There are no features in this archive at present
October 12, 2009
Sussex coach Mark Robinson knows a few things about getting the best out of players. Sussex won the Twenty20 Cup and the Pro40 this season, and were runners-up in the FP Trophy. So when he publicly states that his team are having to play so much cricket during the summer that they can’t train properly, you would think that the ECB would pay attention. They won’t.
Matthew Hoggard has been released by Yorkshire without so much as an “ay-oop lad”. It would seem that Hoggy is among the first victims of the ECB’s new age-related incentive payments, as Yorkshire naturally resent having to actually pay his salary themselves. So much for 15 years of loyal service.
October 11, 2009
The government has decreed that the Ashes should be restored to the Grade A list of showpiece events, meaning that it should be broadcast on free-to-air TV in 2013.
October 9, 2009
The ECB are considering whether county cricket needs a transfer system. The move of Steven Davies from Worcestershire to Surrey highlights the problems for smaller counties who develop talented young players from an early age. This is one area where cricket could learn a valuable lesson from football.
September 14, 2009
As Andrew Flintoff delays the signing of his newly downgraded ECB contract at the prospect of earning more as a freelance Twenty20 cricketer, it is easy to get caught up in accusations of mercenary greed and a sport losing it’s identity.
But is cricket simply returning to it’s roots?
September 13, 2009
English professional cricketers via the PCA have given the ECB a public vote of no confidence over it’s running of the game. But are they serious enough to take on the closed inner-circle of self-serving administrators and their County supporters? Most importantly, how do the fans want County cricket to be structured? Let the debate begin…
September 11, 2009
It’s Central Contract Awards time, and the big “news” is that Steve Harmison and Monty Panesar have missed out altogether. Actually, this shouldn’t be much of a surprise – between them they only played 3 Tests this summer.
September 8, 2009
Fifty over cricket is the runt of the cricketing litter. We know what happens to the runt. To start with, it gets the leftovers, but when the rest of the litter’s appetite increases the leftovers suddenly disappear. It hangs on for a while, then it dies.
September 2, 2009
I wasn’t there, I didn’t see it on TV. So what to make of the abandonment on Tuesday due to waterlogged run-ups? Who was to blame, the authorities at Old Trafford, or the teams and umpires? Reading the reports in the press, it is hard to say for sure, blame being apportioned to either one or the other.
August 27, 2009
Forty-over cricket is considered so important by the ECB that they have decided to go one step further than simply scrapping their 50-over competition to protect it. Now, the ECB is asking the ICC to change the international 50-over format on their behalf.
RT @edsmithwriter: It's the product, stupid. My column on saving Test cricket (with thanks to James Carville and Stringer Bell) http://t ...
2nd February 2012, 1:07pm
RT @Green23: Tell me why the WI are over for a week? Why aren't Ireland playing England in 2 T/20's. #pomsscaredmaybe
23rd September 2011, 7:13pm
RT @cheeseslicesuk: @goodcricktwickt Can we have a RT please? www.cheeseslices.co.uk is a new sports website with an emphasis on cricket ...
13th September 2011, 7:43pm
RT @2ndYellow: One more plug for my latest post - "Football finances: a question of trust" -> http://t.co/hstYTQr
5th September 2011, 8:20pm
RT @2ndYellow: Latest post on the Arsenal crisis, including an historical parallel from 80 years ago -> http://t.co/bbQ7Fov #afc #foo ...
29th August 2011, 7:28pm