http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/cricket/25702462
Someone out there believes county cricket needs a change
I believe the issue goes deeper than county cricket, it goes down to club cricket. The grand vision of the ECB at club cricket level just isn't producing the top class cricketers it was designed to.
I'm talking specifically about the region of the country I play in, but I'm sure it's the same across the UK. A few years ago if you were a good side with talented players you could progress as a club to the highest level of club cricket, and all that mattered were the results you delivered on a Saturday. What has happened more recently in my area of the country is that the Southern Premier League has imposed a range of accreditation requirements before you can get promoted from the Hampshire League (the league I play in), so not only do you need to be a good side, you need to have a raft of requirements in place including a set number of colts sides, boundary sizes, pitch/ground marks to a set standard and specific facilities in place.
Now I'm all for having basic facilities in place, but a number of very good teams over the past few years have been refused promotion due to real technicalities, allowing bigger clubs 2nd teams getting promoted in their place despite finishing lower in the league.
I believe in our region the ECB are trying to create a super league of big clubs in the belief that will deliver the best young cricketers. The impact is that in the smaller clubs, young players who want to play at a high level often have to make the decision to leave their club to join a bigger club in order to do that. I know of a number of talented young players who have chosen to either play a different sport, or stay at their local club and be part of the club they know and like rather than move elsewhere. Either way a potential talent may have been lost to the game at a higher level.
I apologize for the rant, but I have a real issue with what the ECB are doing at club cricket level, and clearly over the past 10 or so years it isn't delivering the required amount of talent to the top level.
Something that always makes me laugh about these Southern League accreditation requirements is that in order to play in the very top league you need to have 2 sight screens at each end. We have players from Australia over who play at a high level back home and have never played a game of cricket with any sight screens, let alone 2 at each end.