A Brisbane Olympics? Cricket should be included

By Scott Pryde / Expert

While T20 cricket will always have its doubters, no one can question the globalisation the sport has undergone since the advent of the shortest format.

Now, with an Olympic Games likely to be hosted by a country where the sport is front of the national interest, it could be the perfect time to introduce it into the Olympics.

News has been swirling for some days that the 2032 Olympics are as good as locked in for Brisbane, and while it’s a case of ‘believe it when you see it’, it is an ideal opportunity for cricket.

Another 11 years gives an extra decade for the sport to globalise before the qualification would even need to be run, and the ability to play T20 cricket means extra teams could be involved, and that the games don’t take nearly as long, or require nearly as much rest between games, meaning getting a respectable tournament played within two weeks could be done.

While it would need to fit in with the ICC scheduling, organising a 16-team Olympics T20 cricket tournament could be the best way for the sport to put itself into the shop window of the world, and planning should be underway.

(Patrick Hamilton/AFP /AFP via Getty Images)

Cricket has had brief stints in the Commonwealth Games before, but it simply wasn’t ready, nor has it been to enter the Olympic Games. But by 2032, and with the state of Queensland having plenty of cricketing facilities, there is no reason this can’t work.

You see, while the Olympics has its fair share of knockers due to the cost, the unlikely return, the disruption to business or a multitude of other reasons, there can be no doubting the influence the Olympic Games still has.

Just about every country in the world participates, thousands of athletes attend and most importantly for a sport trying to spread its wings and find a grip in other key markets around the world, the TV ratings and attention garnered by the general public is enormous.

Think of sports like European handball, field hockey or beach volleyball. They are paid little to no attention outside of the Olympics, but the moment national pride is on the line, suddenly everyone is an interested onlooker.

Even sports like basketball and football rate the Olympics among their biggest tournaments, and it could and should be the same for cricket as it continues to expand.

A 16-team tournament split into four groups of four would be workable in Queensland, with the Gabba, Allan Border Field, Metricon Stadium and grounds in both Cairns and Townsville able to used for matches.

They could, of course, also follow the football approach of the 2000 Sydney Olympics and use other states around the country to fill the gap if those grounds are considered not up to scratch.

The group stage could be played in the space of a week without a problem, with the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final (or whichever format) to be played over the second week of the Games.

But they are the over the top details which could be worked out well down the line.

The first hurdle is to clear it with the IOC, who have to set the sporting guidelines for every Olympic games, including which optional sports can be picked by the hosting country.

(Photo by Lee Warren/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

But if the ICC put cricket forward as an option, it would be difficult for the IOC to knock it back given the enormous qualification path that now exists for T20 World Cups, as well as the potential continued expansion of the sport in years to come as new markets take it up, even if at a very low level.

While it’s not widely followed, cricket at the lower levels is taking off. The qualification tournament for the postponed 2020 T20 World Cup was outstanding in both men’s and women’s competition, and it will only get better as teams from nations where cricket isn’t at the forefront of the mind get exposed to more matches and competitions, including the World League.

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The next hurdle is clearing that of the cricket boards around the world, who already run a packed schedule. Adding another two weeks of cricket, even with a gold medal at the end, could be too much to overcome for the likes of the BCCI and Cricket Australia, who will not want to risk any financial loss by taking part in the mega sporting showcase.

Despite all that, if the top nations can realise a trip to the Olympics would be for the greater good of the sport, then it may not be a significant hurdle.

From there, it would be about setting up a strong qualification for the tournament at the Olympics, and ensuring it doesn’t simply become a one-off at the Games.

Cricket being a long-term success at the Games may seem unlikely right now, but T20 cricket has always been the ticket to the sport going down that road.

It’s now ready to turn it into a reality.

The Crowd Says:

2021-03-01T08:24:16+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


England and America are two countries divided by the same language

2021-03-01T08:23:44+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Also Jeff, the International Rules game I attended at Subi Oval a decade or more ago was "Ireland" too I think?

2021-03-01T06:07:37+00:00

Tony H

Roar Pro


Oi.. Don't be knocking the fencing champ!

2021-03-01T05:35:41+00:00

jman0076

Roar Rookie


Honestly the thought of cricket at the Olympics does absolutely nothing for me. Over the last few decades especially, the mystique and aura of the Olympics had faded from the public's view. The unearthing of rampant doping, questionable "amateur athlete" credentials, endemic corruption and blatant commercialisation have all damaged the brand beyond repair imo. In many ways, instead of showcasing a country's talent and innovation, recent Olympics have only highlighted shambolic organisation, social problems, environmental destruction and dysfunctional governments (Rio or Greece anyone). Cricket already has a global platform and presence in multiple formats, we do not need to associate the game with an outdated and increasingly irrelevant movement.

2021-03-01T03:03:42+00:00

Paul D

Roar Rookie


Cricket in the olympics, no thanks. All you'd have would be a whole bunch of people of indian descent playing for various countries like Finland and clogging up the olympics with a long cumbersome pointless contest for a medal that would just be won by either Australia New Zealand India or England anyway

2021-02-28T08:28:29+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Comparing Australia & Ireland is wrong Jeff. The start of the Republic of Ireland being formed was when Germans successfully stoked anti-British agitation in Ireland during WW1. The British agreed to a sovereign republic Ireland nation to separate from the UK. The UK ALWAYS have retained possession of Northern Ireland. EVERY British colony in Australia agreed to join the hypothetical federation that came into existence in 1901.

2021-02-28T08:19:10+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


This conversation is getting ridiculous, Micko.

2021-02-28T08:12:54+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


That’s a wrong analogy Jeff: the continent of Australia doubles up as a sovereign nation, with the island state of Tasmania too. WA has nearly seceded once or twice.

2021-02-28T08:10:05+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


There's no such nation called "Ireland" Jeff, only two sporting entities.

2021-02-28T08:08:09+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


"There’s no official nation called “Ireland” in existence, there’s the Republic of Ireland" Well Micko, if you want to go down that path, there is no nation called "Australia" in existence. There's the Commonwealth of Australia.

2021-02-28T08:06:37+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Yes. I'm well aware that NI is part of the UK. So, it's not a part of Ireland.

2021-02-28T08:04:43+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


If cricket & rugby are ok with Ireland merging into one entity, that's their decision alone to make. The IOC on the other hand has no prerogative to accept these unofficial sporting unions though.

2021-02-28T08:01:35+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Northern Ireland is a part of the UK too Jeff.

2021-02-28T08:00:50+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


The olympics are ONLY for official countries Jeff (like 206 now?). There's no official nation called "Ireland" in existence, there's the Republic of Ireland, and the area known as Northern Ireland is a constituent nation of the UK.

2021-02-28T07:57:11+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Because England isn't a separate country. England is part of the United Kingdom (sometimes referenced as Britain or Great Britain).

2021-02-28T07:55:29+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


OK. Well not sure on that, but if two countries merge for rugby, perhaps they can do so for cricket. Though seems at odds with the usual IOC approach.

2021-02-28T07:49:06+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Also Jeff why you don't see England etc at olympic soccer. As a one off, they had a GB side for their home olympics @ London 2012.

2021-02-28T07:47:35+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


But the Ireland cricket side is like the rugby union side: it represents the whole island. So presumably some of the cricketers are Northern Irish: who are officially represented by the UK/GB in olympic competition.

2021-02-28T07:36:09+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


How come? The Ireland cricket team is a separate entity (Ireland is a separate country) from the province of Northern Ireland which is part of the UK.

2021-02-28T07:34:07+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Ireland's players would have to separate into two separate entities too.

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