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Kent Cricket 2025
Comments
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Not really a surprise I guess - Kent ostracised Compton from the one day team last season when he was hesitating on a new contract.
At least with Stewart back from injury there are a few more bowling options for tomorrow’s game.0 -
moutuakilla said:Gilchrist gone on loan to Middlesex for the One Day Cup. Clearly don't want to play him as he's moving on at the end of the season. Disappointing as we could do with him playing
We also have to take into account that with such a squad lacking depth we can't afford to have the likes of Crawley, DBD, Muyeye, Billings, Joe Denly and Stewart (now back) missing. That is the backbone of our batting and the experimentation with the bowling is a realisation that, without all of our top five, we are simply not going to be competitive regardless of what is publicly said about us trying to win it.
We've named a 14 man squad for tomorrow's game with Stewart back. Flintoff and Curtiss have been left out from the squad for the last game.
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Beckenham doesn't have the character of Canterbury or the infrastructure to make it a proper county ground. What it does have is location. I'm no expert but, from the perspective of attracting sponsors, is Beckenham, with its links to London, more likely to do so than Canterbury? Do most of the other counties have their centre of operations in a major town/city?
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I've always thought the Kent squad has been a bit unbalanced for a couple of years, with a vast number of bowlers to cover for the injured ones, but no batting depth at all. All teams lose players to the 100, but we don't have enough batsmen to cope, and have a yawning gap in the squad between the senior pros and the raw teenagers.
Losing DBD to injury is unfortunate, but Joe Denly sadly is now showing his age and retirement must surely be imminent.2 -
MarcusH26 said:https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/articles/cy7y5y2z46ro
Blast format change for next year , played in one block before the Crisp Tournament with 12 group games , 3 groups of 6.
Kent stay in the " Southern" group with Sussex, Surrey, Essex, Middlesex and Hampshire.
Absolute shambles from the ECB yet again.0 -
cantersaddick said:MarcusH26 said:https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/articles/cy7y5y2z46ro
Blast format change for next year , played in one block before the Crisp Tournament with 12 group games , 3 groups of 6.
Kent stay in the " Southern" group with Sussex, Surrey, Essex, Middlesex and Hampshire.
Absolute shambles from the ECB yet again.
For example Kent won their last 2 group games to progress, so the squad will have been buzzing, but by the time we play again in September, we'll effectively be starting again.1 -
And now of course it is unlikely that Gilchrist will be included in Kent’s t20 side to play Lancashire in September. Unless Kent decide to pay for an overseas player Cohen, Garrett or Quinn will have to play in the quarter final.1
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won't two less Blast games a season have a major impact on revenue?0
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PemburyAddick said:won't two less Blast games a season have a major impact on revenue?1
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It will affect revenue but of course counties are receiving more money from The Hundred windfall to help compensate. For the more cynically minded two less t20 games will also help free up the calendar to allow for The Hundred to be expanded in terms of both the number of teams and matches and allow it to take place over six weeks instead of four.2
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The Hundred has made a mockery of the one day cup with it being played at the same time.Sunday was like watching a football reserve match1
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FremlinsFellow said:It will affect revenue but of course counties are receiving more money from The Hundred windfall to help compensate. For the more cynically minded two less t20 games will also help free up the calendar to allow for The Hundred to be expanded in terms of both the number of teams and matches and allow it to take place over six weeks instead of four.
Fantastic news. I mean who wants to see loads of runs when you can average 129 runs an innings as The Hundred has done this season from 18 innings? Imagine turning up to Blast games, week in week out, and seeing less than 260 runs in a game and with the vast majority of the time knowing that the side chasing will win - 7/9 this season with the margin of victory on the two occasions that the team batting first being just 8 and 10 runs respectively. You'd want your money back. The argument that you have 20 less balls in The Hundred is offset by the fact that a side has less balls to be all out. I haven't watched a single ball but I bet the Sky commentators aren't majoring on that!4 -
Of course this is all true but as a county cricket supporter I keep having to remind myself The Hundred wasn’t designed for me. Presumably then I should not be worried that the product is losing millions or that the promise by the ECB that The Hundred would attract new fans to other formats of the game turned out to be false.I can’t see why serious money is being invested into The Hundred unless there are significant changes on the horizon. Even other sports investors are intrigued to see how the new co-owners of the franchises plan to recoup their outlay.2
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FremlinsFellow said:Of course this is all true but as a county cricket supporter I keep having to remind myself The Hundred wasn’t designed for me. Presumably then I should not be worried that the product is losing millions or that the promise by the ECB that The Hundred would attract new fans to other formats of the game turned out to be false.I can’t see why serious money is being invested into The Hundred unless there are significant changes on the horizon. Even other sports investors are intrigued to see how the new co-owners of the franchises plan to recoup their outlay.
