ICC aiming to host the Women’s U-19 World Cup in January 2023, says acting CEO Allardice
Ever since taking charge, Geoff Allardice, the acting CEO of the International Cricket Council (ICC), has managed to get the house in order.
Published : Nov 12, 2021 23:57 IST
After the controversial exit of his predecessor, Geoff Allardice, the acting CEO of the International Cricket Council (ICC), has managed to get the house in order.
He is trying to sort out various impending issues, including the FTP and media rights from 2024, the Afghanistan conundrum and pushing cricket as an Olympic sport. In a select-media interaction, Allardice explained the ICC’s position on several issues.
We played a couple of series in Oman in the lead-up to this tournament. That was the first cricket they had while a lot of the full members have been playing regularly. So I am hoping as fixtures resume more regularly, T20 will be attached to those and the teams will be a lot better prepared. We are not looking beyond the normal scheduling competition at this stage before thinking of other measures. In the World Test Championship, do you see the number of series going up? At this stage, the limiting factor is the number of teams we can fit into two years. We tried to fit in eight series over two years initially and it was just too congested. We settled on six and I think that’s your base level of cricket. To add teams means you are just thinning out the competitiveness of the competitiveness of the league. At this stage it looks like a nine-team edition. Do you see the need to put an overarching structure for bilateral cricket? To try and schedule too many, particularly Tests which takes a fair bit of time if you have a three-Test series or longer, it's very hard to schedule a T20 league. If it doesn’t coincide with who you are playing in ODI cricket, and because the World Cups are staggered at different intervals, it's very hard to have a league with a finish line for ODI cricket and T20 cricket in parallel. I think what we prefer is the T20 World Cup in more regular intervals. So we get through one event and bilaterals are preparations for the next event. So you are not having to wait for the long cycle between T20 World Cups. Coming back to the media rights issue. How much more attractive do you believe ICC media rights are now that you have an event every year and perhaps from a fan point of view one can argue if there are too many events now… Right now, I don’t think we have too many events. We’ve had a long break between our events. In the next cycle, I think Twenty20 World Cups every two years is the right sort of frequency. We’ve identified that as our format to grow the international game. That goes hand in hand with expanding the number of teams in the Twenty20 World Cup. I think that frequency is right and the cricket World Cup stays at a four-year interval. Champions Trophy is a short, sharp ODI tournament. They’re very entertaining, good cricket. I don’t think that high quality global events are played too frequently. Would it help from a commercial point of view? Having an event a year certainly helps our broadcast partners, our commercial partners. It gives them an opportunity to leverage their investment on an annual basis. From a cricketing point of view it fits in pretty well too. Afghanistan has been a bit of a difficult issue for the ICC. Australia has refused to play them and there may be other countries who follow suit. Can this affect relations between full members? Afghanistan is our member and they are going through some change at the moment. We are just trying to liaise with them to ensure that cricket is being governed and the board is governed appropriately and in accordance with their constitution. The second is that their cricket is continuing to function. We’ve supported them and the team has performed at this event. You’ve seen their players in a number of events now. In terms of how our board will consider the situation in Afghanistan at its meeting next week, they will get a report on how things are travelling. They’re going through a lot of change within the country and in terms of the relationship of the cricket board with the new regime. If women cricketers are not allowed to play in Afghanistan, could it be the end of Test cricket for the male team, for the time being? Our goal is to see men and women playing cricket in Afghanistan. Our view is that the best way to achieve that is to stay closely connected with the cricket board and try to influence [things] through the cricket board. They’re on a steady trajectory of development there and we would like to see that continue. How other members react with their bilateral arrangements with Afghanistan is up to them. We will be working through their situation at our board level and with their board as well. They are the agent for developing cricket in their country.
Have you got any assurances or has there been any communication from the Afghanistan Cricket Board? They have said to us that women’s cricket is continuing. They certainly haven’t given us an indication that it has stopped. Time will tell, in terms of how that plays out. Yes, we have been in regular communication with them from the time things changed in their country. We are hoping to have some meetings with their representatives around our board meetings. Is there a thought of giving them a hard line, of saying women’s cricket needs to be played by a certain date… I think that’s a bit premature. For the moment the board is going to get an update on the situation and then think about taking any future decisions. It’s premature for me to speculate. Some people have suggested a women’s team for Afghanistan comprising people of Afghan origin who don’t necessarily live in Afghanistan. Is this something the ICC would consider? Very hypothetical. We’re just trying to work out how cricket is being run in that country and giving them time to run the game as they want to. In terms of what might happen in the future, it’s too early to speculate. Regarding venues for ICC events for the next cycle, will the ICC invite bids from countries who want to host events? Good question. We started a process to decide the hosts for men’s events in the next eight-year cycle a while ago. We’ve been through two phases of receiving submissions. We’ve had a board sub committee looking at that over the past few months and I’m hoping that they will have recommendations to present to the board on Tuesday. Some non-full members have also submitted bids. Is this encouraging news for the ICC? Very much so. Taking an ICC event or a World Cup of any description to a developing cricket country has a huge impact whether it’s on facilities or awareness of the game. Particularly when the local team is involved, as was the case in Oman just now. It’s a great opportunity to develop the game. In those submissions, many were associate member countries, either as a joint bid with a full member or standalone. We will know on Tuesday how many matches end up in associate member territories. When do we expect the women’s Under-19 World Cup to happen? We are aiming for January 2023. We’re talking about the format for that tournament at these meetings and at our next set of meetings we will look for a host.
As you know we have a very busy calendar and we’re trying to find a balance between ICC events and the bilateral cricket played between members and domestic leagues in the shortest form. That is a juggling act.
Trying to make sure there is context or relevance for games and if it feeds into rankings and qualification for future events that’s probably the best way. Even in something like this tournament, West Indies' last game decided whether they got into the Super 12s next year or went in qualification. The more meaning the games have the better off we are. Facilitating context is the best we can do.