Could Major League Cricket be the key to West Indies' resurgence?

By Munro Mike / Roar Rookie

On a hot summer’s day at Grand Prairie Stadium on the outskirts of Dallas, Texas the American Major League Cricket T20 tournament got off to a start.

Fanfare? Well, not packing out to the rafters (yet). However, it’s a valid competition in a nation with a huge Indian expat population, amongst others. Arguably there’s potential to gain a solid foothold. And with the Texas Super Kings taking on the Los Angeles Knight Riders, the IPL franchising is helping connect to that demographic.

Despite the early loss of Faf du Plessis for a golden duck, Devon Conway with 55 and David Miller 61 underpinned the Super Kings’ 181-6 over 20 overs.

The venue is a former baseball venue that was adapted to also host soccer. It’s now been redeveloped to be the Super Kings’ home ground – under lease to American Cricket Enterprises who are partnering USA Cricket. The original 5400-seat stadium is now to be not just a MLC venue but also a high performance centre for USA Cricket.

It had also been regarded as one of the best sports performance facilities in Minor League Baseball during its tenure with the now folded Texas AirHogs.

The long-term lease agreement with the City of Grand Prairie shows a determination for the medium term at least to sufficiently crack the US market.

Should cricket crack the USA – sufficiently – with a goal of full ICC membership by 2030, what might that mean for close neighbours in the Caribbean? Could cricket in the West Indies undergo a much-needed resurgence? It may be the last chance for the West Indies to not be completely consumed by the combination of baseball, basketball and soccer. It would be wonderful if cricket in the West Indies could leverage off this in some way.

The LA Knight Riders lost Guptill 3 balls in and never gained any top order momentum; soon collapsing to 4-20. Eventually dismissed for just 112 off 14 overs, the only bright spot being a breezy 55 from Andre Russell with seven 4s and three 6s.

It’s especially vital that the old baseball diamond is gone. This is not a venue of compromise – a key element of the development being the conversion to an international size and quality cricket field capable of hosting major international competitions. Additionally, the plans include a number of training nets and batting ‘lanes’, as well as two additional outside turf fields that will be used for training and by the affiliated MLC academies.

Crucial to this push for cricket in the USA is that it’s not just pie in the sky wishful thinking. And it is being driven by significant funding from investor groups driving the unprecedented cricket infrastructure development for the US. This brings the best cricketers to play at cricket specific venues with natural turf wickets and quality spectator amenity. And plans for high performance development of talent.

Some of the investors include Satya Nadella (CEO of Microsoft) and Soma Somasegar (MD of Madrona Venture Group) amongst others from the business world. A group of investors very keen on making this push a winner.

It should be noted that there is reportedly a population of more than 4.5 million Indian-Americans (around 1.35 per cent of the total US population and the largest group of South Asian-Americans after Chinese-Americans). Significantly, Indian-Americans are the highest-earning ethnic group in the US.

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The Crowd Says:

2023-07-19T08:50:44+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


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AUTHOR

2023-07-18T08:18:13+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


well the separate countries play the domestic level in the West Indies......the irony that their 'first class domestic' matches are actually internationals. Perhaps a broader US-Caribbean super league scenario might help develop that level of 'island/national' patriotic sentiment.

AUTHOR

2023-07-18T08:16:07+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


the issue of Basketball and baseball is the lure to the American market. Cricket - if able to get a sufficient (what ever that level is??) foot hold WILL be visible to the Caribbean cricket culture and might 'reduce' the pressures coming through otherwise. Creating a 'cricket connection' of the US and Caribbean that hasn't really existed.

2023-07-18T06:31:26+00:00

Davico

Roar Pro


They don’t have a history as sep countries playing, and they also do not have the populations individually to support competitive teams. Do not get me wrong, I grew up watching the great teams of the late 70s, 80s and early 90s and I truely long for the WI to field teams like that. That is not going to happen though, for a number of reasons, the 3 biggest being, economic, geographic and lastly the fact that the Caribbean Islands want to move on from their colonial past and all the hurt that came with it.

2023-07-18T06:24:12+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


"they don’t have the patriotic link to fall back on by “representing your country”" It will not solve this issue?

2023-07-18T06:21:53+00:00

Davico

Roar Pro


That will not solve the issue.

2023-07-18T03:12:15+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Is it time for Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, and Guyana to field separate teams?

2023-07-16T22:47:58+00:00

Davico

Roar Pro


The money that can be earned in the NBA, MLB or major soccer comps will ensure that the West Indies will never be a dominant force in cricket again. Unlike everyone else, they don't have the patriotic link to fall back on by "representing your country".

2023-07-16T05:49:18+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


The biggest sporting threat to the British Carribean would be golf courses, land use would be the issue. Land close to the beach is going to be a premium and taken over by foreigners. Cricket in the Carribean thrived on the facilities left behind by the wealthy british. Baseball and Basketball sports that are not in the British Carribean. How will introducing a T20 league into the USA help the Carribean.

2023-07-14T18:15:04+00:00

timbo59

Roar Rookie


The biggest issue with cricket getting a foothold in the USA is Americans themselves. I've lived in Florida for 23 years, home to many of the Indian and Caribbean ex-pats who make up the interest groups, and any time I've corresponded with anyone trying to run the game in this country I've dealt with the same things you always do - an ingrained cultural arrogance that presupposes to know more about the game than anyone else, and lives in the delusion that Americans are ready to rise to the fore and take over the game as the premier team. It's almost funny to try and have a dialogue with some of these individuals and deal with how little they really know, all while sounding as pompous and full of themselves as you could imagine. Staying humble is just not part of the American psyche.

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