BCCI, cricketers concerned over low turnout
November 15th, 2011 - 9:41 pm ICT by IANS
Kolkata, Nov 15 (IANS) The Indian cricket board Tuesday expressed concern over dwindling crowds at the stadiums, including the iconic Eden Gardens here, and said it would find ways to bring back the spectators.
“We are concerned about that. We are looking into this,” Board of Control for Cricket in India chief administrative officer Ratnakar Shetty told mediapersons at the Eden Gardens.
“We will discuss the matter in the next meeting. We will try to do something to attract people to Test matches,” said Shetty, who was here to watch the second day’s action of the second Test between India and the West Indies.
Stylish batsman V.V.S. Laxman and former Indian captain Sourav Ganguly were also worried over the near-empty stands.
Eden Gardens, once known for its large and boisterous crowd, has seen largely empty stands in international matches involving home side India since last month.
The India-England ODI held Oct 25 saw only 27,000 people, the lowest turnout at the hallowed ground in an ODI featuring India. Things improved in the Oct 29 Twenty20 game when around 50,000 turned up.
However, the crowd presence hit a new low in the ongoing Test match, which had a massive build up with Sachin Tendulkar a ton away from his 100th international century mark.
But even when Tendulkar was batting on the opening day Monday, the spectator count touched a bare maximum of 10,000. The scene was more pathetic when the day started Monday with only about 4,000 in attendance in the 67,300 capacity stadium that has been hosting Test matches since 1934. It was also the first ground other than Lords to hold a World Cup final in 1987.
Laxman, who struck a fine hundred Tuesday, also expressed concern over the small crowd.
“About the empty stands, we have to first find out the reasons, and then find a solution. I saw the same in England ODIs,” he said.
Ganguly said: “It was sad to see an empty Eden Gardens. Something seriously needs to be done to get the crowds back to the stadiums.”
He, however, felt that playing Test matches under floodlight was not feasible in the subcontinent because of the dew factor.
“In the subcontinent, there is dew in the evening, I don’t think day-night would be an option. But Test format is mother of cricket and we’ve got to find a solution to it,” said Ganguly on the sidelines of a practice session for the Bengal Ranji Trophy team.
- Poor ticket sales for Eden Test - Nov 12, 2011
- Thin crowd at Eden Gardens for KKR match - Apr 13, 2012
- Empty stands not good advertisement for cricket: Dravid - Dec 14, 2011
- Magic missing at Eden: Dravid regrets dwindling crowds - Nov 15, 2011
- Lowest turnout in India ODI at Eden (Diary) - Oct 25, 2011
- Laxman's tryst with 'very very special' Eden still going strong - Nov 15, 2011
- Ticket sales fail to pick up, T-shirts with prayers for Sachin's feat - Nov 13, 2011
- Closed Kotla ticket counters drive away fans - Nov 06, 2011
- Near capacity crowd at Eden Gardens - Apr 06, 2012
- World Cup back at the Eden, but minus the fans - Mar 14, 2011
- IPL kicks off in Kolkata on a high note - Apr 11, 2011
- History beckons Sachin at Eden - Nov 12, 2011
- Relentless India poised to extend domination over England to T20 (Preview) - Oct 28, 2011
- Eden gets large crowd for its maiden T20 international - Oct 30, 2011
- Graeme Smith salutes Eden Gardens - Mar 16, 2011
Tags: administrative officer, batsman, boisterous crowd, eden gardens, empty stands, hallowed ground, india england odi, indian captain, indian cricket board, odis, opening day, sachin tendulkar, second test, sourav ganguly, spectators, stadiums, test match, test matches, v v s laxman, west indies