No Bilateral ODIs Post 2027? MCC Proposes Stringent Plan To Significantly Reduce 50-over Cricket
NDTV
The MCC has proposed removal of bilateral ODIs after the 2027 World Cup, barring one year preceding each World Cup.
The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the custodians of the laws of the game, has pushed for extra funding to protect Test cricket and the women's game, and suggested a significant reduction in ODIs after the 2027 World Cup. In a recent meeting at the Lord's, the MCC's 13-member World Cricket Committee (WCC) proposed "removing bilateral ODIs, other than in the one year preceding each World Cup".
The panel made the suggestion keeping in mind the crowded calendar, which features T20 domestic franchise leagues around the world.
"The committee questioned the role men's One Day International (ODI) cricket now plays outside of ICC World Cups, and recommended it be significantly reduced following the completion of the 2027 ICC Men's World Cup," the MCC said in a statement posted on its website.
"The suggestion is that a scarcity of ODI cricket would increase the quality, achieved by removing bilateral ODIs, other than in the one-year preceding each World Cup. This would, as a consequence, also create much-needed space in the global cricketing calendar." The MCC committee proposed extra funding to keep the five-day format significant and alive.
"The committee continues to hear of the growing unaffordability to host men's Test match cricket in many nations and concluded that the game currently lacks quantifiable data on the costs of hosting a Test match across its member nations," the release read.