In a bid to grow cricket within the UAE, the Emirates Cricket
Board (ECB) has announced it will partner a new T20 league
that already has the backing of six Full Member cricket boards.
A franchise-based tournament will be staged in December and
January with Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi as the hosts. The
league has also been sanctioned by the ICC for the next 10
years, subject to an annual appraisal.
The competition will include five franchises, with 22 matches
played over 24 days with leading international players.
According to the ECB press release, each of the five franchises
will have 16 players - six international, two emerging - from
Full Member countries - three from Associate countries, two
young players from the local domestic set-up and three UAE
national cricketers.
"Our firm aim is for this event to take the sport to all corners
of the UAE and to develop cricket at a grassroots level, initially
in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman and Ras Al Khaimah," David
East, the ECB's chief executive, said in a statement. "This will
not be just another T20 tournament, it will be a true
international festival of sport and the hottest cricket ticket in
the UAE.
"No other T20 competition has been established with such an
international outlook, offering fans the chance to watch
players from so many nations, from the international stars of
the game to the best up-and-coming young talent," said Zayed
Abbas, an ECB board member. "These are goals and values that
are really important to the ECB and so we are pleased to offer
our full support."
There is also a potential clash brewing between the ECB and the
Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for the slotted window. Pakistan
are due to host New Zealand and Australia later this year,
series which would ordinarily be played in the UAE. But the
UAE's growth as a destination of choice for various T20
leagues means venues could be in short supply for the PCB -
which had asked UAE to keep the winter window exclusively
reserved for Pakistan.
That request appears to have gone unheeded, but the ECB did
offer venues in Dubai and Abu Dhabi for Pakistan's home series,
which is likely to run parallel alongside the T20 leagues. The
PCB, however, insists on having a free window, saying it would
otherwise consider other venues, with Malaysia understood to
be a frontrunner. These latest developments threaten a long-
standing relationship between the PCB and the ECB that has
seen very few hiccups up to this point.
When ESPNcricinfo approached PCB, one of its officials
expressed skepticism over the Emirates T20 league. "PCB will
clarify its position after ECB has officially notified us," they
said. "This ad is not placed by the ECB. It is placed by private
sponsors of the league."
The ECB's T20 league will be squeezed into an already packed
winter schedule for the country, as the Asia Cup, the
Afghanistan Premier League and T10 League are already
confirmed to be staged in the UAE next season. Pakistan are
also due to host two full bilateral series, against New Zealand
and Australia, followed by the fourth edition of the Pakistan
Super League. Pakistan complain that having their home series
run alongside various other leagues hurts the PCB's commercial
rights in the UAE and can cause significant damage to their
home series and the PSL in the UAE.
That is just the winter commitments in the UAE. In addition,
franchise T20 competitions during the time period will be played
across the cricketing world, with the Big Bash League in
Australia, the Bangladesh Premier League, and potentially the
inaugural season of the T20 Global League in South Africa all to
be played between November and January. That might go some
way towards explaining why besides Pakistan, India,
Bangladesh and Australia are also understood to be unhappy
about the development.
The ECB's T20 league project is spearheaded by former PCB
chairman Dr Nasim Ashraf, who, during his term with Pakistan,
had initiated the idea of launching a T20 league within
Pakistan. However, the idea never materialised under Dr.
Ashraf, who resigned from the PCB the same day Pakistan's
then President Pervez Musharraf did, in August 2008.
Ashraf, who is chairman of the new T20 league's board of
directors, is upbeat about the T20 venture in the Emirates.
"Our intention is to build a new event that is here to stay, and
one that occupies a niche position in the international cricket
calendar," Ashraf said in statement issued by the ECB. "We are
not looking to compete with other T20 leagues. We are looking
to develop an international festival of cricket that exists first
and foremost for the benefit of the players, and with a very
specific goal of helping to develop new talent from around the
world and grow the game in keeping with global best
practices."
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