KeegansHairPiece
New member
- Jan 28, 2016
- 1,829
What Sussex did last year (under incredible financial pressures and restrictions due to Covid) was play lots of up and coming young players. These are the players that will become the players in your preferred format which is Test Cricket. 10 of our 16 named player squads were under 24. Ibrahim, The Lenham brothers, Haines, Hunt are all names that will only develop from academy systems set up and paid for by Sussex CCC. Like the Albion, Sussex know to compete they have to develop and find young prospects. Garton a Brighton born fast bowler is in the England squad for the West Indies, Robinson was in the England squad for the ashes, a player given a chance again with our coaching and system.
For what I have read of the Hundred and this new proposed City Championship league it is all about money, going to agents, going to Test ground sides, going to the people that run it. It does not seem interested in devleopment of the game or young players.
It reeks of of the Europen Super League. I am sure some people want that format and to let the rest of football retract and die. So for these and many more reasons I am not in.
You are Tom Harrison and I claim my £5
Not at all. As above, what Sussex did last year is exactly what you would want - lots of young players getting exposure and experience in the long format - only what happened is they got hammered, which may or may not have benefitted them, but it would be brilliant if all the counties could do this rather than using your County cricket trundlers that will get you results in the Championship, but they're never going to be test quality, and they're not actually going to give potential test cricketers enough of a test to prepare them for that format.
How on earth can you defend the current set up of County Cricket as a whole for the development of the game or young players when we haven't been able to find an opening batsmen for nearly a decade, and can't find any kind of test quality spinner, and we're still relying on an ageing seam attack!? I mean, it's hardly an argument for the status quo is it.
All these comparisons to football is utter BS as well. Totally different. As others have said cricket relies on the international team and it's success. Players need paying and they'll go to the highest paying competitions, so to think money isn't relevant in saving Test cricket, then goodness help us. We need a first class competition like the Sheffield Shield that gets to the elite players in the country playing against each other in almost every match, and the audiences will come.