Is ODI Cricket Dead in The Water?

Adam  Wakefield by Correspondent Written on September 18, 2009
NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 17:  Andrew Strauss of England looks on after losing the Sixth One Day International between England and Australia at Trent Bridge on September 17, 2009 in Nottingham, England.  (Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images) (Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

Shane Warne recently wrote in his column for the Times, "This is a big call, but cricket evolves and the 50-over game has passed its sell-by date. It's amazing to think that after the Ashes series, England and Australia play seven one-day games, which take about a month. Sorry, but that's just greed on the part of administrators."

Warne asserts that through eliminating one-day matches, international players would be able to play more domestic cricket and have more time with their families. Australia’s leading wicket-taker said that if he had his way, most tours would last roughly five weeks with three Tests plus a warm-up game and five 20-20s in a 10-day period.

Is Warne right?

Economically, the great driver of international cricket at the moment is 20-20 cricket. With the ICC deciding to hold a 20-20 every two years, that should be indication enough as to where the ICC and the national boards that went along with the idea see ODI cricket in relation to 20-20: the middle child.

Often, middle children feel their youngest sibling gets all the attention and their older sibling gets all the patronage. The main fixture of the ODI calendar, the Cricket World Cup (CWC), used to be the bread and wine that the ICC feasted on during the good times and the bad.

Now with the CWC being supplanted as the main income earner by 20-20 and with the IPL being an annual event, it appears that ODI cricket is slowly, but unsurprisingly, being marginalised by its creators. It was the "doldrums," as referred to by certain supporters and intellectuals (though I use that word carefully) in the game that was the spur for 20-20. How things change.

ODI cricket has supplied the game with some of its most iconic and infamous moments. For every Trevor Chappell under-arm incident there is a 438 game to compare it to.

Also, the one-day game’s influence on modern Test cricket is unquestionable: Fielding standards have improved dramatically, run rates now hover closer to four per an over (with a nod to the Australians for being the pioneers in this regard), and players are certainly more athletic before the one-day game arrived.

Alas, like many ‘good’ things, with the financial component of one-day cricket no longer being its main draw card, perhaps now is the time for the world cricket Gestapo (as the ICC often is with their misplaced intentions) to consider walking away from the game.

I believe that it should become a reality at some point. The old saying goes, "Two’s a company but three’s a crowd," and one-day cricket finds itself very much on the outside. 

Mind you, I don’t think it will happen in the next decade. The ICC will seek, along with the national boards, to squeeze every last drop of currency out of the format until one-day cricket’s body is left disheveled and in a position for the undertakers to take over. The fact that I assume that will be the ICC’s behaviour is a bit disturbing to say the least, but that will be for another time.      

 

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written on September 18, 2009 Opinion

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