Rebel cricket series

REMINDS ME OF KERRY PACKER’S WORLD SERIES CRICKET DAYS
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Series_Cricket

CRICKET: Banned - NZ rebels left out in the cold
Sunday Star Times | Sunday, 30 December 2007

Six of New Zealand’s most talented cricketers have effectively been banned from representing the Black Caps because of their involvement in an Indian rebel league. Richard Boock reports.

New Zealand Cricket has told its selectors to never again consider six former Black Caps for any representative selection after they played in the rebel Indian Cricket League competition.

It appears the players won’t even be allowed to hold contracts to play for State Championship teams, and will be limited to playing on for match payments on a game-by-game basis a huge blow to their prospects of playing any more meaningful cricket in New Zealand.

NZ Cricket has advised selectors to disregard for national or “A” team inclusion current prospects Daryl Tuffey and Hamish Marshall, or the recently “retired” Chris Cairns, Nathan Astle, Craig McMillan and Chris Harris.

The six former test players have drawn the ire of the establishment for competing in the lucrative but unsanctioned ICL, which completed its first season of operation this month amid unanimous condemnation from the International Cricket Council’s member nations.

Of the sextet, Cairns, Harris and Astle are almost certainly past their use-by dates for national duty, but Tuffey, McMillan and Marshall if the latter opted to reverse his Kolpak status may have entertained thoughts of a comeback.

That now seems impossible following revelations of an agreement to actively discourage the selection of rebel players at all levels struck between the chief executives of all the test-playing nations.

New Zealand Cricket chief executive Justin Vaughan said yesterday he’d been in contact with Lalit Modi, a vice-president of the Indian cricket board, and had phoned Modi to clarify NZC’s position and would be speaking to him again on the issue.

But [b]he confirmed the policy of discouraging the selection of the rebels.

“We have a preference that our selectors take into consideration the fact that that these guys have been playing in an unsanctioned competition, an event that isn’t in the best interests of New Zealand or world cricket, and that we’d rather that they didn’t play,” said Vaughan.

"I don’t think we can say that they’re ineligible for selection. We’d prefer to say that the selectors will be encouraged to consider other players.

“There’s an understanding that we don’t support the ICL and that we don’t want to give them unnecessary traction.”[/b]

The international pact came to light after the Indian board of control took exception to the inclusion of Tuffey in an Auckland XI that played the Bangladeshi tourists, claiming the selection of a rebel undermined the intent of the agreement.

[b]“All the boards had agreed in principle at the last ICC CEO’s meeting that any player who is part of an unauthorised tournament will not be encouraged,” Niranjan Shah, the BCCI secretary, told the Times of India.

“This is a violation of a gentleman’s agreement. Lalit Modi will write to New Zealand Cricket to protest against this move.”[/b]

NZC had earlier made clear its position on contracted players participating in the rebel league, saying it would regard the action as a breach of contract. But until last week it had not spelled out its position on the status of non-contracted players.

[b]The impact of the CEOs agreement will probably be felt again this week, when the announcement of the England squad to tour New Zealand will almost certainly highlight the exclusion of rebel players Darren Maddy, Paul Nixon, Chris Read and Vikram Solanki.

“We regard this as a very serious issue,” the ECB’s new chairman Giles Clarke recently told The Times. “Selectors will be instructed to take into consideration the fact that these players have played in an unauthorised competition. You can draw your own conclusions from that.”

NZC’s hardline stance follows that of the boards of India, Pakistan and South Africa, who have all threatened their rebel players with bans not only from playing international cricket but also from their domestic competitions.[/b]

“We view them as rebels,” Gerald Majola, the CSA chief executive, told Beeld, an Afrikaans newspaper. “They have joined a breakaway organisation. Once they have played even one game in the ICL tournament, it’s over and they will never be allowed to play in South Africa again.”

Pakistan board chief Nasim Ashraf said: “We were very clear about our policy about the ICL and they [the players] knew they would be automatically banned from playing cricket in Pakistan if they took part.”

However, the move to marginalise the rebels has received a predictable response from Tim May, the chief executive of the Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations.

“If a player wants to retire from international cricket because he’s had enough and wants to spend more time with his family and he can seek employment elsewhere, to allow him to spend more time with his family, then, like any other employee, he should be allowed to,” May said. “We will resist that [banning players] with everything we have. That is an unreasonable restraint of trade.”