A few bob to appease those lesser counties now is not a long term solution for the sustainability for 18 counties on a level basis and when we see how money can and does create a pyramid system with the Premier League at the top in football (and the ongoing threat of a super European League), it is not difficult to envisage that situation happening in cricket. If they can make The Hundred a global product, even more so if Indian players are permitted to play in it then that opens a whole new market and if the same centres of influence run the ICCI as they do the IPL why shouldn't that happen?
How many players do we sign from another county whose career was on an obviously upward curve? A Cox or a Robinson, for example, who went the other way? Contracts for non pathway players in the last couple of years have been offered to Garrett, Benjamin, Cohen, Bhuiyan, Flintoff and Parkinson. How many of those have really improved the side? A previous signing such as Evison might fulfill his talent, Compton has been a very good acquisition and Finch a good one but they were out of the pro game when we took them on. That is the pool we are fishing in.
As the song goes "it's all about the money".
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Addick Addict said:FremlinsFellow said:Of course this is all true but as a county cricket supporter I keep having to remind myself The Hundred wasn’t designed for me. Presumably then I should not be worried that the product is losing millions or that the promise by the ECB that The Hundred would attract new fans to other formats of the game turned out to be false.I can’t see why serious money is being invested into The Hundred unless there are significant changes on the horizon. Even other sports investors are intrigued to see how the new co-owners of the franchises plan to recoup their outlay.
A few bob to appease those lesser counties now is not a long term solution for the sustainability for 18 counties on a level basis and when we see how money can and does create a pyramid system with the Premier League at the top in football (and the ongoing threat of a super European League), it is not difficult to envisage that situation happening in cricket. If they can make The Hundred a global product, even more so if Indian players are permitted to play in it then that opens a whole new market and if the same centres of influence run the ICCI as they do the IPL why shouldn't that happen?
How many players do we sign from another county whose career was on an obviously upward curve? A Cox or a Robinson, for example, who went the other way? Contracts for non pathway players in the last couple of years have been offered to Garrett, Benjamin, Cohen, Bhuiyan, Flintoff and Parkinson. How many of those have really improved the side? A previous signing such as Evison might fulfill his talent, Compton has been a very good acquisition and Finch a good one but they were out of the pro game when we took them on. That is the pool we are fishing in.
As the song goes "it's all about the money".
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billysboots said:Addick Addict said:FremlinsFellow said:Of course this is all true but as a county cricket supporter I keep having to remind myself The Hundred wasn’t designed for me. Presumably then I should not be worried that the product is losing millions or that the promise by the ECB that The Hundred would attract new fans to other formats of the game turned out to be false.I can’t see why serious money is being invested into The Hundred unless there are significant changes on the horizon. Even other sports investors are intrigued to see how the new co-owners of the franchises plan to recoup their outlay.
A few bob to appease those lesser counties now is not a long term solution for the sustainability for 18 counties on a level basis and when we see how money can and does create a pyramid system with the Premier League at the top in football (and the ongoing threat of a super European League), it is not difficult to envisage that situation happening in cricket. If they can make The Hundred a global product, even more so if Indian players are permitted to play in it then that opens a whole new market and if the same centres of influence run the ICCI as they do the IPL why shouldn't that happen?
How many players do we sign from another county whose career was on an obviously upward curve? A Cox or a Robinson, for example, who went the other way? Contracts for non pathway players in the last couple of years have been offered to Garrett, Benjamin, Cohen, Bhuiyan, Flintoff and Parkinson. How many of those have really improved the side? A previous signing such as Evison might fulfill his talent, Compton has been a very good acquisition and Finch a good one but they were out of the pro game when we took them on. That is the pool we are fishing in.
As the song goes "it's all about the money".
An indication of how far we have fallen is that I can honestly say that I do not believe one player from our current squad would get into this side of the 1970s at the height of when I first started following us. Not even Billings or Crawley if we are talking about red ball.
