secretzimbo wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 3:03 pm
Even if we are to put aside the awful human rights abuses for a moment….
Even in a sporting context Afghanistan gain an unfair advantage from not funding women’s cricket. Similarly funded members, for example Zimbabwe, and forced by the ICC to allocate a fairly significant (and growing) amount of the funding on women and girls cricket.
Afghanistan therefore get the unfair advantage of an extra couple of million dollars to go all in in their men’s side.
You are generally a well informed poster here, although we've disagreed on a couple of things. However, this actually doesn't make much sense, if it makes any sense at all for the following reasons.
1) Money doesn't score runs or take wickets. It doesn't hit the ball or bowl it. It doesn't directly translate to performance. In fact the correlation of money to cricketing success is probably at best 50%.
India gets 40% of the ICC revenues...do they win 40% of the ICC's championships? No.
New Zealand makes very little money compared to other full members, but have always punched above their weight.
Afghanistan still only has a fraction of the revenue of Bangladesh, yet in yesterday's game it was the Afghans who bossed proceedings like they were the millionaires and the opposition was Kangladesh (Begger Nation a pejorative often hurled from across the border). They only scored 115 on a very decent deck and still had the self-belief that they could defend it against a vastly more experienced side. Money didn't do that. Cricketing skills and self awareness did.
2) The ACB itself doesn't get any more money than the ZC. Yes many of the Afghan players are millionaires from playing franchise cricket but that doesn't affect how the team plays.
3) ZC has to spend money on the women's game that could have gone to the men's game instead. Thats true...but there are several points here:
a) How much does ZC actually spend on the women's game? 10 million USD/year? 5 million? 1 million?
b) If that money from a) above was instead given to the men, would it really make a difference to how the Zimbabwe men's team perform? Would it really turn Marumani or Madhevere into 30 average batsmen? Would it have pushed Zimbabwe past the line against Uganda, Scotland, or UAE?