- Joined
- Aug 29, 2012
This! I`ve been saying this for ages. The glut of bilaterals is not only boring for a fan but also makes it hard for the players to get used to the pressure of different qualification scenarios and knockout games. If we step back to when ODI cricket was at its prime in terms of popularity (the mid 90s to about 2007/8) most nations hosted multilateral ODI series. The 97/98 period had several of those Independence Cups tri/quadrangular in Ind/Pak/Ban/SL, all of which had memorable games. An added advantage of this was the newer nations used to get exposure to top quality cricket. Bangladesh and Kenya played a tri-series with India in the summer of 98 and we even lost a game to Kenya there. Sharjah, of course, had so many of those events every year. England used to have the Natwest Tri Series (even up until the mid-2000s where even Bangladesh was once the third team and beat Australia prior to the 05 Ashes). SA hosted tri-series with Zimbabwe or Kenya also being the third side along with the primary touring side. Heck, even Zimbabwe hosted tri-series till 2005 and even that event had close games between India and NZ. Australia, off course, had the most famous Tri-series of the lot, with it being as exciting as the test summer. Kohli chasing those 320-odd in 37 overs to set up the bonus point win. Tendulkar at Sarjah. Anwar's 194. Zimbabwe tying the ODI at Paarl in 1997. All those Sarjah games. The NatWest final in 2002. The Eng-Pak NatWest game in 2001 which Waqar reverse swung Pak to a win. The Dion Nash almost six, the Shane Bond debut VB series and so many others that I can keep going on and on. Bilaterals never allow these narratives. Even in the most one-sided tri-series, there is that element of anxiety if there is a grand final. SA won all group stage games in the 1997 Titan Cup (involved India and Aus) but lost the final to India. Similarly, Australia went unbeaten in that Desert Storm Sharjah series but lost to India in the final (after an exact opposite happened in a tri-series in India). The closest one can get to an ICC event final are these games.
This is why I`m skeptical of stats from bilaterals. Kedar Jadhav might have better stats than Yuvraj possibly. However, is he a better ODI cricketer than Yuvi? Bilateral series, with so many sides resting their primary bowlers these days, can often flatter to deceive. Take the case of NZ in the last 2 games against India and England. Do you guys think (everything else being the same) NZ would've successfully defended 240 against those two batting sides in consecutive games? In all likelihood, Kohli/Sharma would`ve waltzed through that run chase in a bilateral series (on the same track, ground etc). Similarly, with the English lineup yesterday. Given the high stakes, one gets cautious of their approach and thus changes the game completely. We walk every day and probably slip during a walk very very rarely. Yet, if I told you that the one slip could result in you falling down a cliff, you wouldn't walk the same way, would you? The biggest problem in ODI cricket is bilateral-heavy nature. Get the tri-series back and you will also solve the problem of exposure to the smaller nations. Afghans could get games in India/Bangla as a third side. Netherlands/Ireland/Scotland can be the third side in addition to the touring side in England. Give Zim/Kenya/Namibia tri-series games like in the 90s. Maybe PNG can get games in multi-lateral series in Aus/NZ! Sadly, I`m not an administrator.
Absolutely nailed it! Boy I wish they hear ya.