Following on from the Guardian article about more clubs folding, how would you fix club cricket. Let's assume the ECB aren't going to give up their sky blood money for current cricket comps. Here's some of my thoughts:-
1. Clubs can only have a specific number of teams according to the number of pitches at their home ground. Only 2 teams can play in the premier competition.
This restricts the mega clubs adult XI and encourages the talent pool to spread to other clubs, in turn making competition, and the willingness to play for other clubs greater.
2. Start-up fund for new clubs - any club that takes over existing facilities from a closed club gets a £5-10k start up grant, subject to a business plan and monitoring.
3. Pool pitches - get clubs to groundshare where they are a 1 team club. Potentially you could base a 2 sat/2 sun/1 midweek team at the same club. Pooling resources into one well maintained facility is better than 3 average ones.
4. Abandon Colts cricket over the age of 15. Create a pathway straight into adult cricket by 15, make it the norm and create development leagues to bridge the gap between 20 and 45 over cricket. Make each league create a development league.
5. Pool administration resources - ECB should employ part-time or even full time "club managers" to help assist clubs in fundraising and player recruitment. Whether it's an ad-hoc request basis or a regular work, clubs are failing due to lack of admin help. Sack a few ECB development managers or retrain them, they aren't making a difference.
6. Get some live cricket on FTA TV - make up a competition or something!
Any thoughts?