The opening matches of the
County Championship could be played overseas as part of England and Wales
Cricket Board plans to ease fixture congestion.
The proposal is in the early
stages of being considered and is one of a number of ideas from the ECB.
Abu Dhabi, where the
season-opener between the MCC and the county champions has been held since 2010, is understood to be one potential
venue.
The Caribbean, where some teams
train, could be another.
It could mean the start of the
season being brought forward to March.
The need for counties to fit in
16 Championship matches, along with at least 12 40-over and 10 Twenty20
fixtures, resulted in the 2013 season beginning on 10 April and the heavy
concentration of first-class games at the beginning and end of each season is a
consequence of lucrative limited-overs cricket being played in the mid-summer
months.
Spring pile-up
·
Somerset, Worcestershire, Essex and Leicestershire all played
seven County Championship matches - nearly half of the season - by the end of
May
From next season, an increased calendar of 14 Twenty20 games
will spread throughout the whole season, with a competition of a minimum of
eight 50-over games replacing the 40-over tournament.
However, the chance of any
further changes being made to incorporate overseas games to next year's
calendar are thought to be remote.
When revising the calendar, the
ECB faced the challenge of balancing the need for county cricket to act as a
feeder to the England team while at the same time acknowledging that
limited-overs cricket provides domestic sides with vital income from both
spectators and television rights.
As genuine as those promoting
the idea are to maybe take two games abroad at the start of the season, will it
get support? The clubs of course will be very mindful of a backlash from
supporters - in fact many of them seemed not to know a great deal about this
this morning. A driving force for the changes - to give supporters an easier to
follow schedule - could actually mean knowing when your team is playing but
needing an awful lot of money to go abroad to watch them. Whether designed to
gather public opinion or not, this option has certainly got plenty of people
talking.
A proposal to cut the number of
Championship matches to 14 was rejected, leaving the issue of fitting all 16
matches into a season that this year ends as late as 21 September.
Along with the county
champions' now annual trip to Abu Dhabi, many counties travel abroad as part of
their pre-season preparations.
This year, six teams -
Derbyshire, Hampshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Warwickshire and
Yorkshire - took part in a tournament in Barbados in March.
Former Essex cricketer and
chief executive David East, now chief executive of the Emirates Cricket Board,
based in Abu Dhabi, told the BBC that he had received no contact from the ECB
about the possibility of staging County Championship matches.
East, who highlighted the
Sheikh Zayed Stadium's capacity to stage three first-class games
simultaneously, said the venue would be ''very happy and willing to stage
matches if needed if that helps the ECB''.
An earlier start to the season
would also prevent a clash between the end of the County Championship and the
Champions League T20.
The winners and finalists of
the English T20 competition took part in 2011 and 2012, but missed out in 2010
and are set to do so again this year.
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