to be made just by playing white ball 20 over cricket . No more 4 day slogs in semi deserted grounds for Alex . It's a worrying trend but many other players are bound to be tempted to take the same route .
    Can you blame them ?

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  11. No I can’t blame them 75 , but you don’t come in at that level as I’m sure we all appreciate.we mention on here often players who good things were hoped for but it never quite comes off . Foxy

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  12. Not wanting to add to the gloom, but "new" (?) Sky Cricket Channel is just about all wall to wall franchise garbage.
    Funny thing is newspspers ignore it, because results do not matter, it is about the moment of drama.
    They are "events" , not sporting contests. Would make sense to script the whole thing. One sided matches, or groups decided with matches still to play, not good for advertising or subscription revenue.
    Maybe we should give them all the TV and big grounds, and go back to being an amateur sport, as per pre 1700, at least it would be a real sport again.

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    1. Gentlemen proud to represent their town/village/place of employment, as long as there's a bet on the outcome for added interest. Then some blokes got good at it and hired themselves out to other towns/villages/places of other people's employment, for payment, so that the gentlemen stood a better chance of winning their wager. And so it went on... now we have guns for hire roaming the globe tendering their services to the highest bidder. Gone are the towns/villages/places of employment and the gentlemen, to be replaced with soulless franchises that no one has any indentity with and the only common link with the past is that the bookmakers still get richer. I wonder why there're such things as Sky TV and Skybet!

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  13. 75 NOTOUT
    Franchise cricket !
    The $64,000 question !
    How many of the actual match results are known before a ball is bowled?
    Pretty easy for a particular bowler to bowl a wide or a no ball at any stage of the game .And pretty easy for a batsman to be out at any time - playing a stupid shot etc
    They do it all the time!

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  14. Trouble with being a big carnivorous creature in The Franchise Ocrean, is that there are bigger beasts to eat you.
    The women's Hundred reported the big names likely to opt for a rest in, August, due to a busy year making lots of money, with Women's World Cup, then WPL.
    Alrhough the latter is before The Hundred,
    it offers vastly more
    money so those women not wanting to play continually, seem to be choosing it and declining the 16.4 overs.

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  15. Alex is one of 60 English cricketers to play Franchise cricket in the last 12 months according to Cricinfo
    Key and Strauss have actively encouraged players to play overseas in them, as well.as The Hundred, even when they miss England matches as a result
    Football and Rugby, both codes, have moved to defend their traditional domestic and international competitions.
    Even making a virtue out of tradition, unlike Cricket, which uses the word as an insult.
    Can think of no other team sport that has sold out so completely.

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  16. Meanwhile England player who bats, Harry Brook, is to briefly play baseball in The States, along with Izzy Wong.
    All sorts of puns come to mind !

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  17. Perhaps less fun, is the demise of The ODI Super League. The first edition is just finishing, England are playing in it. But you would not know. It was devised, as per World Test Championship, to give context to international fixtures, and a fairer system of World Cup qualification.
    But franchise T20 has made a mockery of it. Top players avoid it, in favour of big money franchise T20, or to rest up before the next big franchise cash bonanza.
    As a result of franchise Cricket, domestic Cricket, and international cricket are being dismantled.
    Who would have thought, even 4 years ago, The Ashes were to be ousted from August ?

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  18. Bit more of a moan.
    According to the book "The T20 Revolution"; in 2016 Andrew Strauss, in his then role at ECB, arranged for extra ECB money to go to Sam Billings. This was to prevent him being out of pocket from signing for IPL, rather staying to play for Kent during the period. He was "bought" for a relatively low price.
    If this is true, and I am just saying what the book claims, this was money raised from County and Test Cricket, used to undermine both. As well as the County programme, 2 Tests were played in England, in May that year.

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  19. Praise Be !
    An MCC Committee of the great and good says cricket needs intervention, because franchises are tearing it apart.
    Not bad, after 15 years ! Maybe they should tell Strauss and Key, because tjey think it is all great.

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  20. Anybody would think I have taken over this thread. But on women's cricket, their top players are now getting huge sums in Franchiseville. Representative domestic cricket, as per men, pushed to the side. In both, money bags players claim it is great for young/upcoming players. I
    Of course the opposite is true, franchises have no interest in investung time and money in potential.
    Very sad, but at least we can turn to a political lecture by Michael Holding, or Gary somebody etc, to cheer us.

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    Replies
    1. You are on a roll rich, keep going. Foxy

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  21. Thanks !
    Re England players not being able to play in new USA Major League T20;
    is that England contract players ? Is there anything to stop non England contracted county players going ? Or county overseas players ?

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