Luckhurst - England
Denness - England
Cowdrey - England
Asif - Pakistan
Ealham (A)
Shepherd - West Indies
Knott - England
Woolmer - England
Johnson
Julien - West Indies
Underwood - England
It also says it all that all bar Bernard Julien either came through the Kent system or settled in Kent post career with the vast majority of the side being one county players. Times really have changed.3 -
I do understand a lot of the dislike for The Hundred but would like to say that it has been great for the women's game, particularly because it's been tied to men's matches. At least one of their matcnes had 15,000 in the other day which just wouldn't happen. Maybe there could have been ways to do similar with the blast but it has undoubtedly been a positive0
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fenaddick said:I do understand a lot of the dislike for The Hundred but would like to say that it has been great for the women's game, particularly because it's been tied to men's matches. At least one of their matcnes had 15,000 in the other day which just wouldn't happen. Maybe there could have been ways to do similar with the blast but it has undoubtedly been a positive
The CEO at the ECB responsible for promoting The Hundred, Tom Harrison, was paid £1.13m in 2022 which is more than double the amount Kent are about to receive.4 -
fenaddick said:I do understand a lot of the dislike for The Hundred but would like to say that it has been great for the women's game, particularly because it's been tied to men's matches. At least one of their matcnes had 15,000 in the other day which just wouldn't happen. Maybe there could have been ways to do similar with the blast but it has undoubtedly been a positive1
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Addick Addict said:fenaddick said:I do understand a lot of the dislike for The Hundred but would like to say that it has been great for the women's game, particularly because it's been tied to men's matches. At least one of their matcnes had 15,000 in the other day which just wouldn't happen. Maybe there could have been ways to do similar with the blast but it has undoubtedly been a positive
The CEO at the ECB responsible for promoting The Hundred, Tom Harrison, was paid £1.13m in 2022 which is more than double the amount Kent are about to receive.3 - Sponsored links:
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Addick Addict said:FremlinsFellow said:Of course this is all true but as a county cricket supporter I keep having to remind myself The Hundred wasn’t designed for me. Presumably then I should not be worried that the product is losing millions or that the promise by the ECB that The Hundred would attract new fans to other formats of the game turned out to be false.I can’t see why serious money is being invested into The Hundred unless there are significant changes on the horizon. Even other sports investors are intrigued to see how the new co-owners of the franchises plan to recoup their outlay.
A few bob to appease those lesser counties now is not a long term solution for the sustainability for 18 counties on a level basis and when we see how money can and does create a pyramid system with the Premier League at the top in football (and the ongoing threat of a super European League), it is not difficult to envisage that situation happening in cricket. If they can make The Hundred a global product, even more so if Indian players are permitted to play in it then that opens a whole new market and if the same centres of influence run the ICCI as they do the IPL why shouldn't that happen?
How many players do we sign from another county whose career was on an obviously upward curve? A Cox or a Robinson, for example, who went the other way? Contracts for non pathway players in the last couple of years have been offered to Garrett, Benjamin, Cohen, Bhuiyan, Flintoff and Parkinson. How many of those have really improved the side? A previous signing such as Evison might fulfill his talent, Compton has been a very good acquisition and Finch a good one but they were out of the pro game when we took them on. That is the pool we are fishing in.
As the song goes "it's all about the money".
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Hypothetical question - how would we feel about Kent being sold to outside investors like Hampshire has been , if it guaranteed financial stability and the ability to invest in the team ?1
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billysboots said:Hypothetical question - how would we feel about Kent being sold to outside investors like Hampshire has been , if it guaranteed financial stability and the ability to invest in the team ?0
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The Kent County Cricket Board would no doubt welcome any investment with open arms but in reality I can’t see it happening - overseas buyers have only been interested in counties hosting The Hundred franchises. In time the eight or if expanded ten (mainly Test hosting) counties, which stage The Hundred, will be morphed into the franchises and the remaining counties will be left even further behind.The precarious financial position of the non-Test playing counties means they keep voting for the reforms even though they know that in the long term it means they are likely to become a minor entity or an affiliated feeder county to one of the franchises.1
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Kent have suggested a 100 franchise based at an expanded Beckenham.
Something has to happen, as the county is drifting, and to me Canterbury is part of the problem. Not near to the most populous parts of the historic Kent area, and the ground itself is very old fashioned without being especially quaint.1 -
Compton is injured so Dawkins has come in. Has to be close to our youngest ever opening partnership given Jaydn is 19 and Dawkins 18. Stewart in for Rizvi.
Warwickshire have won the toss and elected to bat.0 -
The ECB will want to protect their Test hosting link to those franchises and might still limit it to eight sides. Equally, there will be the argument that three London based teams out of potentially ten, with some areas miles from one, Durham would be next in line and one suspects that we would lose out to someone like Somerset as the odd team out.killerandflash said:Kent have suggested a 100 franchise based at an expanded Beckenham.
Something has to happen, as the county is drifting, and to me Canterbury is part of the problem. Not near to the most populous parts of the historic Kent area, and the ground itself is very old fashioned without being especially quaint.0 -
killerandflash said:Kent have suggested a 100 franchise based at an expanded Beckenham.
Something has to happen, as the county is drifting, and to me Canterbury is part of the problem. Not near to the most populous parts of the historic Kent area, and the ground itself is very old fashioned without being especially quaint.0 -
For anyone struggling to find the live stream because it's not on the Kent site and labelled as Warickshire v Northantants here it is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R52nMctFJwM
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With two franchises already London based, a third would be out of the question. And the Beckenham Ground is totally unsuitable. I would be amazed if the Kent Management Board gave this serious consideration.0