It's Just Not Cricket (Anymore): How A Traditional Pastime Became A Global Business

Cricket is no longer a sedate game played in whites during the day. The gentle crack of leather on willow has been replaced by the crash bang wallop, blaring music and dazzling lights complete with cheerleaders and franchise-style nicknames. Seduced by the lure of TV money, those who run the game have remarkably made cricket less accessible to ordinary people. In 'It's just not cricket (anymore)' I look back on my childhood memories of the game I grew up watching and describe the revolution that has unfolded before our eyes and the influence some of these changes has had on other sports trying to compete in an ever crowded marketplace with spectators' attention spans getting shorter than ever and the fundamental need to increase TV and advertising revenue.

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It's Just Not Cricket (Anymore): How A Traditional Pastime Became A Global Business

Cricket is no longer a sedate game played in whites during the day. The gentle crack of leather on willow has been replaced by the crash bang wallop, blaring music and dazzling lights complete with cheerleaders and franchise-style nicknames. Seduced by the lure of TV money, those who run the game have remarkably made cricket less accessible to ordinary people. In 'It's just not cricket (anymore)' I look back on my childhood memories of the game I grew up watching and describe the revolution that has unfolded before our eyes and the influence some of these changes has had on other sports trying to compete in an ever crowded marketplace with spectators' attention spans getting shorter than ever and the fundamental need to increase TV and advertising revenue.

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It's Just Not Cricket (Anymore): How A Traditional Pastime Became A Global Business

It's Just Not Cricket (Anymore): How A Traditional Pastime Became A Global Business

by Richard Freeston-Clough
It's Just Not Cricket (Anymore): How A Traditional Pastime Became A Global Business

It's Just Not Cricket (Anymore): How A Traditional Pastime Became A Global Business

by Richard Freeston-Clough

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Overview

Cricket is no longer a sedate game played in whites during the day. The gentle crack of leather on willow has been replaced by the crash bang wallop, blaring music and dazzling lights complete with cheerleaders and franchise-style nicknames. Seduced by the lure of TV money, those who run the game have remarkably made cricket less accessible to ordinary people. In 'It's just not cricket (anymore)' I look back on my childhood memories of the game I grew up watching and describe the revolution that has unfolded before our eyes and the influence some of these changes has had on other sports trying to compete in an ever crowded marketplace with spectators' attention spans getting shorter than ever and the fundamental need to increase TV and advertising revenue.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940046154085
Publisher: Richard Freeston-Clough
Publication date: 08/30/2014
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 228 KB

About the Author

Richard Freeston-Clough is 33 years old. He grew up in Hertfordshire where he has lived almost all his life and lives in Ware with his wife Charlotte and baby daughter, Aurora. He studied Politics at the University of Sheffield and has worked in public relations for the last 10 years. He blogs at www.sorted4sport.co.uk and tweets at @sorted4sport.

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