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 Cricket in Olympics
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Posted on 08-29-08 12:39 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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OLYMPIC CRICKET SHOULD BE GIVEN TO NON TEST PLAYING NATIONS

In the cricketing world, there is a new dream and hope hanging around now. Most of the cricket player want to see cricket being included in Olympics as a medal sport. It really sounds brilliant. Everyone thinks that Twenty20 cricket really fits into the Olympic games.

All cricket players want to see cricket in Olympic because they (have said they) want Cricket to go global rather than congesting them into a dozen of countries. As a cricket lover, I really back this idea. However, I think that this will not globalise cricket. The same bunch of players and teams will be playing in Olympics as well as world stage. This wont really attract other countries to play cricket.

However, if cricket is ever introduced in Olympic than they should give chance to non test playing nations. This will lead to teams like Nepal, Afghanistan or Argentina to play at world level. The globalisation of cricket is only possible by giving chance to the non test playing nations into Olympics.

Who knows if Russia makes it to the finals or China gets its team into Olympics?

(Originally posted at http://www.cricket.com.np/fanclub/?p=299 )

Last edited: 31-Aug-08 03:12 AM

 
Posted on 08-30-08 2:29 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Why cricket isn't an Olympic sport

The Olympics should be the pinnacle of an athlete's career, and if it is not, then the sport has no place on the schedule


August 28, 2008


A World Cup win will always rank over an Olympics one in cricket © AFP
 

Apparently there has been some cricket taking place over the past Olympic fortnight, but if you're a sports fan in either Britain or India, it's possible you haven't really noticed. Gold fever has gripped both nations, you see - 19 nuggets-worth for Team GB, the country's biggest haul in a century, and a single precious medal for the Indian marksman, Abhinav Bindra, whose victory in the 10m Air Rifle has been described by Kapil Dev (with no apparent false modesty) as the greatest achievement in India's sporting history.

Kapil is not unknown for hyperbole, but his new-found enthusiasm for the Olympics is clearly shared by many in the cricketing fraternity. The greatest sporting spectacle in the world has just taken place in Beijing, and it's clear that many of the game's great and good feel they have missed out on something special. One thing's for sure - had Kevin Pietersen and Co. been obliged to head for Karachi to compete for gold medals rather than the worthless Champions Trophy, that competition would not have been ditched with quite the same unseemly haste.

But while the Champions Trophy has been sunk by player power, those same players are casting their beady eyes over some far more enticing baubles. Speaking at Sir Don Bradman's centenary dinner in Sydney on Wednesday, Ricky Ponting proved once again that the wish is father to the thought when he declared it was "inevitable" that cricket would soon become an Olympic sport. His reasoning did, however, have some validity - almost a quarter of the world's population lives in Asia; therefore it makes sense for the IOC to invite Asia's favourite sport to the festival.

Whether cricket actually belongs at the Olympics, however, is another matter entirely. The relationship between the two is brief and inglorious - only one contest has ever taken place, and that was in 1900 between the victors "Britain", a wandering side from Devon, and "France", a 12-man outfit of English expats (and it was a further 12 years before the match was recognised by the IOC). Compared to the agony, ecstasy and compelling drama of the majority of the 28 sports on show in Beijing this month, it's still doubtful whether cricket would take its inclusion any more seriously this time around.

The Olympic ideal has been somewhat tarnished over the years with drugs scandals, political boycotts and sundry charges of corruption, but the basic magnificence of the human spirit somehow manages to weave its way through the chaos and find a way to soar. In those silent few seconds when the athletes are under starter's orders - when the realisation dawns that four years of solid and unstinting sacrifice are about to be condensed into a few moments of supreme exertion - you'd be hard-pressed to find a more compelling sporting scenario in any walk of life.

Is that really how England's cricketers would react if they lined up as the representatives of "Great Britain" on the opening day of the Delhi Games in 2020? Almost certainly not. The Olympics should be the pinnacle of an athlete's career, and if it is not, then the sport has no place on the schedule. "Why cricket?" said Linford Christie, whose fall from grace doesn't preclude him from making valid points. "In a team of 11 players, nine might be working hard but the other two might not. This is not in line with the spirit of the Olympics."

 
 
There have been 18 medallist nations in hockey since 1908 - it'll take another 100 years and more for cricket to provide that many countries who stand a chance of making it to the podium
 

Cricket, in fact, would fail on two counts. Firstly, the chosen format for Olympic inclusion would have to be the short and disposable Twenty20, because the truly Olympian version of the game, Test cricket, would be impenetrable to the game's new-found global audience. Secondly, the calendar is simply too crowded for the players to treat the trip with anything like the gravitas it would deserve.

Take Paul Collingwood's comments from earlier this week. He is unquestionably one of the most professional men in the England squad, but he is also one of the straightest talkers, as he showed while reflecting on a season in which his form had fallen apart. "We're always asked to be 100% all of the time, but I'd rather be crap against New Zealand and then build form up towards Australia," said Collingwood. "We've got a big Ashes series coming up, so maybe subconsciously you try and peak at the right time."

In the Olympics, however, there is nothing subconscious or shameful about peaking at the right time. On the contrary, the knowledge that this is it, your one shot at everlasting glory, forms the essence of the drama. Not that cricket would be alone in its awkwardness, mind you. The football tournament, differentiated by artificial age restraints, has no place in the modern games, and then there's the biggest anomaly of the lot, the tennis, which served up two particularly telling scenarios.