Vaughan said at this stage, NZC saw no need to prevent the rebels playing domestic cricket on a non-contracted, match-by-match basis, but they would monitor the situation and could yet change position.

Who needs these nobodies with so much other NZ cricketing talent…

I wonder if this will cripple some smaller nations national teams?

it is the global impact that interested me, it was a gentleman’s agreement reached by the CEO’s of all test playing nations. While mainly NZers at this stage there are players from other countries as well. TC is right…and as if on cue below is from yesterday’s ‘The Australian’

Indian rebel league to gut Test teams
Malcolm Conn | January 01, 2008

AUSTRALIA may end up playing a New Zealand second XI in November’s Test series, with star fast bowler Shane Bond in line to become the latest Kiwi to abandon the national side and join India’s rebel Twenty20 league.

New Zealand and other countries with modestly paid players are in danger of being gutted by the breakaway International Cricket League, further damaging the standard of international cricket.

As the well-paid Australians continue their complete domination by attempting to equal their own amazing record of 16 successive Test victories, in the second Test against India beginning at the SCG tomorrow, the soft underbelly of the game is being exposed by India’s big-money brawling over Twenty20 and television rights.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India has set up the rival Indian Premier League Twenty20 competition, to begin in April, and is paying big money for international stars, including Australians, to be part of it, but players overlooked by the official IPL are joining the ICL.

It is not only international cricket that is under threat, but domestic first-class cricket, with falling standards not adequately preparing players for Test cricket.

The cricketing countries at greatest risk of being damaged are those that can least afford it and New Zealand is at the top of the list. Some players can earn more in a month playing with the ICL than for a full year playing for their country. :eek:

New Zealand Cricket is under enormous pressure from the BCCI to ban the six Kiwi players who took part in the inaugural ICL championship in India last month and is in a bind about what to do with Bond, who has signed to be part of an expanded ICL competition this year.

If NZC bans Bond, the best Kiwi paceman since Richard Hadlee, he can sue for restraint of trade. If he is allowed to play in the ICL, the billion-dollar wrath of the BCCI will reign down on the Kiwis, further damaging cricket in a country where it has been a marginal sport.

[b]Bond may be only one of many ICL players from around the globe who may be able to take court action if they are banned by their home boards in what shapes as a messy and expensive fight that can only harm the game.

International players association chief executive Tim May made it clear FICA would protect the rights of players to earn a professional living, regardless of which competition they join.[/b]

“With New Zealand and these other poorly paid countries, it’s incredibly enticing at the end of their career, or even in the middle of their career, to look after themselves,” May said. "It’s their job and they’re trying to do the best for their families.

"You may well see more ICL contracted players signed up. So what are we going to do, have a New Zealand second XI out there? Is it in New Zealand’s national interest to put out a half-baked team?

"Is it in world cricket’s interest? These are the questions people really need to sit down and think about.

"And there is also the rights of the players to ply their trade.

"We want to encourage people to play cricket professionally, don’t we? It’s not necessarily a bad thing, this ICL.

“We will protect the players’ rights to ply their trade, and the more people who can play international and domestic cricket and earn a living, isn’t that in the interests of the game with competition from more and more sports out there professionally?”

New Zealand’s dreadful lack of depth was exposed in last month’s lopsided Chappell-Hadlee series, with one-day dasher Craig McMillan among those who retired to join the ICL.

Hamish Marshall and Daryl Tuffey might never again represent New Zealand after appearing in the ICL. NZC has told selectors to consider others ahead of the pair, while the other four players, Chris Cairns, McMillan, Nathan Astle and Chris Harris, have retired.
[b]
Pakistan has effectively banned three players including former captain Inzamam-Ul-Haq, but none of the Test countries will put in writing that players joining the ICL will be banned, for fear of being sued for restraint of trade.

“Of concern to us and what should be of concern to all players is that boards have not communicated formally their position despite requests from player associations in some of those countries,” May said.[/b]

“It’s important for players thinking of entering this competition that they understand the risks involved in playing in this so-called rebel league. If boards do not want to put their positions in writing, then the boards should not expect to restrict players from coming back and playing in their country’s competitions.”