New format needed for under-19 tournament
BY GEOFF LONGLEY
Relevant offers
Opinion
OPINION: The International Cricket Council needs to take a serious look at the format of the world under-19 cup tournament after the latest competition in New Zealand.
The top eight, in fact nine teams including Bangladesh, were evenly matched and deserved to have more "live" matches against each other than the early introduction of the sudden death knockout phase.
After the first-round pool matches teams went straight into the quarterfinals, semis and final while those knocked out were left to play off for the minor placings.
While that gave them games, the extra edge of still being in with a chance of making the top bracket was gone.
A better system may have been to keep the four pools of four, but start playing them immediately the teams had arrived instead of having two full rounds of practice games. If teams want practice games, arrange them beforehand as most did.
Then have pool play with the minnows matched against the big boys, before the probable top two meet to decide first and second in the section.
Instead of then going straight into the quarterfinal knockout stage, have two pools of four and let the sides play each other before finding the top two from each post-section pool to play in the semifinals.
The teenage boys are capable of playing every second day at least and do not need three-day breaks. Also, it would mean more players in the 15-strong squads should get game time.
One unfortunate player in the New Zealand squad, Mattie Thomas, did not take the field in a championship match at all.
Just to show how close some of the teams were, Australia, the eventual champion, lost their pool play match to South Africa but then went on a title-winning run. Bangladesh beat both New Zealand and Australia in warmup matches, before losing narrowly to West Indies and Pakistan in pool play and cruelly missed making the top eight.
A cut-off has to exist and that was tough for them as they could only then finish ninth. It would have been more interesting to use the available days better to get teams facing each other with the title still to be decided instead of toiling for the minor money.
While the idea to have the tournament opening ceremony at the Christchurch Art Gallery was all very well in theory, it rather fell flat in practice when only a few players and officials from each team could attend because of the limited space available.
Surely one of the features of assembling such players in a world event is that they get a chance to mix and mingle at an opening ceremony to celebrate the sport.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
Danny Lee drops back to pack at Pebble Beach
Jones, Keeling take out two-day Coast to Coast
New Zealand facing clean sweep in Davis Cup tie
Linsanity sweeps Kobe, Lakers aside at MSG
Critics coming round as Phoenix change ethos
Breaststroke win for Glenn Snyders in NSW
Easy does it for Jesse Ryder's Black Caps return
Harry Redknapp flattered by England job link
Canes have much to gain against Crusaders
Alonso ends final day of Jerez F1 test on top
NZ Sevens team start strong in Las Vegas
Contador's team risk World Tour exclusion
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
One dead after head-on Hawke's Bay crash
Victim was holding bat, says witness
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
Uzbek pleads guilty to Obama kill plot
Gardener's paradise planned for Chch
Danny Lee drops back to pack at Pebble Beach
Obama tries to defuse birth control fight
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Will bill make food safer or be a form of control?
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
Earthquakes shake north and south of NZ
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Author, 12, gives proceeds to cancer research
Baby murder-accused sobs, sniffles in court
Daily trivia quiz: February 11
A burning issue: When coffins get too big
NZ police access Facebook evidence
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
CERA report prompts mall evacuation
Top selling games in New Zealand