- Apr 5, 2014
- 25,901
That's pure urine extraction. Birmingham is £65 for a decent seat and £15 for kids. First two days for Windies almost sold out.All really spot on here. The answer is money of course. And unless there is a fairer distribution of it in test cricket then the game will be doomed to fail (or at least, be a smaller symbolic competition between 4 teams).
The World Test Championship was the right first step, but its implementation has been dreadful. It should have standardised the game, instead it has just shown it up to be an uneven calendar, with a league table that is somewhat warped (on purpose) by the biggest player.
Regarding the ticket prices, £195 was for the upper tier of the Grand Stand. For Sri Lanka that's £140 each with no deductions for Under 16s. The cheapest ticket for that, (not including restricted view or alcohol free zone) is £115 for adults and £40 for U16. That's £310 for a family of 4 to see England trounce sub-standard opposition. As someone who grew up as a Middlesex Colt, and now lives within a ten minute walk from Lords, this is the first year where I've found myself unable to afford a ticket and I find that really sad. It can't be sustainable for the game.
Must be a Lords thing.