Lancashire's chairman believes that it might "make absolute sense" for the Hundred to develop into a T20 competitors from 2025, as English cricket continues to debate the match's future following top-level discussions over the prospect of opening it as much as personal funding.
The ECB have been assembly with counties this month to debate the Hundred's future, following a profitable third season for the match which noticed file ticket gross sales and viewing figures. The eight groups are owned by the ECB and run by boards comprising county representatives and unbiased members, however may quickly be opened as much as personal buyers.
The Hundred's future is safe for no less than 5 extra seasons because it types a big a part of the ECB's TV rights take care of Sky Sports, which runs till the top of the 2028 season. But the ECB's timeline for potential adjustments to the competitors's possession constructions would see a brand new mannequin in place forward of the 2025 version.
The Daily Telegraph reported final week that the ECB may give host counties fairness stakes of their respective groups, and that they may take into account including two new golf equipment - most probably primarily based within the south-west and the north-east - to create a higher geographical unfold.
The Hundred's 100-ball format was vastly controversial on the level of inception, and was devised each to fulfill the will of the BBC - who're its free-to-air broadcasters - for shorter video games and to create a distinction with the Vitality Blast, the counties' T20 match which has continued as England's second-tier short-form competitors.
The format has largely proved well-liked with the gamers and has produced barely shorter video games than the Blast, however has not caught on all over the world. Andy Anson, Lancashire's chair, stated on Wednesday that the Hundred now not wants a novel format and will "fall in line" with franchise cricket by shifting to T20.
"It would make absolute sense," Anson advised LancsTV, Lancashire's in-house channel. "I think the format was an unnecessary creation. It was there to create a difference between the Blast and the Hundred… I think we are past that now. You won't even need to change the branding of it: it could still be called the Hundred.
"I feel it needs to be T20, simply to fall in step with this recreation that's sensible. It is the very best format of cricket from a world viewers perspective. It does generate enormous quantities of curiosity all over the world…. I'd simply fall in step with it, and I do really feel, within the conferences I'm in, that there's a sympathy for that angle and for that change to occur."
The top salary in the men's Hundred was £125,000 in 2023, which represented less money for more work than was on offer to leading overseas players in the inaugural season of Major League Cricket in the United States, where four of the six franchises are backed by IPL owners.
To attract the world's best, Anson believes that the Hundred would require private investment. "If you're going to make the Hundred the second-best match after the IPL, you in all probability want to enhance the amount of cash going into participant wages to get the higher gamers coming in," he stated.
"Right now, we have got wage limits that imply the South African league [SA20] is paying extra. The Middle Eastern league [ILT20] is definitely going to pay extra, and I would not be shocked if the US league [MLC] pays extra. And it [the Hundred] will drop down the pecking order, and we will not let that occur truly, from a worth perspective."
Bruce Carnegie-Brown, the chair of MCC, who are involved in the running of London Spirit, will consult with members next week to "talk about ideas… and search a broad consensus" on the club's attitude towards private investment in the Hundred.
"At the second the way in which ahead is much from sure," Carnegie-Brown - who announced this month he will not stand for re-election at the end of next season - told members in a recent email. "What we do know is that change is coming."
Anson said that Lancashire - who are the sole county involved in running Manchester Originals - will also consult members, and stressed that despite the club's £30 million debt after investment in Emirates Old Trafford, they are "not in any pressing want of capital or money… the debt is sustainable."
He stated: "The alternative that everybody is discussing is across the Hundred, and if the counties doubtlessly have extra possession of the franchises within the Hundred… now we have this dialogue on the county chairs and CEOs assembly and I'd say the overwhelming majority would love an injection of capital sooner or later within the close to future."
Matt Roller is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98
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