You may not know it but there was an ODI series on before the test series. ODI cricket has been non-existent for a number of years but it appears noone wants to know about it anymore, at least until the world cup.
I just feel that Cricket Australia have lost touch with promoting the game and that some rule changes of ODI cricket have made the game dull and boring. And it's not just ODI cricket, test cricket as well as we watch a very empty Optus stadium in the first test.
So how to fix it?
1. The build up. Sport is like sex, the foreplay is important. What happens prior to a sporting match generates interest. It generates emotion, creates a feeling of importance, generates passion and feeling for the contest and gets everyone primed for what is about to happen. Just like foreplay there are things you don't do before sex and there are things you don't do before a sporting contest because it kills the mood, it kills what I mentioned above. You don't talk about your ex before sex and you don't get political before sport. I think regardless of how good the cause is, there is no doubt that some of the actions and processes partaken in before sporting events are mood killers. Play the national anthems and get into it. Leave the causes, the PC stuff, the political stuff all the stuff irrelevant to the contest out of it, do it another way.
2. Going further on the build up, there needs to be more heard from the players before a series. Cricketers need to take a bit out of boxing, get the banter going, get some feeling into the contest and some passion because I'm not seeing that anymore. Guys like Warne and McGrath nominating their men and their bunnies, the sledges, the banter, the individual rivalries, it was a big part of the build up. There is no emotion or passion anymore, it's become very robotic. No aggression, no getting in the oppositions face, just bowl, go back to your mark, repeat. The players don't show it matters or it has meaning and the fans take that feeling on so they lose interest. I feel we have gone too far trying to be nice guys and it's boring, it makes it appear that they players don't care and that flows onto the fans. Imagine Merv Hughes, Shane Warne, Mitchell Johnson, Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee showing no emotion or saying nothing or not getting into the oppositions face, it was fun, it made you feel like what you were watching was a big deal, it was passion and we don't have anyone bringing that anymore. There are no entertainers anymore and that's part of the reason the players are playing in empty stadiums. The players as individuals aren't doing enough to get people through the gates.
3. The rules. One of the best things in ODI cricket was reverse swing and bowling at the depth. Nothing better than watching Brett Lee trying to bowl as fast and full as he could with the ball starting to reverse. It was something to look forward to in ODI cricket and now with two new balls it's gone.
4. Powerplays. Has it really made the game better to watch? Not in my opinion, you had to get on with it early, we knew when there were changes in the field restrictions, it's over complicated and added nothing.
5. Schedule. People aren't thinking about cricket until at least the first test. ODIs were always played after the test series, it was seen as an opportunity for a team to get some back after losing a test or to rub it in even further for the winning team. There is a blank spot in the sporting calendar after the test series or after the tennis. Use that. It's far enough away from the footy season where that's forgotten, people are thinking and following cricket by now.
6. The tri-series ODI's were great because it was a mini tournament and there were two opponents to play. It wasn't just playing the same team over and over again. When the two touring teams played each other you might not get to see big crowds but perhaps this is an opportunity to take international cricket to regional areas and to cities that don't see much international cricket. Perhaps having two rivals like Pakistan and India come out for a tri-ODI series would generate some crowds and TV viewing.
7. No free to air TV. You're killing the interest and the game by not having it on free to air and that goes for any sport. People need to be able to watch it, follow it then when it comes to their city they might go to it.
8. Advertising. I didn't know that ODI series was on. I heard nothing. I like a lot of people don't watch free to air TV, so how do you reach me? Advertise on social media, targeted ads, Spotify, commercial radio, billboards, social media posts, hear more from the players. CA I think have completely lost touch with how to promote something in the modern world and how to promote sport. I think a lot of what people love about sport and athletes as individuals has been taken away. Oh and promote it on free to air TV, lets not forget that.
9. Cost. Cost of living is hammering people at the moment. Going to an ODI with the family is going to cost a small fortune. Perhaps we need to look at making things cheaper. It's not like going to a big stadium is the best experience. Parking can be a problem. Lining up in huge lines to get a poor quality beer in a plastic cup is far from ideal. Expensive food cheap style food is not ideal. Hard plastic seats all day. It's something that could be improved.
Just some thoughts. Are we killing cricket by doing so many things wrong or are people in a world of constantly accessible entertainment just not as interested? IMO Cricket Australia, how they operate, if they were an AFL club's board the fans would be calling for their heads. Doing nothing for the game and mismanaging it. Taking nothing away from the past when it was at it's peak and how things were don then.
