Now, you can get all the USA Cricket updates via Facebook. Also follow us on Twitter via @dreamcricket
By Mike Thomas
I’m
a cricketer. Some would say a keen and passionate cricketer. Let’s face
it, to withstand twenty-six years of club and league cricket in the
U.S.A. after a similar length in the English game, needs a certain
amount of passion besides the ibuprofen.
One
forges all manner of friends, acquaintances and relationships in the
game after so long. Countless long evenings dissecting, analyzing and
absorbing all manner of opinion on every facet of the priceless pastime.
Strangely, only one subject appears to unite all those opinions – the
parlous state of U.S. cricket organization. How so, one asks: is cricket
not the fastest growing sport in the U.S? Are clubs and leagues not
mushrooming across the land? Are there not promising development signs
in the schools and colleges? Are not global authorities hungrily eying
such a vast market?
All true, yet stranger still, everybody
seems to know the answers - and they’re always all the same. A litany of
intangibles: transparency, democracy, fairness, openly representative,
altruism, service to the whole cricket community. All nod sagely in
agreement, but implementation always seems to escape similar unity.
Generations of clubs, leagues and putative national bodies have now
embraced, or purported to embrace such ideals, so why the lack of
success?
This is not rocket science. The Founding Fathers got
it right in infinitely more complex circumstances. Why is not every
member of the cricketing community, social player, league player,
national star, youth player, female player, coach, umpire and plain
enthusiast, up in arms clamoring at the gates, demanding resolution?
Well,
apathy and those unable or unwillingly to commit effort cut the throng
substantially from the get-go, while some of the activists already there
have a few problems of self-interest, or with ego, power or money, or
all of the above. Frustration, disgust and a sense of helplessness are
powerful disincentives to commitment. Don’t get me wrong, there are some
very bright and well-intentioned people who have been or currently are
involved in emergent cricket organizations. There are however, many war
stories out there about the difficulties in reaching democratic or
collective decisions with both communities present.
So..er..ok,
resolution is still easy right? Just find a few good men and women who
are prepared to work their socks off for some years, have no
self-interest, ego or wish for power, reward or benefit and who will
readily accept ballot box banishment by their peers. This sounds
onerous, but it will happen in time because the crowd at the gates is
swelling and ultimately any national body gets held accountable for its
results.
There is one case-book study out there, already
operating successfully to the joy of all. The United States Youth
Cricket Association (USYCA). Guess what? It’s altruistic, democratic,
decentralized, apolitical, financially transparent, has a simple
laser-like focus and is united and driven by a single commonly held
belief. U.S. cricket development will pivot on the degree that
generations of boys and girls in the nation’s school learn about, play
and enjoy cricket. The rewards for the many hard-working volunteers?
Just the laughter and smiles on the faces of the kids and PE teachers
alike, the satisfaction of bringing free equipment and coaching to
schools and a tangible contribution to the Game.
Who knows, maybe
the children can teach something to us all in the search for appropriate
leadership of U.S. Cricket. It’s the Game stupid! Playing it, enjoying
it, creating the community and environment where more can enjoy it.
Haggling over rewards, TV rights, national selection and lawsuits before
lifting a finger is soooo adult!
So, for what it’s worth, one tiny voice of suggestion for those that would rule, or reform, or replace:
- Get the Constitution right to start with, preferably both decentralized and with strong independent oversight of the Executive.
- Win the hearts and minds of all cricket constituencies – by effort, achievement and providing service
- Listen to those constituencies. U.S. Cricket needs management of those needs, not dictatorship.
- Keep early goals simple: under-promising and over-achievement wins friends (and sponsorship!)
- Maintain a sharp focus on that which can be unanimously agreed. Dissention is a killer.
- Eliminate
barriers to entry for individuals, clubs and leagues, focusing on
member’s “W.I.I.F.M.” (What’s in it for me?). If today’s playing
cricketers and enthusiasts are not clamoring to join, something’s wrong!
AND MOST IMPORTANT – AND CHALLENGING - OF ALL?
- Leave
egos and self-interest behind. U.S. cricket cannot stand further
debacle: those who cannot put the greater good of the Game ahead of
self-interest - stay away!
How nice it would be to hear 100
tiny voices, then 1000 tiny voices: it is time the gates really rattled
from the rank and file….
[Mike Thomas has been playing
cricket for 26 years in the U.S., and is a former captain and president of his club. He
is also a board member of the C.C. Morris Cricket Library and Museum at
Haverford College, PA.]