Thursday, December 8, 2011

Foreign influx threatens local talent

It will be more than just a chance to roll the arm over and get the eye in.

Should Paul Collingwood be rushed into WA's one-day team on Saturday it will be a defining moment for the abridged format on this side of the wide brown land.

There is no doubt about the popularity of the Twenty20 game. Yet the new version has a gun-for-hire attitude about it. Composite teams have been accepted almost since the first match. Such selections have suited the entertainment-at-all-costs attitude of 20-over cricket.

But to use an official one-day match involving a State side as little more than an opportunity for an import to get match practice for a cricket carnival degrades the 50-over game almost to the point of irrelevancy.

The Ryobi Cup is in danger of becoming simply a warm-up before the "speed cricket" starts.

WA might be better off not playing in the series after struggling in the first half of the season. The Warriors are without a point from five matches.


However, this State's one-day game isn't going to improve by giving foreigners free hits. Surely it is in WA's best interests to keep blooding youngsters in the hope of unearthing a genuine 50-over talent.

Or should the Ryobi Cup - a competition which has lost appeal with the Australian cricket community - follow the line of the Big Bash and bring in overseas stars to lift its profile?

The far better option in the long run for WA - and the game at a national level - is to give youth a chance.

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