Firstly there was Andy Murray, a hot tip for the title but with most of his thoughts pinned on the impending US Open. He bombed out in the first round of the singles, and instantly admitted he had not been "professional" enough. Then there was the sight of Rafael Nadal, the unstoppable champion, inching himself away from the cameras after a barrage of questions about how much his gold medal meant to him. He knew in the circumstances what his answer should have been, but he also knew that everyone else knew the truth - this title wasn't a patch on Wimbledon or Roland Garros.

And that, really, is what it all comes down to. If there is a bigger prize to be had in your particular sport - be it the Ashes, a World Cup, or even the Champions Trophy - then you simply don't belong at the Olympics. Even the women's beach volleyball, which somehow managed to transform itself from soft porn to an Orwellian style war minus the shooting when Russia and Georgia went head to head in the preliminary rounds, has more of a claim to the Games than cricket, for the simple fact that it is the sport's athletic apex.

Likewise the hockey competition. It may have been won by either India or Pakistan in every tournament from 1928 to 1968, but it wasn't until 1971 that a World Cup was inaugurated to fill the void between four-year cycles. Moreover, there have been 18 medallist nations since 1908 - it'll take another 100 years and more for cricket to provide that many countries who stand a chance of making it to the podium.


 
Posted on 08-31-08 3:08 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Kumar Sangakkara >>

Short form, big stage

Why Twenty20 needs to make it to the Olympics if cricket is to be a truly global sport


August 29, 2008



Twenty20 is a format in which even the weaker teams can compete, and is cricket's best bet for inclusion at the Olympics © Getty Images

Being at the Olympics is probably the final step for a sport to be recognised globally. To be an Olympian is a huge attraction. If we can graduate cricket to that level, which I hope the authorities are having a look at, it would be fantastic.

Right now we have ten countries playing competitive cricket, and a lot of others making up the numbers. It is going to take a long time to get all the teams to a uniformly acceptable standard, if ever, but we need to try and bring as many of the associates to a level where any of them stands a chance of competing. We've seen Zimbabwe beat Australia in the ICC World Twenty20, so maybe that is the format for the Olympics. It's short enough and attractive enough for other countries to take up, and for the authorities to consider for inclusion in the Games.

Cricket was once an Olympic sport. For it to become one again, there has to be a structure in place for the associates that supports and accelerates the growth and the standard in those countries. The hard part is generating interest, support, finance, and ensuring there is solid infrastructure in place. We need vibrant interest from the established countries, the associates and the countries that are just starting to understand and play cricket. You need to get people interested - not just the expats around the world but natives in countries that have not yet taken up the sport. As far as the ICC is concerned, it will find its next cash cow more easily if the game goes global. A cricket explosion will happen. Not in the next five or six years, but not too far down the road either.

The IPL model is one worth exploring if cricket's appeal is to go global. Various countries could launch their own Twenty20 leagues and the established nations could boost the process by playing exhibition games at neutral venues, thereby enhancing interest. There are venues in the USA, Canada and Morocco. China is an option. We need to see if countries are interested in constructing grounds, have exhibition games there, take the game to new audiences, see if there is acceptance.

 
 
You could argue that cricket has over 100 years of history, and doesn't need any more recognition. Sure, there is a lot of passion and spectator interest, but does that make it a global sport? We need to make it like soccer, which everyone plays
 

It's going to be a huge challenge to have cricket at the 2020 Olympics, but it is a realistic goal for the administrators and players to aim at. Cricket was at the Commonwealth Games in 1998, and it will be part of the Asian Games. If such sporting competitions are looking at cricket as viable, then we have to justify their support. The vindication for playing a sport is when it is recognised globally. Not like the World Series in baseball, where all teams bar one are from one country.

You could argue that cricket has over 100 years of history and doesn't need any more recognition. Sure, there is a lot of passion and spectator interest, but does that make it a global sport? We need to make it like soccer, which everyone plays. Getting cricket into the Olympics is a logical step.

Basketball gradually progressed into an Olympic sport. The USA dominated Olympic basketball for some time. But at the last Olympics they were knocked out in the semi-final by Argentina. That just shows that on the Olympic stage, athletes push themselves higher. Zimbabwe beating Australia in the World Twenty20 is in a sense bigger than Argentina beating the USA in the Olympics. Established greats can never be sure of a medal because the occasion inspires everyone to give it their best.

Cricketers have a huge role to play in taking the game global. Icons like Sachin Tendulkar, Ricky Ponting, Sanath Jayasuriya, Muttiah Muralitharan, Kevin Pietersen, Adam Gilchrist, Matthew Hayden are the ones who are followed individually, and they can make a huge impact on promoting the game. A lot of the players who are now pushing for cricket's inclusion in the Olympics won't be playing when it happens, but they can say they were part of a movement. That will be a hugely satisfying achievement.

I've spoken to Gilchrist, who has strong views on Twenty20 at the Olympics, and now I'm a believer myself. The time is now, and we need to act. The ICC, the various boards, and the players have to formalise a plan. It must be a collective effort.


 
Posted on 08-31-08 4:27 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Well, I want cricket in 2020 olympics  in 12 years. But what i dont want to see the same top players from all the test playing nations playing for gold.

Like  in football, almost all the players should be armatures or under 23 (except 2 or 3) .  Same should be applied to cricket and allow 8 players in the team who haven't played test cricket. I am a great fan of English 20-20 tournament and there are some great twenty twenty players.

Players like Graham Napier who is awesome in twenty twenty  in English domestic cricket and who haven't played a test match should be given an opportunity. He is better in 20-20 than most of the test cricketer.


Graham Napier is legend in English domestic 20-20


 


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