New Zealand Listener – June 08, 2019

(Tuis.) #1

44 LISTENER JUNE 8 2019


THIS LIFE


G
ET


TY


IM


AG


ES


Lies, damned


lies and ODIs


New Zealand looks good


on paper as it takes its place


in the 10-nation Cricket


World Cup field.


by Paul Thomas


SPORT


Flying high: Trent
Boult is the second-
top-ranked ODI
bowler and three
Kiwi batters are in
the ODI top 12.

cricket back then was just an
abbreviated version of test cricket.
There were no fielding restric-
tions, wides had to be out of the
batsman’s reach, as opposed to a
couple of centimetres outside leg
stump, the players wore white
and the ball was red. And there

T


he 12th men’s Cricket World Cup, now
under way in England and Wales, will
bear little resemblance to the inaugural
tournament in 1975.
In the intervening years, limited-
overs cricket has gone from being a
gimmick, a bit of “hit and giggle” for
the non-purist who lacked the knowledge and
attention span to appreciate test cricket, to the tail
that wags the dog.
And cricket itself has gone from being a rather
quaint pursuit undertaken in scattered pockets
of the old British Empire at a leisurely pace that
harked back to the amateur era to a year-round,
increasingly global, professionalised and athletic
game comfortably positioned at the sport/enter-
tainment nexus created by pay television.
The 1975 tournament consisted of 15 games
shoehorned into a fortnight. The peripheral role
and influence of television enabled the organisers
to stage four games simultaneously, as opposed to
staggering them to maximise income for the partici-
pants and “product” for the broadcasters. This year’s
competition has 48 games and ends in mid-July.
There were eight teams in 1975: the traditional
test-playing nations minus South Africa, who
were banned; associate nation Sri Lanka; and a
composite East Africa team. This year, there are 10
participants, reduced from 14 in 2015 to create a
format in which every game counts. However, the
fact that Sri Lanka won a World Cup 21 years after
just making up the numbers would seem to add
weight to the argument that you can’t expect to
grow a game internationally unless you give the
minnows the opportunity to compete on the big
stage.
In most respects, one-day international (ODI)

England’s Jos Buttler, far left, and India’s
Hardik Pandya.
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