On July 9th 2013, Ireland became the first Associate nation to qualify for the 2015
World Cup. However there are good chances that most of the cricketing world
would have missed the high intensity drama that day in Amstelveen as Ireland pulled off a thrilling
last-ball tie against their Dutch hosts.IRELAND CRICKET
For long, Ireland has been at the forefront of
rising standards and profile of Associate and Affiliate cricket around the
world. The World Cup 2015 will be Ireland's sixth global event, with the side
having already competed in the 2007 and 2011 editions, as well as the ICC World
Cup Twenty20 in 2009, 2010 and 2012.
During the
2007 event in the Caribbean, the Irish broke many hearts when their motley
bunch of amateurs-including a postman, a farmhand, a school teacher and an
electrician-defeated Pakistan. Four years hence, Kevin O' Brien smashed the
fastest century in World Cup history as Ireland defeated England in
extraordinary fashion.
If Irish
player expectations have soared, then so too have those of supporters and
administrators. In the last three years, Ireland have been defeated just four
times in 42 ODI's by their fellow Associates and Affiliates, clearly
establishing their kingpin status in the Associate world.
With seemingly no
more lands to conquer, Cricket Ireland recently announced that it will apply
for full membership of ICC, with ambitions for Test status by 2020. But without
a clear roadmap for graduating to the
next level and reluctance on the part of ICC to define , let alone create one
after the premature and hurried elevation of Bangladesh - Irish players seem to
have become flustered. In a sport like cricket, careers are finite and the lure
of better opportunities (read Test Cricket) has proved overpowering for some.
From the likes of Ed Joyce who once went
astray only to find out that he was not in England's scheme of things for Test
Cricket to limited overs giant Eoin Morgan-who has slipped down England's
pecking order in the longer version of the game, Cricket Ireland has been rendered
helpless in preventing its players from representing England. Another Irish
star, fast bowler Boyd Rankin has just recently become a part of England setup
and it won't be long before the talented 21-year old left-arm spinner George
Dockrell is lapped up by them.
It's clear that the quality of
cricketers being produced by the emerald isle is not a problem. One argument
against Ireland's elevation is lack of stadia. Ireland currently host their
home matches at Stormont in Belfast and Clontarf in Dublin, each having a
capacity of over 5,000 spectators for internationals. But with the under
construction stadia in Malahide, planned to have a capacity of over 10,000 to be completed in the next two months,
Ireland will be able to spread its fixtures between three top quality venues.
Another argument puts forth the
fact that Ireland has no domestic first-class structure in place. Ireland's
chief executive, Warren Deutrom has outlined a plan to establish a provincial
first-class structure, although the plans are still in a nascent stage. It is
important to note that Bangladesh received their Test status before their
first-class competition could be properly established. Only in the season
following their first Test match, did
the National Cricket League become a first-class competition.
With seemingly all the bases
covered, where is Ireland cricket heading? Test Nations continue to ignore their improving
one-day results since it doesn't make financial sense to play them. The ICC,
despite its rhetoric about globalising the game, doesn't act to stem the talent
drain.
With a number of Irish players
playing in the highly-competitive County circuit, Ireland should be better
prepared for Tests than say, players from Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. Moreover
providing Test status would help them retain quality players and feature in
more top-level competitions. At least their ODI record shows they are good
enough. For the moment though, it remains an agonizing wait for Irish cricket
fans and its cricketers, for whom, Test status still seems a distant dream.
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