I just feel that Cricket Australia have lost touch with promoting the game and that some rule changes of ODI cricket have made the game dull and boring. And it's not just ODI cricket, test cricket as well as we watch a very empty Optus stadium in the first test.
So how to fix it?
1. The build up. Sport is like sex, the foreplay is important. What happens prior to a sporting match generates interest. It generates emotion, creates a feeling of importance, generates passion and feeling for the contest and gets everyone primed for what is about to happen. Just like foreplay there are things you don't do before sex and there are things you don't do before a sporting contest because it kills the mood, it kills what I mentioned above. You don't talk about your ex before sex and you don't get political before sport. I think regardless of how good the cause is, there is no doubt that some of the actions and processes partaken in before sporting events are mood killers. Play the national anthems and get into it. Leave the causes, the PC stuff, the political stuff all the stuff irrelevant to the contest out of it, do it another way.
2. Going further on the build up, there needs to be more heard from the players before a series. Cricketers need to take a bit out of boxing, get the banter going, get some feeling into the contest and some passion because I'm not seeing that anymore. Guys like Warne and McGrath nominating their men and their bunnies, the sledges, the banter, the individual rivalries, it was a big part of the build up. There is no emotion or passion anymore, it's become very robotic. No aggression, no getting in the oppositions face, just bowl, go back to your mark, repeat. The players don't show it matters or it has meaning and the fans take that feeling on so they lose interest. I feel we have gone too far trying to be nice guys and it's boring, it makes it appear that they players don't care and that flows onto the fans. Imagine Merv Hughes, Shane Warne, Mitchell Johnson, Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee showing no emotion or saying nothing or not getting into the oppositions face, it was fun, it made you feel like what you were watching was a big deal, it was passion and we don't have anyone bringing that anymore. There are no entertainers anymore and that's part of the reason the players are playing in empty stadiums. The players as individuals aren't doing enough to get people through the gates.
3. The rules. One of the best things in ODI cricket was reverse swing and bowling at the depth. Nothing better than watching Brett Lee trying to bowl as fast and full as he could with the ball starting to reverse. It was something to look forward to in ODI cricket and now with two new balls it's gone.
4. Powerplays. Has it really made the game better to watch? Not in my opinion, you had to get on with it early, we knew when there were changes in the field restrictions, it's over complicated and added nothing.
5. Schedule. People aren't thinking about cricket until at least the first test. ODIs were always played after the test series, it was seen as an opportunity for a team to get some back after losing a test or to rub it in even further for the winning team. There is a blank spot in the sporting calendar after the test series or after the tennis. Use that. It's far enough away from the footy season where that's forgotten, people are thinking and following cricket by now.
6. The tri-series ODI's were great because it was a mini tournament and there were two opponents to play. It wasn't just playing the same team over and over again. When the two touring teams played each other you might not get to see big crowds but perhaps this is an opportunity to take international cricket to regional areas and to cities that don't see much international cricket. Perhaps having two rivals like Pakistan and India come out for a tri-ODI series would generate some crowds and TV viewing.
7. No free to air TV. You're killing the interest and the game by not having it on free to air and that goes for any sport. People need to be able to watch it, follow it then when it comes to their city they might go to it.
8. Advertising. I didn't know that ODI series was on. I heard nothing. I like a lot of people don't watch free to air TV, so how do you reach me? Advertise on social media, targeted ads, Spotify, commercial radio, billboards, social media posts, hear more from the players. CA I think have completely lost touch with how to promote something in the modern world and how to promote sport. I think a lot of what people love about sport and athletes as individuals has been taken away. Oh and promote it on free to air TV, lets not forget that.
9. Cost. Cost of living is hammering people at the moment. Going to an ODI with the family is going to cost a small fortune. Perhaps we need to look at making things cheaper. It's not like going to a big stadium is the best experience. Parking can be a problem. Lining up in huge lines to get a poor quality beer in a plastic cup is far from ideal. Expensive food cheap style food is not ideal. Hard plastic seats all day. It's something that could be improved.
Just some thoughts. Are we killing cricket by doing so many things wrong or are people in a world of constantly accessible entertainment just not as interested? IMO Cricket Australia, how they operate, if they were an AFL club's board the fans would be calling for their heads. Doing nothing for the game and mismanaging it. Taking nothing away from the past when it was at it's peak and how things were don then.
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