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Cricket should not be welcomed into Olympics: Christie
« on: August 17, 2008, 01:19:01 PM »

Cricketers might be excited at the idea of competing in Olympics [Images] but former champion Linford Christie has strongly opposed it, fearing the sport would "hamper" prospects of individual disciplines which wait for the Games to showcase their talents to the world.

"Team sports like cricket should not be included in the Olympics. Olympics is a personal game where sportsman tries to excel within himself," the 48-year-old 100 metre champion told PTI.

"It would be unfair to include cricket in the Olympics as the players of other sports, especially of individual events wait for the single day to happen and show their talents," he added.

Christie, the only British athlete to win 100 metre race gold medals in Olympics, World Championships, Commonwealth Games [Images] and European championships, feels including cricket in the Olympics could be detrimental to other disciplines.

Cricket wherever is popular, "hampers other sports, but it is the governments who should take corrective measures to ensure that individual sports also get their due," said Christie, who won the gold in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics in 100 metre.

The Jamaica-born British sprinter, who also won silver medals in Seoul Olympics in 100 metre and 4x100 metre relay, said Olympics was for individual sportsman.

"Olympics is the lifeline. The player waits for this day after long four years to showcase his talent and also to let the world know about him," he said.

http://www.rediff.com/sports/2008/aug/17linford.htm
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justforkix

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Re: Cricket should not be welcomed into Olympics: Christie
« Reply #1 on: August 17, 2008, 01:50:14 PM »
HUH ?!? what about hockey, football and other team sports in the plympics  :icon_scratch: :icon_scratch: :icon_scratch:
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cricinfo

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Re: Cricket should not be welcomed into Olympics: Christie
« Reply #2 on: August 17, 2008, 02:45:05 PM »
The Olympics can wait
 Ian Chappell
Why pushing it onto the world's biggest sporting platform is hardly the best way to globalise cricket


Cricket at the Olympics: the idea certainly has a ring to it and makes for a good headline but is it really the best way to globalise the game?

First, I must confess to being a sceptic when it comes to the Olympic Games. I'm not quite in the category of the person who suggested the Olympic pool in Beijing had been deliberately built a couple of metres short (and hence the extraordinary number of world records), but a healthy sceptic nevertheless. Stories about IOC delegates accepting large payments for their votes, and charges of cheating by judges and officials tend to have that effect. And then there's the ever-present spectre of performances being enhanced by illegal substances.

However, there has been a strong call for cricket to be an Olympic sport by current players. Even those two former antagonists Steve Waugh and Sourav Ganguly have backed Adam Gilchrist's suggestion that the game make a push for inclusion in the 2020 games. So let's explore the pros and cons.

The main reason proffered is the globalisation of the game. This is a commendable aim but the question remains: "Can you create a market for cricket in places like the USA and China by playing at the Olympics, or do you first try to make the citizens of those countries more aware of the game so there is then a demand for it at Olympic level?"

Any cricket match involving either USA or China in the Olympics is unlikely to receive much television exposure in those countries, with all the competition for coverage among the major Olympic sports. The only reason for cricket to appear in the Olympic coverage in those countries would be if their team produced a major upset. Judging by the USA's lacklustre performance so far in top international cricket competitions, a nuclear-free world is more likely.

Perhaps a more realistic approach would be to expand the IPL model, with franchises in places like USA, Japan, China and Europe. That way, competitive matches are guaranteed in those countries and an opportunity is created for an increased audience for cricket on television in those regions. By taking this approach it would also accelerate the development of young homegrown players from those countries, who would eventually go on to play in a competitive national team. When that time arrives, it would be appropriate to start thinking about cricket as an Olympic sport.

In the past, when the USA had competed at the highest level, the bulk of the team was made up of older expats from cricket regions like the Caribbean or the subcontinent. They still had some skill but were way out of their depth when it came to running between wickets and fielding, two crucial aspects of the short versions of the game. Consequently, rather than the USA having a young team building toward a strong performance down the track, they were a bunch of individuals trying for one last hurrah - before the cycle repeated itself at the next tournament, four years later.

In proposing cricket as an Olympic sport, Waugh cited as a reason the incredibly good feeling he experienced while competing in the 1998 Commonwealth Games. That's a great personal memory but what did involvement in the Games do for cricket?

Though the 1998 Commonwealth Games involved all the major cricket-playing countries (the Caribbean was represented by individual nations), the sport was dropped from the next Games, which were held in Manchester, a major city in the country where the game was invented.

Playing at the Olympics would also create a major headache in regard to the international cricket schedule. With the proliferation of Twenty20 events in world cricket, the international itinerary is currently as cluttered as a mechanic's workshop. Rather than take on another major tournament, and the resulting qualifying event the Olympics would require, the ICC desperately needs to trim the current schedule so it resembles an orderly document rather than a parchment covered in Sanskrit scribble.

There's no doubt Twenty20 is the way to globalise the game, but that cause won't be helped if, as in all likelihood, only the eight major cricket nations qualify to play at the Olympics. Marching in an Olympic Games opening ceremony might give individual cricketers goosebumps, but as part of the evolution of the game, it wouldn't rate as a pimple on
 
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/current/story/365218.html
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Re: Cricket should not be welcomed into Olympics: Christie
« Reply #3 on: August 17, 2008, 03:00:02 PM »
I support Christie. The more countries play cricket, the worse it will be for Indian cricketers. Wait, may be that would be good for other sports!
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achutank

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Re: Cricket should not be welcomed into Olympics: Christie
« Reply #4 on: August 17, 2008, 03:23:28 PM »
i think indoor T20 would be a brilliant addition to the Olympics

same group format as football

i think it will be very popular
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